英文摘要 |
There would hardly be anything better than the author's own summary of his own work that could serve as the cornerstone of an understanding of the main point of that work. In the preface to his first masterpiece, the Tractatus logico-philosophicus (abbreviated as the Tractatus hereafter), Wittgenstein has made such a remark: The whole sense of the book might be summed up in the following words: what can be said at ail can be said clearly, and what we cannot talk about we must pass over in silence. Thus the aim of the book is to draw a limit to ... the expression of thoughts. |