University of Chicago Press, 2025 Cloth: 978-0-226-82457-4 | eISBN: 978-0-226-84271-4 Library of Congress Classification B3376.W564L37513 2025
ABOUT THIS BOOK | AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY | REVIEWS | TOC | REQUEST ACCESSIBLE FILE
ABOUT THIS BOOK
A holistic introduction to Wittgenstein’s philosophy that approaches him as a philosopher of ordinary life.
One of philosopher Ludwig Wittgenstein’s most consequential claims was that the meaning of the word, its sense, is its use in language. This deceptively simple claim, the foundation of what became known as ordinary language philosophy, has animated thinkers across disciplinary bounds from metaphysics to ethics and more. In The Senses of Use, Sandra Laugier embarks on a fresh journey through Wittgenstein’s corpus that emphasizes the place of ordinary life and language in its thought. Through his Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus, Philosophical Investigations, and rich posthumously published works, Laugier offers a compelling new look at Wittgenstein as a philosopher of mind.
AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY
Sandra Laugier is professor of philosophy at the University of Paris I Panthéon Sorbonne and a senior fellow of the Institut Universitaire de France. Her books in English include Why We Need Ordinary Language Philosophy, also published by the University of Chicago Press. Daniela Ginsburg is a freelance translator. She cotranslated Knowledge of Life by Georges Canguilhem.
REVIEWS
“In this elegant and thoughtfully composed book, Laugier provides a route to the philosophy of Wittgenstein that should be valuable for new and veteran readers alike. Laugier centers ‘use’ or our traffic with words and, without distracting technicalities, insightfully traces central lines of Wittgenstein’s thought. She brings in an appealingly broad set of references to contemporary philosophy, including, notably, the French reception of Wittgenstein.”
— Alice Crary, The New School
“Wittgenstein: The Senses of Use is a brilliant overview of Wittgenstein’s philosophy. In it, France’s foremost expert on ordinary language philosophy, Sandra Laugier, writes with exceptional clarity and explains why Wittgenstein is a genuinely revolutionary philosopher, someone who makes us see ourselves and the world afresh. By focusing on Wittgenstein’s fundamental notion of ‘use,’ Laugier demonstrates that his rethinking of language is also a rethinking of the very foundations of philosophy of mind and of ethics. Anyone trying to grasp what Wittgenstein is doing in Philosophical Investigations should read this book.”
— Toril Moi, Duke University
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Introduction
Chapter 1: The Uses of (Non-)Sense
Chapter 2: Sites of Mind
Chapter 3: Forms of Life
Chapter 4: The Voice of the Subject
Chapter 5: Visions of the Good
Notes
Bibliography
Index
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