"What struck me most in this conversation was a radical passion for truthfulness in everything (which I came to know as a characteristic vogue among the young Viennese intellectuals of the generation immediately preceding mine only in the following university years). This truthfulness became almost a fashion in that border group between the purely Jewish and the purely Gentile parts of the intelligentsia in which I came so much to move. It meant much more than truth in speech. One had to "live" truth and not tolerate any pretence in oneself or others. It sometimes produced outright rudeness and, certainly, unpleasantness. Every convention was dissected and every conventional form exposed as fraud. Wittgenstein merely carried this further in applying it to himself. I sometimes felt that he took a perverse pleasure in discovering falsehood in his own feelings and that he was constantly trying to purge himself of all fraud."
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University of Cambridge facultyPhilosophers from the United KingdomPhilosophers from AustriaAcademics from AustriaPeople from Vienna
Original Language: English
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Sources
Friedrich Hayek, "Remembering My Cousin, Ludwig Wittgenstein", Encounter (August 1977) Page 20.
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Ludwig_Wittgenstein
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Ludwig Wittgenstein
1889 – 1951
österreichischer Philosoph
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