<!DOCTYPE book SYSTEM "book.dtd">
<book>
 <head>
  <title>Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus</title>
  <date>1918</date>
  <author>Ludwig Wittgenstein</author>
  <source>Produced by Matthew Stapleton</source>
  <id>5740</id>
  <language>English</language>
  <posted>June 11, 2009</posted>
  <always>
   <p>This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
      almost no restrictions whatsoever.  You may copy it, give it away or
      re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
      with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
   </p>
  </always>
 </head>
 <body>
  <title>TRACTATUS LOGICO-PHILOSOPHICUS</title>
  <date>1918</date>
  <author>Ludwig Wittgenstein</author>
  <preface>
   <p>Perhaps this book will be understood only by someone who has
      himself already had the thoughts that are expressed in it&mdash;or
      at least similar thoughts.&mdash;So it is not a
      textbook.&mdash;Its purpose would be achieved if it gave pleasure
      to one person who read and understood it.
   </p>
   <p>The book deals with the problems of philosophy, and shows, I
      believe, that the reason why these problems are posed is that the
      logic of our language is misunderstood.  The whole sense of the
      book might be summed up the following words:  what can be said at
      all can be said clearly, and what we cannot talk about we must
      pass over in silence.
   </p>
   <p>Thus the aim of the book is to draw a limit to thought, or
      rather&mdash;not to thought, but to the expression of thoughts:
      for in order to be able to draw a limit to thought, we should have
      to find both sides of the limit thinkable (i.e. we should have to
      be able to think what cannot be thought).
   </p>
   <p>It will therefore only be in language that the limit can be drawn,
      and what lies on the other side of the limit will simply be nonsense.
   </p>
   <p>I do not wish to judge how far my efforts coincide with those of
      other philosophers.  Indeed, what I have written here makes no
      claim to novelty in detail, and the reason why I give no sources
      is that it is a matter of indifference to me whether the thoughts
      that I have had have been anticipated by someone else.
   </p>
   <p>I will only mention that I am indebted to Frege's great works and
      to the writings of my friend Mr Bertrand Russell for much of the
      stimulation of my thoughts.
   </p>
   <p>If this work has any value, it consists in two things:  the first
      is that thoughts are expressed in it, and on this score the better
      the thoughts are expressed&mdash;the more the nail has been hit on
      the head&mdash;the greater will be its value.&mdash;Here I am
      conscious of having fallen a long way short of what is possible.
      Simply because my powers are too slight for the accomplishment of
      the task.&mdash;May others come and do it better.
   </p>
   <p>On the other hand the truth of the thoughts that are here
      communicated seems to me unassailable and definitive.  I therefore
      believe myself to have found, on all essential points, the final
      solution of the problems.  And if I am not mistaken in this
      belief, then the second thing in which the of this work consists
      is that it shows how little is achieved when these problems are solved.
   </p>
   <p>L.W. Vienna, 1918</p>
 </preface>
 <chapter>
  <title>1. The world is all that is the case.</title>
   <p>1.1 The world is the totality of facts, not of things.
   </p>
   <p>1.11 The world is determined by the facts, and by their being all the facts.
   </p>
   <p>1.12 For the totality of facts determines what is the case, and also
      whatever is not the case.
   </p>
   <p>1.13 The facts in logical space are the world.
   </p>
   <p>1.2 The world divides into facts.
   </p>
   <p>1.21 Each item can be the case or not the case while everything else
      remains the same.
   </p>
 </chapter>
 <chapter>
  <title>2.  What is the case&mdash;a fact&mdash;is the existence of
            states of affairs.</title>
   <p>2.01 A state of affairs (a state of things) is a combination of objects
      (things).
   </p>
   <p>2.011 It is essential to things that they should be possible
      constituents of states of affairs.
   </p>
   <p>2.012 In logic nothing is accidental: if a thing can occur in a state
      of affairs, the possibility of the state of affairs must be written into
      the thing itself.
   </p>
   <p>2.0121 It would seem to be a sort of accident, if it turned out that
      a situation would fit a thing that could already exist entirely on its
      own. If things can occur in states of affairs, this possibility must
      be in them from the beginning. (Nothing in the province of logic can
      be merely possible. Logic deals with every possibility and all
      possibilities are its facts.) Just as we are quite unable to imagine
      spatial objects outside space or temporal objects outside time, so too
      there is no object that we can imagine excluded from the possibility of
      combining with others. If I can imagine objects combined in states of
      affairs, I cannot imagine them excluded from the possibility of such
      combinations.
   </p>
   <p>2.0122 Things are independent in so far as they can occur in all
      possible situations, but this form of independence is a form of
      connexion with states of affairs, a form of dependence. (It is
      impossible for words to appear in two different roles: by themselves,
      and in propositions.)
   </p>
   <p>2.0123 If I know an object I also know all its possible occurrences in
      states of affairs. (Every one of these possibilities must be part of the
      nature of the object.) A new possibility cannot be discovered later.
   </p>
   <p>2.01231 If I am to know an object, thought I need not know its external
      properties, I must know all its internal properties.
   </p>
   <p>2.0124 If all objects are given, then at the same time all possible
      states of affairs are also given.
   </p>
   <p>2.013 Each thing is, as it were, in a space of possible states of
      affairs. This space I can imagine empty, but I cannot imagine the thing
      without the space.
   </p>
   <p>2.0131 A spatial object must be situated in infinite space. (A spatial
      point is an argument-place.) A speck in the visual field, thought it
      need not be red, must have some colour: it is, so to speak, surrounded
      by colour-space. Notes must have some pitch, objects of the sense of
      touch some degree of hardness, and so on.
   </p>
   <p>2.014 Objects contain the possibility of all situations.
   </p>
   <p>2.0141 The possibility of its occurring in states of affairs is the form
      of an object.
   </p>
   <p>2.02 Objects are simple.
   </p>
   <p>2.0201 Every statement about complexes can be resolved into a statement
      about their constituents and into the propositions that describe the
      complexes completely.
   </p>
   <p>2.021 Objects make up the substance of the world. That is why they
      cannot be composite.
   </p>
   <p>2.0211 If they world had no substance, then whether a proposition had
      sense would depend on whether another proposition was true.
   </p>
   <p>2.0212 In that case we could not sketch any picture of the world (true
      or false).
   </p>
   <p>2.022 It is obvious that an imagined world, however difference it may be
      from the real one, must have something&mdash;a form&mdash;in common with it.
   </p>
   <p>2.023 Objects are just what constitute this unalterable form.
   </p>
   <p>2.0231 The substance of the world can only determine a form, and not
      any material properties. For it is only by means of propositions that
      material properties are represented&mdash;only by the configuration of
      objects that they are produced.
   </p>
   <p>2.0232 In a manner of speaking, objects are colourless.
   </p>
   <p>2.0233 If two objects have the same logical form, the only distinction
      between them, apart from their external properties, is that they are
      different.
   </p>
   <p>2.02331 Either a thing has properties that nothing else has, in which
      case we can immediately use a description to distinguish it from the
      others and refer to it; or, on the other hand, there are several things
      that have the whole set of their properties in common, in which case it
      is quite impossible to indicate one of them. For it there is nothing to
      distinguish a thing, I cannot distinguish it, since otherwise it would
      be distinguished after all.
   </p>
   <p>2.024 The substance is what subsists independently of what is the case.
   </p>
   <p>2.025 It is form and content.
   </p>
   <p>2.0251 Space, time, colour (being coloured) are forms of objects.
   </p>
   <p>2.026 There must be objects, if the world is to have unalterable form.
   </p>
   <p>2.027 Objects, the unalterable, and the subsistent are one and the same.
