広島大学大学院教育学研究科紀要. 第三部, 教育人間科学関連領域 Issue 58
published_at 2009-12-25

感覚表現における言語ゲームの可変性 : ウィトゲンシュタイン「私的言語」論に注目して

Variability of the Language Games of Expressing Sensations : Focusing on Wittgenstein's "Private Language" Argument
Hirata Yoshitsugu
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BullGradSchEduc-HiroshimaUniv-Part3_58_97.pdf
Abstract
The purpose of this paper is, by focusing on Wittgenstein's "Private Language" argument, to demonstrate that Wittgenstein's philosophy does not approve of conformism. Philosophers of education have studied Wittgenstein's philosophy in terms of Wittgenstein' s Rule Following Considerations. According to these studies, education as initiation into a language game is that educators train learners to imitate those who follow established rules; Wittgenstein's philosophy approves of conformism. However, these studies failed to see the significance of Wittgenstein's "Private Language" argument because they have given much attention to Wittgenstein's Rule Following Considerations. His argument points out two kinds of rules: the First Person Authority and the Third Person Norm, and indicates the possibility of discrepancy between them. In dissolving the discrepancy, the First Person Authority and the Third Person Norm can alter each other gradually. This alteration suggests variability of the language games in expressing sensations. His argument clarifies the possibilities of the variability. Education as initiation into a language game is training learners not to imitate those who follow established rules, but to become members who share the varying processes of language games with others.
Keywords
Private Language argument
First Person Authority
Third Person Norm
discrepancy
variability
「私的言語」論
一人称権威
三人称規範
矛盾
可変性