Georg Henrik von Wright

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Georg Henrik von Wright (pronounced, roughly, fon vrikt, IPA: [je:ɔrj hɛn:rik fɔn-vrik:t],) (June 14, 1916June 16, 2003) was a Finnish philosopher, who succeeded Ludwig Wittgenstein as professor at the University of Cambridge. He published in English, Finnish, German, and in his mother tongue Swedish.

Von Wright's writings come under two headings. The first is analytic philosophy and philosophical logic in the Anglo-American vein. His 1951 books, An Essay in Modal Logic and Deontic Logic, were landmarks in the postwar rise of formal modal logic and its deontic version. He was an authority on Wittgenstein, editing his late work. He is a leader of modern Finnish philosophy, which specializes in philosophical logic, analysis, philosophy of language, philosophy of mind, and the close study of Charles Peirce. The other vein in von Wright's writings is moralist and pessimist. During his last 20 years, partly under the influence of Oswald Spengler, he wrote several books, the best known being The Myth of Progress, questioning whether our apparent material and techological progress can really be considered progress. He eventually discovered that Wittgenstein too had read Spengler, and (to the astonishment of von Wright) had liked him as well.

[edit] Works

  • The Logical Problem of Induction, PhD thesis, 31 May 1941
  • Den logiska empirismen (Logical Empirism), in Swedish, 1945
  • Über Wahrscheinlichkeit (On Chance), in German, 1945
  • An Essay in Modal Logic, 1951
  • A Treatise on Induction and Probability, 1951
  • Deontic Logic, 1951
  • Tanke och förkunnelse (Thought and Preaching), in Swedish, 1955
  • Logical Studies, 1957
  • Logik, filosofi och språk (Logic, philosophy and language), in Swedish, 1957
  • The Varieties of Goodness, 1963. He considered this his best and most personal work.
  • Norm and Action, 1963
  • The Logic of Preference, 1963
  • Essay om naturen, människan och den vetenskaplig-tekniska revolutionen (Essay on Nature, Man and the Scientific-Technological Revolution), in Swedish, 1963
  • An Essay in Deontic Logic, 1968
  • Time, Change and Contradiction, 1969
  • Tieteen filosofian kaksi perinnettä (The Two Traditions of the Philosophy of Science), in Finnish, 1970
  • Explanation and Understanding, 1971
  • Causality and Determinism, 1974
  • Handlung, Norm und Intention (Action, Norm and Intention), in German, 1977
  • Humanismen som livshållning (Humanism as an approach to Life), in Swedish, 1978
  • Freedom and Determination, 1980
  • Wittgenstein, 1982
  • Philosophical Papers I-III, 1983-1984
  • Filosofisia tutkielmia (Philosophical Dissertations), in Finnish, 1985
  • Vetenskapen och förnuftet (Science and Reason), in Swedish, 1986
  • Minervan Pöllö (The Owl of Minerva), in Finnish, 1991
  • Myten om framsteget (The Myth of Progress), in Swedish, 1993
  • The Tree of Knowledge, 1993
  • Att förstå sin samtid (To Understand one's own Time), in Swedish, 1994
  • Six Essays in Philosophical Logic, 1996
  • Viimeisistä ajoista. Ajatusleikki (On the End Times. A Thought Experiment.), in Finnish, 1997
  • Logiikka ja humanismi (Logic and Humanism), in Finnish, 1998
  • In the Shadow of Descartes, 1998
  • Mitt liv som jag minns det (My Life as I Remember it), in Swedish, 2001

Works by Wittgenstein von Wright helped edit, published by Blackwell unless otherwise stated:

  • 1961. Notebooks 1914-1916.
  • 1967. Zettel.
  • 1969. On Certainty.
  • 1971. ProtoTractatus -- An Early Version of Tractatus Logico- Philosophicus. Cornell University Press.
  • 1973. Letters to C.K. Ogden with Comments on the English Translation of the Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus.
  • 1974. Letters to Russell, Keynes and Moore.
  • 1978 (1956). Remarks on the Foundations of Mathematics.
  • 1980. Remarks on the Philosophy of Psychology. Vols 1,2.
  • 1980. Culture and Value.
  • 1982. Last Writings on the Philosophy of Psychology, Vol. 1. Vol. 2, 1992.