   </p>
   <p>2.0271 Objects are what is unalterable and subsistent; their
      configuration is what is changing and unstable.
   </p>
   <p>2.0272 The configuration of objects produces states of affairs.
   </p>
   <p>2.03 In a state of affairs objects fit into one another like the links
      of a chain.
   </p>
   <p>2.031 In a state of affairs objects stand in a determinate relation to
      one another.
   </p>
   <p>2.032 The determinate way in which objects are connected in a state of
      affairs is the structure of the state of affairs.
   </p>
   <p>2.033 Form is the possibility of structure.
   </p>
   <p>2.034 The structure of a fact consists of the structures of states of
      affairs.
   </p>
   <p>2.04 The totality of existing states of affairs is the world.
   </p>
   <p>2.05 The totality of existing states of affairs also determines which
      states of affairs do not exist.
   </p>
   <p>2.06 The existence and non-existence of states of affairs is reality.
      (We call the existence of states of affairs a positive fact, and their
      non-existence a negative fact.)
   </p>
   <p>2.061 States of affairs are independent of one another.
   </p>
   <p>2.062 From the existence or non-existence of one state of affairs it is
      impossible to infer the existence or non-existence of another.
   </p>
   <p>2.063 The sum-total of reality is the world.
   </p>
   <p>2.1 We picture facts to ourselves.
   </p>
   <p>2.11 A picture presents a situation in logical space, the existence and
      non-existence of states of affairs.
   </p>
   <p>2.12 A picture is a model of reality.
   </p>
   <p>2.13 In a picture objects have the elements of the picture corresponding
      to them.
   </p>
   <p>2.131 In a picture the elements of the picture are the representatives
      of objects.
   </p>
   <p>2.14 What constitutes a picture is that its elements are related to one
      another in a determinate way.
   </p>
   <p>2.141 A picture is a fact.
   </p>
   <p>2.15 The fact that the elements of a picture are related to one another
      in a determinate way represents that things are related to one another
      in the same way. Let us call this connexion of its elements the
      structure of the picture, and let us call the possibility of this
      structure the pictorial form of the picture.
   </p>
   <p>2.151 Pictorial form is the possibility that things are related to one
      another in the same way as the elements of the picture.
   </p>
   <p>2.1511 That is how a picture is attached to reality; it reaches right
      out to it.
   </p>
   <p>2.1512 It is laid against reality like a measure.
   </p>
   <p>2.15121 Only the end-points of the graduating lines actually touch the
      object that is to be measured.
   </p>
   <p>2.1514 So a picture, conceived in this way, also includes the pictorial
      relationship, which makes it into a picture.
   </p>
   <p>2.1515 These correlations are, as it were, the feelers of the picture's
      elements, with which the picture touches reality.
   </p>
   <p>2.16 If a fact is to be a picture, it must have something in common with
      what it depicts.
   </p>
   <p>2.161 There must be something identical in a picture and what it
      depicts, to enable the one to be a picture of the other at all.
   </p>
   <p>2.17 What a picture must have in common with reality, in order to be
      able to depict it&mdash;correctly or incorrectly&mdash;in the way that it does, is
      its pictorial form.
   </p>
   <p>2.171 A picture can depict any reality whose form it has. A spatial
      picture can depict anything spatial, a coloured one anything coloured,
      etc.
   </p>
   <p>2.172 A picture cannot, however, depict its pictorial form: it displays
      it.
   </p>
   <p>2.173 A picture represents its subject from a position outside it.
      (Its standpoint is its representational form.) That is why a picture
      represents its subject correctly or incorrectly.
   </p>
   <p>2.174 A picture cannot, however, place itself outside its
      representational form.
   </p>
   <p>2.18 What any picture, of whatever form, must have in common with
      reality, in order to be able to depict it&mdash;correctly or incorrectly&mdash;in
      any way at all, is logical form, i.e. the form of reality.
   </p>
   <p>2.181 A picture whose pictorial form is logical form is called a logical
      picture.
   </p>
   <p>2.182 Every picture is at the same time a logical one. (On the other
      hand, not every picture is, for example, a spatial one.)
   </p>
   <p>2.19 Logical pictures can depict the world.
   </p>
   <p>2.2 A picture has logico-pictorial form in common with what it depicts.
   </p>
   <p>2.201 A picture depicts reality by representing a possibility of
      existence and non-existence of states of affairs.
   </p>
   <p>2.202 A picture contains the possibility of the situation that it
      represents.
   </p>
   <p>2.203 A picture agrees with reality or fails to agree; it is correct or
      incorrect, true or false.
   </p>
   <p>2.22 What a picture represents it represents independently of its truth
      or falsity, by means of its pictorial form.
   </p>
   <p>2.221 What a picture represents is its sense.
   </p>
   <p>2.222 The agreement or disagreement or its sense with reality
      constitutes its truth or falsity.
   </p>
   <p>2.223 In order to tell whether a picture is true or false we must
      compare it with reality.
   </p>
   <p>2.224 It is impossible to tell from the picture alone whether it is true
      or false.
   </p>
   <p>2.225 There are no pictures that are true a priori.
   </p>
  </chapter>
  <chapter>
   <title>3. A logical picture of facts is a thought.</title>
   <p>3.001 'A state of affairs is thinkable': what this means is that we can
      picture it to ourselves.
   </p>
   <p>3.01 The totality of true thoughts is a picture of the world.
   </p>
   <p>3.02 A thought contains the possibility of the situation of which it is
      the thought. What is thinkable is possible too.
   </p>
   <p>3.03 Thought can never be of anything illogical, since, if it were, we
      should have to think illogically.
   </p>
   <p>3.031 It used to be said that God could create anything except what
      would be contrary to the laws of logic. The truth is that we could not
      say what an 'illogical' world would look like.
   </p>
   <p>3.032 It is as impossible to represent in language anything that
      'contradicts logic' as it is in geometry to represent by its coordinates
      a figure that contradicts the laws of space, or to give the coordinates
      of a point that does not exist.
   </p>
   <p>3.0321 Though a state of affairs that would contravene the laws of
      physics can be represented by us spatially, one that would contravene
      the laws of geometry cannot.
   </p>
   <p>3.04 If a thought were correct a priori, it would be a thought whose
      possibility ensured its truth.
   </p>
   <p>3.05 A priori knowledge that a thought was true would be possible only
      it its truth were recognizable from the thought itself (without anything
      a to compare it with).
   </p>
   <p>3.1 In a proposition a thought finds an expression that can be perceived
      by the senses.
   </p>
   <p>3.11 We use the perceptible sign of a proposition (spoken or written,
      etc.) as a projection of a possible situation. The method of projection
      is to think of the sense of the proposition.
   </p>
   <p>3.12 I call the sign with which we express a thought a propositional
      sign. And a proposition is a propositional sign in its projective
      relation to the world.
   </p>
   <p>3.13 A proposition, therefore, does not actually contain its sense,
      but does contain the possibility of expressing it. ('The content of
      a proposition' means the content of a proposition that has sense.) A
      proposition contains the form, but not the content, of its sense.
   </p>
   <p>3.14 What constitutes a propositional sign is that in its elements (the
      words) stand in a determinate relation to one another. A propositional
      sign is a fact.
   </p>
   <p>3.141 A proposition is not a blend of words.(Just as a theme in music is
      not a blend of notes.) A proposition is articulate.
   </p>
   <p>3.142 Only facts can express a sense, a set of names cannot.
   </p>
   <p>3.143 Although a propositional sign is a fact, this is obscured by
      the usual form of expression in writing or print. For in a printed
      proposition, for example, no essential difference is apparent between a
      propositional sign and a word. (That is what made it possible for Frege
      to call a proposition a composite name.)
