Lectures and Conversations on Aesthetics, Psychology, and Religious Belief
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Lectures and Conversations on Aesthetics, Psychology, and Religious Belief (german: Vorlesungen und Gespräche über Ästhetik, Psychoanalyse und religiösen Glauben) is a series of notes transcribed by
Yorick Smythies Yorick Smythies (21 February 1917 – 1980) was a student and friend of Ludwig Wittgenstein known for his notes of the philosopher's lectures. He was also a friend of, and character inspiration for, the novelist (and philosopher) Iris Murdoch. ...
, Rush Rhees, and James Taylor from assorted lectures by Ludwig Wittgenstein, and published in 1967. The lectures, at which
Casimir Lewy Casimir Lewy ( pl, Kazimierz Lewy; 26 February 1919 – 8 February 1991) was a Polish philosopher of Jewish descent. He worked in philosophical logic but published scantly. He was an influential teacher; several of his students went on to be pro ...
was present, contain Wittgenstein's thoughts about aesthetics and religion, alongside a critique of psychoanalysis.
Wittgensteinian fideism Ludwig Josef Johann Wittgenstein ( ; ; 26 April 1889 – 29 April 1951) was an Austrian-British philosopher who worked primarily in logic, the philosophy of mathematics, the philosophy of mind, and the philosophy of language. He is consider ...
originates from the remarks in the ''Lectures''. Eberhard Bubser, in the introduction, of the German edition states that: ″Wittgenstein would surely have not approved this release ..€³ (″Wittgenstein hätte diese Ausgabe bestimmt nicht gebilligt ..€³).


Lectures on Aesthetics

One question Wittgenstein raises in his ''Lectures on Aesthetics'' is how we learn to use and recognize the words used to make an aesthetic judgment, such as ″beautiful″ (″schön″) or ″nice″ or (″fein″). He suggests that these words are firstly and often used like interjections or gestures. Wittgenstein also notes that we seldom use these words in everyday language to make aesthetic judgments, but rather use words like ″right″ (″richtig″) or ″correct″ (″korrekt″). With regard to aesthetic pleasures, he also names a question that is recently under debate in aesthetics: How are distinctly aesthetic pleasures different from more ordinary pleasures? He makes a point in stating that ″One uses the same term in both cases ..€³ (″ Man gebraucht in beiden Fällen ..dasselbe Wort″). A recurring theme in these lectures is also Wittgenstein's firm rejection of the possibility that psychology may explain aesthetic experiences or judgments. This opinion is based on Wittgenstein's view that psychological ( behaviorist) experiments would generate results based on mere descriptions of behavior and generalizations across large numbers of observers.


Lectures on Religious Belief

In his Lectures on Religious Belief (''Vorlesungen über den religiösen Glauben''), Wittgenstein argues, among other things, that superficial grammatical similarities in the ''forms'' of both religious and factual statements mislead us into believing that they are fundamentally identical states of "belief." This grammatical similarity, Wittgenstein argues, is merely a parallel ''expression'' of drastically different processes. "The expression of belief", Wittgenstein notes, "may play an absolutely minor role."


References

Ludwig Wittgenstein Books by Ludwig Wittgenstein 1967 non-fiction books Aesthetics books Books about psychoanalysis Philosophy of religion literature {{Reli-philo-book-stub