Why, then, do I talk of Wittgenstein’s ‘apparent’ recoil from metaphysics? Given what I have said so far, surely there cannot be any doubt that he is firmly opposed to it-can there? And we do not need metaphysics to know how to answer such questions. For instance, there is no such Big Question as whether we have free will: there are just the various particular local questions that we ask in our everyday transactions with one another, such as whether the chairman issued his written apology of his own free will or was coerced into doing it. But on a Wittgensteinian conception, trying to tackle these Big Questions involves wrenching ordinary ways of making sense of things from their ordinary contexts and producing nonsense as a result. Is there a God? What is the fundamental nature of reality? Does it consist ultimately of substances, and, if so, what are they? What is the fundamental nature of the self? Can it survive physical death? Do we have free will? And suchlike. The kind of metaphysics to which Wittgenstein is opposed is concerned with what we might call the Big Questions. This leaves entirely open what kinds of questions metaphysicians ask, or what kinds of methods they adopt. Metaphysics is simply the most general attempt to make sense of things. ‘What we do,’ he writes in Philosophical Investigations, ‘is to bring words back from their metaphysical to their everyday use.’ That is, what ‘we’ do, qua good philosophers, is to rescue words from their abuse in the hands of bad philosophers (who no doubt, very often, include ‘us’). For in both his earlier work and his later work, the only clearly pertinent uses of the term ‘metaphysical’ indicate that Wittgenstein identifies metaphysics with bad philosophy. This brings us to the apparent recoil from metaphysics. Wittgenstein distinguishes between good philosophy, which is what we have just been talking about, and bad philosophy, which is the home of the very confusions against which good philosophy is pitted. Or at least, this is true of good philosophy. SUGGESTED READING Wittgenstein's Tractatus at 100 By IAI Editorial For an example of such ill effects, consider someone interested in the privacy of sensations who asks the following question and who struggles to find any satisfactory answer: ‘Why can nobody else know with the certainty I do whether I feel pain?’ On Wittgenstein’s view, if we attend to the way in which sentences like ‘I feel pain’ are actually used, then this will appear akin to someone grappling with the gibberish: ‘Why can nobody else know with the certainty I do whether ouch!?’ Philosophy can be used to show that there is no real problem here. Philosophy is an antidote to unclear thinking, and specifically to the ill effects of our mishandling our own ways of making sense of things. Moreover, this aim is to be viewed in therapeutic terms. Its aim is to promote clarity of thought and understanding, not to discover and state truths about the nature of reality. Wittgenstein conceives of philosophy as an activity, rather than a body of doctrine. Among these are his conception of philosophy itself and, relatedly, an apparent recoil from metaphysics. Nevertheless, there are some equally profound and very significant continuities. It is well known that Wittgenstein’s early philosophical work and his later philosophical work are marked by various profound differences of style and content. Read the series' previous articles The Return of Metaphysics: Hegel vs Kant, The Return of Idealism: Hegel vs Russell, Derrida and the trouble with metaphysics, The Return of Metaphysics: Russell and Realism, and After Metaphysics: Rorty and American Pragmatism. This is the sixth instalment in our series The Return of Metaphysics, in partnership with the Essentia Foundation. But in his attempt to avoid the pitfalls of traditional metaphysics, Wittgenstein ends up asking questions about the way we make sense of things, that are metaphysical, argues A.W. For him, philosophy’s attempts to answer traditional metaphysical questions like “Is there a God?”, “What is the nature of reality”, “Do we have free will?” end up in confusion and nonsense. Wittgenstein is known as a philosopher who sought to cure philosophy from unclear thinking.
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