   </p>
   <p>3.1431 The essence of a propositional sign is very clearly seen if we
      imagine one composed of spatial objects (such as tables, chairs, and
      books) instead of written signs.
   </p>
   <p>3.1432 Instead of, 'The complex sign "aRb" says that a stands to b in
      the relation R' we ought to put, 'That "a" stands to "b" in a certain
      relation says that aRb.'
   </p>
   <p>3.144 Situations can be described but not given names.
   </p>
   <p>3.2 In a proposition a thought can be expressed in such a way that
      elements of the propositional sign correspond to the objects of the
      thought.
   </p>
   <p>3.201 I call such elements 'simple signs', and such a proposition
      'complete analysed'.
   </p>
   <p>3.202 The simple signs employed in propositions are called names.
   </p>
   <p>3.203 A name means an object. The object is its meaning. ('A' is the
      same sign as 'A'.)
   </p>
   <p>3.21 The configuration of objects in a situation corresponds to the
      configuration of simple signs in the propositional sign.
   </p>
   <p>3.221 Objects can only be named. Signs are their representatives. I can
      only speak about them: I cannot put them into words. Propositions can
      only say how things are, not what they are.
   </p>
   <p>3.23 The requirement that simple signs be possible is the requirement
      that sense be determinate.
   </p>
   <p>3.24 A proposition about a complex stands in an internal relation to a
      proposition about a constituent of the complex. A complex can be given
      only by its description, which will be right or wrong. A proposition
      that mentions a complex will not be nonsensical, if the complex does
      not exits, but simply false. When a propositional element signifies a
      complex, this can be seen from an indeterminateness in the propositions
      in which it occurs. In such cases we know that the proposition leaves
      something undetermined. (In fact the notation for generality contains
      a prototype.) The contraction of a symbol for a complex into a simple
      symbol can be expressed in a definition.
   </p>
   <p>3.25 A proposition cannot be dissected any further by means of a
      definition: it is a primitive sign.
   </p>
   <p>3.261 Every sign that has a definition signifies via the signs that
      serve to define it; and the definitions point the way. Two signs cannot
      signify in the same manner if one is primitive and the other is defined
      by means of primitive signs. Names cannot be anatomized by means of
      definitions. (Nor can any sign that has a meaning independently and on
      its own.)
   </p>
   <p>3.262 What signs fail to express, their application shows. What signs
      slur over, their application says clearly.
   </p>
   <p>3.263 The meanings of primitive signs can be explained by means of
      elucidations. Elucidations are propositions that stood if the meanings
      of those signs are already known.
   </p>
   <p>3.3 Only propositions have sense; only in the nexus of a proposition
      does a name have meaning.
   </p>
   <p>3.31 I call any part of a proposition that characterizes its sense
      an expression (or a symbol). (A proposition is itself an expression.)
      Everything essential to their sense that propositions can have in common
      with one another is an expression. An expression is the mark of a form
      and a content.
   </p>
   <p>3.311 An expression presupposes the forms of all the propositions in
      which it can occur. It is the common characteristic mark of a class of
      propositions.
   </p>
   <p>3.312 It is therefore presented by means of the general form of the
      propositions that it characterizes. In fact, in this form the expression
      will be constant and everything else variable.
   </p>
   <p>3.313 Thus an expression is presented by means of a variable whose
      values are the propositions that contain the expression. (In the
      limiting case the variable becomes a constant, the expression becomes a
      proposition.) I call such a variable a 'propositional variable'.
   </p>
   <p>3.314 An expression has meaning only in a proposition. All variables can
      be construed as propositional variables. (Even variable names.)
   </p>
   <p>3.315 If we turn a constituent of a proposition into a variable, there
      is a class of propositions all of which are values of the resulting
      variable proposition. In general, this class too will be dependent on
      the meaning that our arbitrary conventions have given to parts of the
      original proposition. But if all the signs in it that have arbitrarily
      determined meanings are turned into variables, we shall still get
      a class of this kind. This one, however, is not dependent on any
      convention, but solely on the nature of the pro position. It corresponds
      to a logical form&mdash;a logical prototype.
   </p>
   <p>3.316 What values a propositional variable may take is something that is
      stipulated. The stipulation of values is the variable.
   </p>
   <p>3.317 To stipulate values for a propositional variable is to give
      the propositions whose common characteristic the variable is. The
      stipulation is a description of those propositions. The stipulation will
      therefore be concerned only with symbols, not with their meaning. And
      the only thing essential to the stipulation is that it is merely a
      description of symbols and states nothing about what is signified. How
      the description of the propositions is produced is not essential.
   </p>
   <p>3.318 Like Frege and Russell I construe a proposition as a function of
      the expressions contained in it.
   </p>
   <p>3.32 A sign is what can be perceived of a symbol.
   </p>
   <p>3.321 So one and the same sign (written or spoken, etc.) can be common
      to two different symbols&mdash;in which case they will signify in different
      ways.
   </p>
   <p>3.322 Our use of the same sign to signify two different objects can
      never indicate a common characteristic of the two, if we use it with two
      different modes of signification. For the sign, of course, is arbitrary.
      So we could choose two different signs instead, and then what would be
      left in common on the signifying side?
   </p>
   <p>3.323 In everyday language it very frequently happens that the same
      word has different modes of signification&mdash;and so belongs to different
      symbols&mdash;or that two words that have different modes of signification
      are employed in propositions in what is superficially the same way. Thus
      the word 'is' figures as the copula, as a sign for identity, and as an
      expression for existence; 'exist' figures as an intransitive verb like
      'go', and 'identical' as an adjective; we speak of something, but also
      of something's happening. (In the proposition, 'Green is green'&mdash;where
      the first word is the proper name of a person and the last an
      adjective&mdash;these words do not merely have different meanings: they are
      different symbols.)
   </p>
   <p>3.324 In this way the most fundamental confusions are easily produced
      (the whole of philosophy is full of them).
   </p>
   <p>3.325 In order to avoid such errors we must make use of a sign-language
      that excludes them by not using the same sign for different symbols and
      by not using in a superficially similar way signs that have different
      modes of signification: that is to say, a sign-language that is governed
      by logical grammar&mdash;by logical syntax. (The conceptual notation of Frege
      and Russell is such a language, though, it is true, it fails to exclude
      all mistakes.)
   </p>
   <p>3.326 In order to recognize a symbol by its sign we must observe how it
      is used with a sense.
   </p>
   <p>3.327 A sign does not determine a logical form unless it is taken
      together with its logico-syntactical employment.
   </p>
   <p>3.328 If a sign is useless, it is meaningless. That is the point of
      Occam's maxim. (If everything behaves as if a sign had meaning, then it
      does have meaning.)
   </p>
   <p>3.33 In logical syntax the meaning of a sign should never play a role.
      It must be possible to establish logical syntax without mentioning
      the meaning of a sign: only the description of expressions may be
      presupposed.
   </p>
   <p>3.331 From this observation we turn to Russell's 'theory of types'. It
      can be seen that Russell must be wrong, because he had to mention the
      meaning of signs when establishing the rules for them.
   </p>
   <p>3.332 No proposition can make a statement about itself, because a
      propositional sign cannot be contained in itself (that is the whole of
      the 'theory of types').
   </p>
   <p>3.333 The reason why a function cannot be its own argument is that the
      sign for a function already contains the prototype of its argument, and
      it cannot contain itself. For let us suppose that the function F(fx)
      could be its own argument: in that case there would be a proposition
      'F(F(fx))', in which the outer function F and the inner function F must
      have different meanings, since the inner one has the form O(f(x)) and
      the outer one has the form Y(O(fx)). Only the letter 'F' is common to
      the two functions, but the letter by itself signifies nothing. This
      immediately becomes clear if instead of 'F(Fu)' we write '(do): F(Ou).
