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twittgenstein

  1. 3.325. In order to avoid these errors, we must employ a symbolism which excludes... Read More: http://is.gd/1nfPy
  2. 3.324. Thus there easily arise the most fundamental confusions (of which the whole of philosophy is full).
  3. 3.323. In the language of everyday life it very often happens that the same word... Read More: http://is.gd/17Rq2
  4. 3.322. It can never indicate the common characteristic of two objects that we sy... Read More: http://is.gd/17Rnb
  5. 3.321. Two different symbols can therefore have the sign (written sign or sound sign) in common—​they then signify in different ways.
  6. 3.32. The sign is the part of the symbol perceptible by the senses.
  7. 3.318. I conceive the proposition —​ like Frege and Russell —​ as a function of the expressions contained in it.
  8. 3.317 The determination of the values of the propositional variable is done b... Read More: http://is.gd/D4HH
  9. 3.316. What values the propositional variable can assume is determined. The determination of the values is the variable.
  10. 3.315. If we change a constituent part of a proposition into a variable, there i... Read More: http://is.gd/uOgx
  11. 3.314 An expression has meaning only in proposition. Every variable can be conceived as propositional variable (Including the variable name)
  12. 3.313. An expression is thus presented by a variable, whose values are the propo... Read More: http://is.gd/tci8
  13. 3.312. (...) And in this form the expression is constant and everything else variable.
  14. 3.312. It is therefore represented by the general form of the propositions which it characterizes. (...)
  15. 3.311. (...) It is the common characteristic mark of a class of propositions.
  16. 3.311. An expression presupposes the forms of all propositions in which it can occur. (...)
  17. 3.31. (...) An expression characterizes a form and a content.
  18. 3.31.(...)Expressions are everything—​essential for the sense of the proposition—​that propositions can have in common with one another(...)
  19. 3.31. (...) (The proposition itself is an expression.) (...)
  20. 3.31. Every part of a proposition which characterizes its sense I call an expression (a symbol). (...)