Ludwig Wittgenstein, enfant terrible or idiot savant? A student of the great Bertrand Russell and protégé of renowned mathematician and logician Gottlob Frege, the angry young upstartâs Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus put both elder thinkers on notice: The days of their comfortable assumptions were numbered, in a series of austere, cryptic aphorisms and symbolic propositions that make very little sense to those of us who lack the prodigious intellects of Russell and Frege. While Wittgenstein is often dismissed, writes Paul Horwich at New York Timesâ philosophy blog âThe Stone,â as âself indulgently obscure,â perhaps the real reason many academic philosophers reject his work is that it renders them superfluous. Philosophy, Wittgenstein obliquely claimed in his half-mystical, hyper-logical treatise, âcanât give us the kind of knowledge generally regarded as its raison dâêtre.â
Given the Tractatusâs firebombing of an entire area of human endeavor, itâs no surprise it hasnât fared well in many traditional departments, but that hasnât stopped Wittgensteinâs work from finding purchase elsewhere, influencing modern artists like Jasper Johns, the Coen Brothers, and, not least surely, Finnish avant garde composer and musician M.A. Numminen. This odd character, who caused a stir in the 60s by setting sex guides to music, took it upon himself to do the same for many of the Tractatusâs propositions, and the results are, wellâ¦. Listen for yourself. At the top of the post, we have video of Numminen performing the fifth and final movement of his Tractatus suiteâthe famous final proposition of that strange little book: âWhereof one cannot speak, thereof one must be silentâ (âWoven man nicht sprechen kann, darüber muss man schweigenâ). Numminen sings this in German, in his high-pitched, creaking voice. The rest of the suite he sings in English. Just above, hear the first movement, âThe World Isâ¦,â and below, hear movements 2-4, âIn Order To Tellâ¦,â âA Thought Isâ¦,â and âThe General Form Of A Truth Function.â He even sings the symbols, in breathless transcription. You can stream and download the full suite at Ubuweb and follow along at the Tractatus hypertext here.
Should Numminenâs tinpan alley-like compositions strike you as a particularly ridiculous setting for Wittgensteinâs genius, fear not; the Motet below (âExcerota Tractati Logico-Philosophiciâ), by composer Elisabeth Lutyens, treats the eccentric Germanâs work with a great deal more reverence.
via Leiter Reports
Related Content:
Wittgenstein: Watch Derek Jarmanâs Tribute to the Philosopher, Featuring Tilda Swinton (1993)
Bertrand Russell on His Student Ludwig Wittgenstein: Man of Genius or Merely an Eccentric?
Philosopher Portraits: Famous Philosophers Painted in the Style of Influential Artists
Photography of Ludwig Wittgenstein Displayed by Archives at Cambridge
Josh Jones is a writer and musician based in Durham, NC. Follow him at @jdmagness
Ludwig Wittgensteinâs Tractatus Gets Adapted Into an Avant-Garde Comic Opera is a post from: Open Culture. Follow us on Facebook, Twitter, and Google Plus, or get our Daily Email. And don’t miss our big collections of Free Online Courses, Free Online Movies, Free eBooks, Free Audio Books, Free Foreign Language Lessons, and MOOCs.
The post Ludwig Wittgensteinâs Tractatus Gets Adapted Into an Avant-Garde Comic Opera appeared first on Open Culture.
Ludwig Wittgensteinâs Tractatus Gets Adapted Into an Avant-Garde Comic Opera
No comments:
Post a Comment