      Ou = Fu'. That disposes of Russell's paradox.
   </p>
   <p>3.334 The rules of logical syntax must go without saying, once we know
      how each individual sign signifies.
   </p>
   <p>3.34 A proposition possesses essential and accidental features.
      Accidental features are those that result from the particular way in
      which the propositional sign is produced. Essential features are those
      without which the proposition could not express its sense.
   </p>
   <p>3.341 So what is essential in a proposition is what all propositions
      that can express the same sense have in common. And similarly, in
      general, what is essential in a symbol is what all symbols that can
      serve the same purpose have in common.
   </p>
   <p>3.3411 So one could say that the real name of an object was what all
      symbols that signified it had in common. Thus, one by one, all kinds of
      composition would prove to be unessential to a name.
   </p>
   <p>3.342 Although there is something arbitrary in our notations, this much
      is not arbitrary&mdash;that when we have determined one thing arbitrarily,
      something else is necessarily the case. (This derives from the essence
      of notation.)
   </p>
   <p>3.3421 A particular mode of signifying may be unimportant but it is
      always important that it is a possible mode of signifying. And that is
      generally so in philosophy: again and again the individual case turns
      out to be unimportant, but the possibility of each individual case
      discloses something about the essence of the world.
   </p>
   <p>3.343 Definitions are rules for translating from one language into
      another. Any correct sign-language must be translatable into any other
      in accordance with such rules: it is this that they all have in common.
   </p>
   <p>3.344 What signifies in a symbol is what is common to all the symbols
      that the rules of logical syntax allow us to substitute for it.
   </p>
   <p>3.3441 For instance, we can express what is common to all notations
      for truth-functions in the following way: they have in common that, for
      example, the notation that uses 'Pp' ('not p') and 'p C g' ('p or g')
      can be substituted for any of them. (This serves to characterize the
      way in which something general can be disclosed by the possibility of a
      specific notation.)
   </p>
   <p>3.3442 Nor does analysis resolve the sign for a complex in an arbitrary
      way, so that it would have a different resolution every time that it was
      incorporated in a different proposition.
   </p>
   <p>3.4 A proposition determines a place in logical space. The existence
      of this logical place is guaranteed by the mere existence of the
      constituents&mdash;by the existence of the proposition with a sense.
   </p>
   <p>3.41 The propositional sign with logical coordinates&mdash;that is the
      logical place.
   </p>
   <p>3.411 In geometry and logic alike a place is a possibility: something
      can exist in it.
   </p>
   <p>3.42 A proposition can determine only one place in logical space:
      nevertheless the whole of logical space must already be given by it.
      (Otherwise negation, logical sum, logical product, etc., would introduce
      more and more new elements in co-ordination.) (The logical scaffolding
      surrounding a picture determines logical space. The force of a
      proposition reaches through the whole of logical space.)
   </p>
   <p>3.5 A propositional sign, applied and thought out, is a thought.
   </p>
  </chapter>
  <chapter>
   <title>4. A thought is a proposition with a sense.</title>
   <p>4.001 The totality of propositions is language.
   </p>
   <p>4.022 Man possesses the ability to construct languages capable of
      expressing every sense, without having any idea how each word has
      meaning or what its meaning is&mdash;just as people speak without knowing how
      the individual sounds are produced. Everyday language is a part of the
      human organism and is no less complicated than it. It is not humanly
      possible to gather immediately from it what the logic of language is.
      Language disguises thought. So much so, that from the outward form of
      the clothing it is impossible to infer the form of the thought beneath
      it, because the outward form of the clothing is not designed to reveal
      the form of the body, but for entirely different purposes. The tacit
      conventions on which the understanding of everyday language depends are
      enormously complicated.
   </p>
   <p>4.003 Most of the propositions and questions to be found in
      philosophical works are not false but nonsensical. Consequently we
      cannot give any answer to questions of this kind, but can only point
      out that they are nonsensical. Most of the propositions and questions
      of philosophers arise from our failure to understand the logic of our
      language. (They belong to the same class as the question whether the
      good is more or less identical than the beautiful.) And it is not
      surprising that the deepest problems are in fact not problems at all.
   </p>
   <p>4.0031 All philosophy is a 'critique of language' (though not in
      Mauthner's sense). It was Russell who performed the service of showing
      that the apparent logical form of a proposition need not be its real
      one.
   </p>
   <p>4.01 A proposition is a picture of reality. A proposition is a model of
      reality as we imagine it.
   </p>
   <p>4.011 At first sight a proposition&mdash;one set out on the printed page, for
      example&mdash;does not seem to be a picture of the reality with which it
      is concerned. But neither do written notes seem at first sight to be a
      picture of a piece of music, nor our phonetic notation (the alphabet)
      to be a picture of our speech. And yet these sign-languages prove to be
      pictures, even in the ordinary sense, of what they represent.
   </p>
   <p>4.012 It is obvious that a proposition of the form 'aRb' strikes us as
      a picture. In this case the sign is obviously a likeness of what is
      signified.
   </p>
   <p>4.013 And if we penetrate to the essence of this pictorial character, we
      see that it is not impaired by apparent irregularities (such as the
      use [sharp] of and [flat] in musical notation). For even these
      irregularities depict what they are intended to express; only they do it
      in a different way.
   </p>
   <p>4.014 A gramophone record, the musical idea, the written notes, and the
      sound-waves, all stand to one another in the same internal relation
      of depicting that holds between language and the world. They are all
      constructed according to a common logical pattern. (Like the two youths
      in the fairy-tale, their two horses, and their lilies. They are all in a
      certain sense one.)
   </p>
   <p>4.0141 There is a general rule by means of which the musician can obtain
      the symphony from the score, and which makes it possible to derive the
      symphony from the groove on the gramophone record, and, using the first
      rule, to derive the score again. That is what constitutes the inner
      similarity between these things which seem to be constructed in such
      entirely different ways. And that rule is the law of projection which
      projects the symphony into the language of musical notation. It is
      the rule for translating this language into the language of gramophone
      records.
   </p>
   <p>4.015 The possibility of all imagery, of all our pictorial modes of
      expression, is contained in the logic of depiction.
   </p>
   <p>4.016 In order to understand the essential nature of a proposition, we
      should consider hieroglyphic script, which depicts the facts that it
      describes. And alphabetic script developed out of it without losing what
      was essential to depiction.
   </p>
   <p>4.02 We can see this from the fact that we understand the sense of a
      propositional sign without its having been explained to us.
   </p>
   <p>4.021 A proposition is a picture of reality: for if I understand a
      proposition, I know the situation that it represents. And I understand
      the proposition without having had its sense explained to me.
   </p>
   <p>4.022 A proposition shows its sense. A proposition shows how things
      stand if it is true. And it says that they do so stand.
   </p>
   <p>4.023 A proposition must restrict reality to two alternatives: yes
      or no. In order to do that, it must describe reality completely.
      A proposition is a description of a state of affairs. Just as a
      description of an object describes it by giving its external properties,
      so a proposition describes reality by its internal properties. A
      proposition constructs a world with the help of a logical scaffolding,
      so that one can actually see from the proposition how everything
      stands logically if it is true. One can draw inferences from a false
      proposition.
   </p>
   <p>4.024 To understand a proposition means to know what is the case if it
      is true. (One can understand it, therefore, without knowing whether it
      is true.) It is understood by anyone who understands its constituents.
