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  1. One’s Own’ in the Other and the Other in ‘One’s Own.Jasmin Trächtler - 2022 - Grazer Philosophische Studien 99 (1):99-123.
    The questions of how we can understand others and how we can know what they feel, think and sense have repeatedly preoccupied Wittgenstein since the 1930s and especially in his last writings. In this article, the author will tackle these questions by focusing on the other as other or strange. For it is also the strangeness of others, their otherness as such, that makes it difficult and even impossible to recognize and understand their inner life. As she will show, such (...)
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  • Mathematizing Power, Formalization, and the Diagrammatical Mind or: What Does “Computation” Mean? [REVIEW]Sybille Krämer - 2014 - Philosophy and Technology 27 (3):345-357.
    Computation and formalization are not modalities of pure abstractive operations. The essay tries to revise the assumption of the constitutive nonsensuality of the formal. The argument is that formalization is a kind of linear spatialization, which has significant visual dimensions. Thus, a connection can be discovered between visualization by figurative graphism and formalization by symbolic calculations: Both use spatial relations not only to represent but also to operate on epistemic, nonspatial, nonvisual entities. Descartes was one of the pioneers of using (...)
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  • Wittgenstein y Gadamer: lenguaje, praxis, razón.Nuria Sara Miras Boronat - 2009 - Dissertation, Universitat de Barcelona