Wittgenstein: od etyki do ślepego stosowania reguł i z powrotem

The paper discusses Wittgenstein’s approaches to ethics within two contrastive contexts, e.g., pragmatism and cooperative-discursive normative practice. The first section revisits the fiasco of his early “negative” ethics. The second section subsequently shows how Wittgenstein’s mature concept of bl...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Ewa Nowak
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: Adam Mickiewicz University 2019-02-01
Series:Ethics in Progress
Subjects:
Online Access:http://pressto.amu.edu.pl/index.php/eip/article/view/17879
Description
Summary:The paper discusses Wittgenstein’s approaches to ethics within two contrastive contexts, e.g., pragmatism and cooperative-discursive normative practice. The first section revisits the fiasco of his early “negative” ethics. The second section subsequently shows how Wittgenstein’s mature concept of blind rule-following displaces normativity but simultaneously becomes the key predictor for discourse ethics (or, rather, a specific kind of it). The final section discusses the pros and cons of finitism in the light of contemporary philosophy of mind. As a conclusion, the author provides evidence for her hypothesis that there is no normative (embodied) mind without a manifest normative competence, which includes moral judgment and discursive competence.
ISSN:2084-9257