   </p>
   <p>4.025 When translating one language into another, we do not proceed by
      translating each proposition of the one into a proposition of the other,
      but merely by translating the constituents of propositions. (And the
      dictionary translates not only substantives, but also verbs, adjectives,
      and conjunctions, etc.; and it treats them all in the same way.)
   </p>
   <p>4.026 The meanings of simple signs (words) must be explained to us if
      we are to understand them. With propositions, however, we make ourselves
      understood.
   </p>
   <p>4.027 It belongs to the essence of a proposition that it should be able
      to communicate a new sense to us.
   </p>
   <p>4.03 A proposition must use old expressions to communicate a new
      sense. A proposition communicates a situation to us, and so it must be
      essentially connected with the situation. And the connexion is precisely
      that it is its logical picture. A proposition states something only in
      so far as it is a picture.
   </p>
   <p>4.031 In a proposition a situation is, as it were, constructed by way of
      experiment. Instead of, 'This proposition has such and such a sense, we
      can simply say, 'This proposition represents such and such a situation'.
   </p>
   <p>4.0311 One name stands for one thing, another for another thing, and
      they are combined with one another. In this way the whole group&mdash;like a
      tableau vivant&mdash;presents a state of affairs.
   </p>
   <p>4.0312 The possibility of propositions is based on the principle that
      objects have signs as their representatives. My fundamental idea is that
      the 'logical constants' are not representatives; that there can be no
      representatives of the logic of facts.
   </p>
   <p>4.032 It is only in so far as a proposition is logically articulated
      that it is a picture of a situation. (Even the proposition, 'Ambulo',
      is composite: for its stem with a different ending yields a different
      sense, and so does its ending with a different stem.)
   </p>
   <p>4.04 In a proposition there must be exactly as many distinguishable
      parts as in the situation that it represents. The two must possess the
      same logical (mathematical) multiplicity. (Compare Hertz's Mechanics on
      dynamical models.)
   </p>
   <p>4.041 This mathematical multiplicity, of course, cannot itself be the
      subject of depiction. One cannot get away from it when depicting.
   </p>
   <p>4.0411. If, for example, we wanted to express what we now write as '(x).
      fx' by putting an affix in front of 'fx'&mdash;for instance by writing
      'Gen. fx'&mdash;it would not be adequate: we should not know what was
      being generalized. If we wanted to signalize it with an affix 'g'&mdash;for
      instance by writing 'f(xg)'&mdash;that would not be adequate either: we
      should not know the scope of the generality-sign. If we were to try to
      do it by introducing a mark into the argument-places&mdash;for instance by
      writing '(G,G). F(G,G)' &mdash;it would not be adequate: we should not be
      able to establish the identity of the variables. And so on. All these
      modes of signifying are inadequate because they lack the necessary
      mathematical multiplicity.
   </p>
   <p>4.0412 For the same reason the idealist's appeal to 'spatial spectacles'
      is inadequate to explain the seeing of spatial relations, because it
      cannot explain the multiplicity of these relations.
   </p>
   <p>4.05 Reality is compared with propositions.
   </p>
   <p>4.06 A proposition can be true or false only in virtue of being a
      picture of reality.
   </p>
   <p>4.061 It must not be overlooked that a proposition has a sense that is
      independent of the facts: otherwise one can easily suppose that true and
      false are relations of equal status between signs and what they signify.
      In that case one could say, for example, that 'p' signified in the true
      way what 'Pp' signified in the false way, etc.
   </p>
   <p>4.062 Can we not make ourselves understood with false propositions just
      as we have done up till now with true ones?&mdash;So long as it is known that
      they are meant to be false.&mdash;No! For a proposition is true if we use it
      to say that things stand in a certain way, and they do; and if by 'p' we
      mean Pp and things stand as we mean that they do, then, construed in the
      new way, 'p' is true and not false.
   </p>
   <p>4.0621 But it is important that the signs 'p' and 'Pp' can say the same
      thing. For it shows that nothing in reality corresponds to the sign
      'P'. The occurrence of negation in a proposition is not enough to
      characterize its sense (PPp = p). The propositions 'p' and 'Pp' have
      opposite sense, but there corresponds to them one and the same reality.
   </p>
   <p>4.063 An analogy to illustrate the concept of truth: imagine a black
      spot on white paper: you can describe the shape of the spot by saying,
      for each point on the sheet, whether it is black or white. To the fact
      that a point is black there corresponds a positive fact, and to the fact
      that a point is white (not black), a negative fact. If I designate
      a point on the sheet (a truth-value according to Frege), then this
      corresponds to the supposition that is put forward for judgement, etc.
      etc. But in order to be able to say that a point is black or white, I
      must first know when a point is called black, and when white: in order
      to be able to say,'"p" is true (or false)', I must have determined in
      what circumstances I call 'p' true, and in so doing I determine the
      sense of the proposition. Now the point where the simile breaks down is
      this: we can indicate a point on the paper even if we do not know
      what black and white are, but if a proposition has no sense, nothing
      corresponds to it, since it does not designate a thing (a truth-value)
      which might have properties called 'false' or 'true'. The verb of a
      proposition is not 'is true' or 'is false', as Frege thought: rather,
      that which 'is true' must already contain the verb.
   </p>
   <p>4.064 Every proposition must already have a sense: it cannot be given a
      sense by affirmation. Indeed its sense is just what is affirmed. And the
      same applies to negation, etc.
   </p>
   <p>4.0641 One could say that negation must be related to the logical
      place determined by the negated proposition. The negating proposition
      determines a logical place different from that of the negated
      proposition. The negating proposition determines a logical place
      with the help of the logical place of the negated proposition. For it
      describes it as lying outside the latter's logical place. The negated
      proposition can be negated again, and this in itself shows that what
      is negated is already a proposition, and not merely something that is
      preliminary to a proposition.
   </p>
   <p>4.1 Propositions represent the existence and non-existence of states of
      affairs.
   </p>
   <p>4.11 The totality of true propositions is the whole of natural science
      (or the whole corpus of the natural sciences).
   </p>
   <p>4.111 Philosophy is not one of the natural sciences. (The word
      'philosophy' must mean something whose place is above or below the
      natural sciences, not beside them.)
   </p>
   <p>4.112 Philosophy aims at the logical clarification of thoughts.
      Philosophy is not a body of doctrine but an activity. A philosophical
      work consists essentially of elucidations. Philosophy does not result
      in 'philosophical propositions', but rather in the clarification of
      propositions. Without philosophy thoughts are, as it were, cloudy
      and indistinct: its task is to make them clear and to give them sharp
      boundaries.
   </p>
   <p>4.1121 Psychology is no more closely related to philosophy than
      any other natural science. Theory of knowledge is the philosophy of
      psychology. Does not my study of sign-language correspond to the study
      of thought-processes, which philosophers used to consider so essential
      to the philosophy of logic? Only in most cases they got entangled in
      unessential psychological investigations, and with my method too there
      is an analogous risk.
   </p>
   <p>4.1122 Darwin's theory has no more to do with philosophy than any other
      hypothesis in natural science.
   </p>
   <p>4.113 Philosophy sets limits to the much disputed sphere of natural
      science.
   </p>
   <p>4.114 It must set limits to what can be thought; and, in doing so, to
      what cannot be thought. It must set limits to what cannot be thought by
      working outwards through what can be thought.
   </p>
   <p>4.115 It will signify what cannot be said, by presenting clearly what
      can be said.
   </p>
   <p>4.116 Everything that can be thought at all can be thought clearly.
      Everything that can be put into words can be put clearly. 4.12
      Propositions can represent the whole of reality, but they cannot
      represent what they must have in common with reality in order to be able
      to represent it&mdash;logical form. In order to be able to represent logical
      form, we should have to be able to station ourselves with propositions
      somewhere outside logic, that is to say outside the world.
   </p>
   <p>4.121 Propositions cannot represent logical form: it is mirrored in
      them. What finds its reflection in language, language cannot represent.
      What expresses itself in language, we cannot express by means of
      language. Propositions show the logical form of reality. They display
      it.
   </p>
   <p>4.1211 Thus one proposition 'fa' shows that the object a occurs in
      its sense, two propositions 'fa' and 'ga' show that the same object is
      mentioned in both of them. If two propositions contradict one another,
      then their structure shows it; the same is true if one of them follows
      from the other. And so on.
   </p>
   <p>4.1212 What can be shown, cannot be said.
   </p>
   <p>4.1213 Now, too, we understand our feeling that once we have a
      sign-language in which everything is all right, we already have a
      correct logical point of view.
   </p>
   <p>4.122 In a certain sense we can talk about formal properties of objects
      and states of affairs, or, in the case of facts, about structural
      properties: and in the same sense about formal relations and structural
      relations. (Instead of 'structural property' I also say 'internal
      property'; instead of 'structural relation', 'internal relation'. I
      introduce these expressions in order to indicate the source of the
      confusion between internal relations and relations proper (external
      relations), which is very widespread among philosophers.) It is
      impossible, however, to assert by means of propositions that such
      internal properties and relations obtain: rather, this makes itself
      manifest in the propositions that represent the relevant states of
      affairs and are concerned with the relevant objects.
   </p>
   <p>4.1221 An internal property of a fact can also be bed a feature of that
      fact (in the sense in which we speak of facial features, for example).
   </p>
   <p>4.123 A property is internal if it is unthinkable that its object should
      not possess it. (This shade of blue and that one stand, eo ipso, in the
      internal relation of lighter to darker. It is unthinkable that these two
      objects should not stand in this relation.) (Here the shifting use
      of the word 'object' corresponds to the shifting use of the words
      'property' and 'relation'.)
   </p>
   <p>4.124 The existence of an internal property of a possible situation is
      not expressed by means of a proposition: rather, it expresses itself
      in the proposition representing the situation, by means of an internal
      property of that proposition. It would be just as nonsensical to assert
      that a proposition had a formal property as to deny it.
   </p>
   <p>4.1241 It is impossible to distinguish forms from one another by
      saying that one has this property and another that property: for this
      presupposes that it makes sense to ascribe either property to either
      form.
   </p>
   <p>4.125 The existence of an internal relation between possible situations
      expresses itself in language by means of an internal relation between
      the propositions representing them.
   </p>
   <p>4.1251 Here we have the answer to the vexed question 'whether all
      relations are internal or external'.
   </p>
   <p>4.1252 I call a series that is ordered by an internal relation a series
      of forms. The order of the number-series is not governed by an external
      relation but by an internal relation. The same is true of the series of
      propositions 'aRb', '(d: c): aRx. xRb', '(d x,y): aRx. xRy. yRb', and so
      forth. (If b stands in one of these relations to a, I call b a successor
      of a.)
   </p>
   <p>4.126 We can now talk about formal concepts, in the same sense that we
      speak of formal properties. (I introduce this expression in order to
      exhibit the source of the confusion between formal concepts and concepts
      proper, which pervades the whole of traditional logic.) When something
      falls under a formal concept as one of its objects, this cannot be
      expressed by means of a proposition. Instead it is shown in the very
      sign for this object. (A name shows that it signifies an object, a sign
      for a number that it signifies a number, etc.) Formal concepts cannot,
      in fact, be represented by means of a function, as concepts proper can.
      For their characteristics, formal properties, are not expressed by
      means of functions. The expression for a formal property is a feature of
      certain symbols. So the sign for the characteristics of a formal concept
      is a distinctive feature of all symbols whose meanings fall under the
      concept. So the expression for a formal concept is a propositional
      variable in which this distinctive feature alone is constant.
   </p>
   <p>4.127 The propositional variable signifies the formal concept, and its
      values signify the objects that fall under the concept.
   </p>
   <p>4.1271 Every variable is the sign for a formal concept. For every
      variable represents a constant form that all its values possess, and
      this can be regarded as a formal property of those values.
   </p>
   <p>4.1272 Thus the variable name 'x' is the proper sign for the
      pseudo-concept object. Wherever the word 'object' ('thing', etc.) is
      correctly used, it is expressed in conceptual notation by a variable
      name. For example, in the proposition, 'There are 2 objects which.. .',
      it is expressed by ' (dx,y)... '. Wherever it is used in a different
      way, that is as a proper concept-word, nonsensical pseudo-propositions
      are the result. So one cannot say, for example, 'There are objects', as
      one might say, 'There are books'. And it is just as impossible to
      say, 'There are 100 objects', or, 'There are!0 objects'. And it is
      nonsensical to speak of the total number of objects. The same applies to
      the words 'complex', 'fact', 'function', 'number', etc. They all
      signify formal concepts, and are represented in conceptual notation by
      variables, not by functions or classes (as Frege and Russell believed).
      '1 is a number', 'There is only one zero', and all similar expressions
      are nonsensical. (It is just as nonsensical to say, 'There is only one
   </p>
   <p>1', as it would be to say, '2 + 2 at 3 o'clock equals 4'.)
   </p>
   <p>4.12721 A formal concept is given immediately any object falling under
      it is given. It is not possible, therefore, to introduce as primitive
      ideas objects belonging to a formal concept and the formal concept
      itself. So it is impossible, for example, to introduce as primitive
      ideas both the concept of a function and specific functions, as Russell
      does; or the concept of a number and particular numbers.
   </p>
   <p>4.1273 If we want to express in conceptual notation the general
      proposition, 'b is a successor of a', then we require an expression for
      the general term of the series of forms 'aRb', '(d: c): aRx. xRb', '(d
      x,y) : aRx. xRy. yRb',..., In order to express the general term of a
      series of forms, we must use a variable, because the concept 'term
      of that series of forms' is a formal concept. (This is what Frege and
      Russell overlooked: consequently the way in which they want to express
      general propositions like the one above is incorrect; it contains a
      vicious circle.) We can determine the general term of a series of forms
      by giving its first term and the general form of the operation that
      produces the next term out of the proposition that precedes it.
   </p>
   <p>4.1274 To ask whether a formal concept exists is nonsensical. For no
      proposition can be the answer to such a question. (So, for example,
      the question, 'Are there unanalysable subject-predicate propositions?'
      cannot be asked.)
   </p>
   <p>4.128 Logical forms are without number. Hence there are no pre-eminent
      numbers in logic, and hence there is no possibility of philosophical
      monism or dualism, etc.
   </p>
   <p>4.2 The sense of a proposition is its agreement and disagreement with
      possibilities of existence and non-existence of states of affairs. 4.21
      The simplest kind of proposition, an elementary proposition, asserts the
      existence of a state of affairs.
   </p>
   <p>4.211 It is a sign of a proposition's being elementary that there can be
      no elementary proposition contradicting it.
   </p>
   <p>4.22 An elementary proposition consists of names. It is a nexus, a
      concatenation, of names.
   </p>
   <p>4.221 It is obvious that the analysis of propositions must bring us to
      elementary propositions which consist of names in immediate combination.
      This raises the question how such combination into propositions comes
      about.
   </p>
   <p>4.2211 Even if the world is infinitely complex, so that every fact
      consists of infinitely many states of affairs and every state of affairs
      is composed of infinitely many objects, there would still have to be
      objects and states of affairs.
   </p>
   <p>4.23 It is only in the nexus of an elementary proposition that a name
      occurs in a proposition.
   </p>
   <p>4.24 Names are the simple symbols: I indicate them by single letters
      ('x', 'y', 'z'). I write elementary propositions as functions of names,
      so that they have the form 'fx', 'O (x,y)', etc. Or I indicate them by
      the letters 'p', 'q', 'r'.
   </p>
   <p>4.241 When I use two signs with one and the same meaning, I express this
      by putting the sign '=' between them. So 'a = b' means that the sign 'b'
      can be substituted for the sign 'a'. (If I use an equation to introduce
      a new sign 'b', laying down that it shall serve as a substitute for
      a sign a that is already known, then, like Russell, I write the
      equation&mdash;definition&mdash;in the form 'a = b Def.' A definition is a rule
      dealing with signs.)
   </p>
   <p>4.242 Expressions of the form 'a = b' are, therefore, mere
      representational devices. They state nothing about the meaning of the
      signs 'a' and 'b'.
   </p>
   <p>4.243 Can we understand two names without knowing whether they signify
      the same thing or two different things?&mdash;Can we understand a proposition
      in which two names occur without knowing whether their meaning is the
      same or different? Suppose I know the meaning of an English word and of
      a German word that means the same: then it is impossible for me to be
      unaware that they do mean the same; I must be capable of translating
      each into the other. Expressions like 'a = a', and those derived from
      them, are neither elementary propositions nor is there any other way in
      which they have sense. (This will become evident later.)
   </p>
   <p>4.25 If an elementary proposition is true, the state of affairs exists:
      if an elementary proposition is false, the state of affairs does not
      exist.
   </p>
   <p>4.26 If all true elementary propositions are given, the result is a
      complete description of the world. The world is completely described by
      giving all elementary propositions, and adding which of them are true
      and which false. For n states of affairs, there are possibilities of
      existence and non-existence. Of these states of affairs any combination
      can exist and the remainder not exist.
   </p>
   <p>4.28 There correspond to these combinations the same number of
      possibilities of truth&mdash;and falsity&mdash;for n elementary propositions.
   </p>
   <p>4.3 Truth-possibilities of elementary propositions mean Possibilities of
      existence and non-existence of states of affairs.
   </p>
   <p>4.31 We can represent truth-possibilities by schemata of the following
      kind ('T' means 'true', 'F' means 'false'; the rows of 'T's' and
      'F's' under the row of elementary propositions symbolize their
      truth-possibilities in a way that can easily be understood):
   </p>
   <p>4.4 A proposition is an expression of agreement and disagreement with
      truth-possibilities of elementary propositions.
   </p>
   <p>4.41 Truth-possibilities of elementary propositions are the conditions
      of the truth and falsity of propositions.
   </p>
   <p>4.411 It immediately strikes one as probable that the introduction of
      elementary propositions provides the basis for understanding all other
      kinds of proposition. Indeed the understanding of general propositions
      palpably depends on the understanding of elementary propositions.
   </p>
   <p>4.42 For n elementary propositions there are ways in which a proposition
      can agree and disagree with their truth possibilities.
   </p>
   <p>4.43 We can express agreement with truth-possibilities by correlating
      the mark 'T' (true) with them in the schema. The absence of this mark
      means disagreement.
   </p>
   <p>4.431 The expression of agreement and disagreement with the truth
      possibilities of elementary propositions expresses the truth-conditions
      of a proposition. A proposition is the expression of its
      truth-conditions. (Thus Frege was quite right to use them as a starting
      point when he explained the signs of his conceptual notation. But the
      explanation of the concept of truth that Frege gives is mistaken: if
      'the true' and 'the false' were really objects, and were the arguments
      in Pp etc., then Frege's method of determining the sense of 'Pp' would
      leave it absolutely undetermined.)
   </p>
   <p>4.44 The sign that results from correlating the mark 'I' with
      truth-possibilities is a propositional sign.
   </p>
   <p>4.441 It is clear that a complex of the signs 'F' and 'T' has no object
      (or complex of objects) corresponding to it, just as there is
      none corresponding to the horizontal and vertical lines or to the
      brackets.&mdash;There are no 'logical objects'. Of course the same applies to
      all signs that express what the schemata of 'T's' and 'F's' express.
   </p>
   <p>4.442 For example, the following is a propositional sign: (Frege's
      'judgement stroke' '|-' is logically quite meaningless: in the works
      of Frege (and Russell) it simply indicates that these authors hold the
      propositions marked with this sign to be true. Thus '|-' is no more a
      component part of a proposition than is, for instance, the proposition's
      number. It is quite impossible for a proposition to state that it itself
      is true.) If the order or the truth-possibilities in a scheme is fixed
      once and for all by a combinatory rule, then the last column by itself
      will be an expression of the truth-conditions. If we now write this
      column as a row, the propositional sign will become '(TT-T) (p,q)' or
      more explicitly '(TTFT) (p,q)' (The number of places in the left-hand
      pair of brackets is determined by the number of terms in the right-hand
      pair.)
   </p>
   <p>4.45 For n elementary propositions there are Ln possible groups of
      truth-conditions. The groups of truth-conditions that are obtainable
      from the truth-possibilities of a given number of elementary
      propositions can be arranged in a series.
   </p>
   <p>4.46 Among the possible groups of truth-conditions there are two
      extreme cases. In one of these cases the proposition is true for all
      the truth-possibilities of the elementary propositions. We say that the
      truth-conditions are tautological. In the second case the proposition
      is false for all the truth-possibilities: the truth-conditions are
      contradictory. In the first case we call the proposition a tautology; in
      the second, a contradiction.
   </p>
   <p>4.461 Propositions show what they say; tautologies and contradictions
      show that they say nothing. A tautology has no truth-conditions, since
      it is unconditionally true: and a contradiction is true on no condition.
      Tautologies and contradictions lack sense. (Like a point from which two
      arrows go out in opposite directions to one another.) (For example, I
      know nothing about the weather when I know that it is either raining or
      not raining.)
   </p>
   <p>4.46211 Tautologies and contradictions are not, however, nonsensical.
      They are part of the symbolism, much as '0' is part of the symbolism of
      arithmetic.
   </p>
   <p>4.462 Tautologies and contradictions are not pictures of reality. They
      do not represent any possible situations. For the former admit all
      possible situations, and latter none. In a tautology the conditions of
      agreement with the world&mdash;the representational relations&mdash;cancel one
      another, so that it does not stand in any representational relation to
      reality.
   </p>
   <p>4.463 The truth-conditions of a proposition determine the range that it
      leaves open to the facts. (A proposition, a picture, or a model is,
      in the negative sense, like a solid body that restricts the freedom of
      movement of others, and in the positive sense, like a space bounded by
      solid substance in which there is room for a body.) A tautology leaves
      open to reality the whole&mdash;the infinite whole&mdash;of logical space: a
      contradiction fills the whole of logical space leaving no point of it
      for reality. Thus neither of them can determine reality in any way.
   </p>
   <p>4.464 A tautology's truth is certain, a proposition's possible, a
      contradiction's impossible. (Certain, possible, impossible: here we
      have the first indication of the scale that we need in the theory of
      probability.)
   </p>
   <p>4.465 The logical product of a tautology and a proposition says the same
      thing as the proposition. This product, therefore, is identical with the
      proposition. For it is impossible to alter what is essential to a symbol
      without altering its sense.
   </p>
   <p>4.466 What corresponds to a determinate logical combination of signs is
      a determinate logical combination of their meanings. It is only to the
      uncombined signs that absolutely any combination corresponds. In
      other words, propositions that are true for every situation cannot be
      combinations of signs at all, since, if they were, only determinate
      combinations of objects could correspond to them. (And what is not a
      logical combination has no combination of objects corresponding to
      it.) Tautology and contradiction are the limiting cases&mdash;indeed the
      disintegration&mdash;of the combination of signs.
   </p>
   <p>4.4661 Admittedly the signs are still combined with one another even in
      tautologies and contradictions&mdash;i.e. they stand in certain relations to
      one another: but these relations have no meaning, they are not essential
      to the symbol.
   </p>
   <p>4.5 It now seems possible to give the most general propositional form:
      that is, to give a description of the propositions of any sign-language
      whatsoever in such a way that every possible sense can be expressed by
      a symbol satisfying the description, and every symbol satisfying the
      description can express a sense, provided that the meanings of the names
      are suitably chosen. It is clear that only what is essential to the
      most general propositional form may be included in its description&mdash;for
      otherwise it would not be the most general form. The existence of a
      general propositional form is proved by the fact that there cannot be a
      proposition whose form could not have been foreseen (i.e. constructed).
      The general form of a proposition is: This is how things stand.
   </p>
   <p>4.51 Suppose that I am given all elementary propositions: then I can
      simply ask what propositions I can construct out of them. And there I
      have all propositions, and that fixes their limits.
   </p>
   <p>4.52 Propositions comprise all that follows from the totality of all
      elementary propositions (and, of course, from its being the totality
      of them all ). (Thus, in a certain sense, it could be said that all
      propositions were generalizations of elementary propositions.)
   </p>
   <p>4.53 The general propositional form is a variable.
   </p>
  </chapter>
  <chapter>
   <title>5 A proposition is a truth-function of elementary propositions.</title>
   <p>(An elementary proposition is a truth-function of itself.)
   </p>
   <p>5.01 Elementary propositions are the truth-arguments of propositions.
   </p>
   <p>5.02 The arguments of functions are readily confused with the affixes of
      names. For both arguments and affixes enable me to recognize the meaning
      of the signs containing them. For example, when Russell writes '+c',
      the 'c' is an affix which indicates that the sign as a whole is the
      addition-sign for cardinal numbers. But the use of this sign is the
      result of arbitrary convention and it would be quite possible to choose
      a simple sign instead of '+c'; in 'Pp' however, 'p' is not an affix but
      an argument: the sense of 'Pp' cannot be understood unless the sense of
      'p' has been understood already. (In the name Julius Caesar 'Julius'
      is an affix. An affix is always part of a description of the object to
      whose name we attach it: e.g. the Caesar of the Julian gens.) If I
      am not mistaken, Frege's theory about the meaning of propositions and
      functions is based on the confusion between an argument and an affix.
      Frege regarded the propositions of logic as names, and their arguments
      as the affixes of those names.
   </p>
   <p>5.1 Truth-functions can be arranged in series. That is the foundation of
      the theory of probability.
   </p>
   <p>5.101 The truth-functions of a given number of elementary propositions
      can always be set out in a schema of the following kind: (TTTT) (p, q)
      Tautology (If p then p, and if q then q.) (p z p. q z q) (FTTT) (p, q)
      In words: Not both p and q. (P(p. q)) (TFTT) (p, q) ": If q then p. (q
      z p) (TTFT) (p, q) ": If p then q. (p z q) (TTTF) (p, q) ": p or q. (p C
      q) (FFTT) (p, q) ": Not g. (Pq) (FTFT) (p, q) ": Not p. (Pp) (FTTF) (p,
      q) " : p or q, but not both. (p. Pq: C: q. Pp) (TFFT) (p, q) ": If p
      then p, and if q then p. (p + q) (TFTF) (p, q) ": p (TTFF) (p, q) ": q
      (FFFT) (p, q) ": Neither p nor q. (Pp. Pq or p | q) (FFTF) (p, q) ": p
      and not q. (p. Pq) (FTFF) (p, q) ": q and not p. (q. Pp) (TFFF) (p,q) ":
      q and p. (q. p) (FFFF) (p, q) Contradiction (p and not p, and q and not
      q.) (p. Pp. q. Pq) I will give the name truth-grounds of a proposition
      to those truth-possibilities of its truth-arguments that make it true.
   </p>
   <p>5.11 If all the truth-grounds that are common to a number of
      propositions are at the same time truth-grounds of a certain
      proposition, then we say that the truth of that proposition follows from
      the truth of the others.
   </p>
   <p>5.12 In particular, the truth of a proposition 'p' follows from the
      truth of another proposition 'q' is all the truth-grounds of the latter
      are truth-grounds of the former.
   </p>
   <p>5.121 The truth-grounds of the one are contained in those of the other:
      p follows from q.
   </p>
   <p>5.122 If p follows from q, the sense of 'p' is contained in the sense of
      'q'.
   </p>
   <p>5.123 If a god creates a world in which certain propositions are
      true, then by that very act he also creates a world in which all the
      propositions that follow from them come true. And similarly he could not
      create a world in which the proposition 'p' was true without creating
      all its objects.
   </p>
   <p>5.124 A proposition affirms every proposition that follows from it.
   </p>
   <p>5.1241 'p. q' is one of the propositions that affirm 'p' and at the
      same time one of the propositions that affirm 'q'. Two propositions are
      opposed to one another if there is no proposition with a sense, that
      affirms them both. Every proposition that contradicts another negate it.
   </p>
   <p>5.13 When the truth of one proposition follows from the truth of others,
      we can see this from the structure of the proposition.
   </p>
   <p>5.131 If the truth of one proposition follows from the truth of
      others, this finds expression in relations in which the forms of the
      propositions stand to one another: nor is it necessary for us to set up
      these relations between them, by combining them with one another in a
      single proposition; on the contrary, the relations are internal,
      and their existence is an immediate result of the existence of the
      propositions.
   </p>
   <p>5.1311 When we infer q from p C q and Pp, the relation between the
      propositional forms of 'p C q' and 'Pp' is masked, in this case, by our
      mode of signifying. But if instead of 'p C q' we write, for example,
      'p|q. |. p|q', and instead of 'Pp', 'p|p' (p|q = neither p nor q), then
      the inner connexion becomes obvious. (The possibility of inference from
      (x). fx to fa shows that the symbol (x). fx itself has generality in
      it.)
   </p>
   <p>5.132 If p follows from q, I can make an inference from q to p, deduce
      p from q. The nature of the inference can be gathered only from the two
      propositions. They themselves are the only possible justification of
      the inference. 'Laws of inference', which are supposed to justify
      inferences, as in the works of Frege and Russell, have no sense, and
      would be superfluous.
   </p>
   <p>5.133 All deductions are made a priori.
   </p>
   <p>5.134 One elementary proposition cannot be deduced form another.
   </p>
   <p>5.135 There is no possible way of making an inference form the existence
      of one situation to the existence of another, entirely different
      situation.
   </p>
   <p>5.136 There is no causal nexus to justify such an inference.
   </p>
   <p>5.1361 We cannot infer the events of the future from those of the
      present. Belief in the causal nexus is superstition.
   </p>
   <p>5.1362 The freedom of the will consists in the impossibility of knowing
      actions that still lie in the future. We could know them only if
      causality were an inner necessity like that of logical inference.&mdash;The
      connexion between knowledge and what is known is that of logical
      necessity. ('A knows that p is the case', has no sense if p is a
      tautology.)
   </p>
   <p>5.1363 If the truth of a proposition does not follow from the fact that
      it is self-evident to us, then its self-evidence in no way justifies our
      belief in its truth.
   </p>
   <p>5.14 If one proposition follows from another, then the latter says more
      than the former, and the former less than the latter.
   </p>
   <p>5.141 If p follows from q and q from p, then they are one and same
      proposition.
   </p>
   <p>5.142 A tautology follows from all propositions: it says nothing.
   </p>
   <p>5.143 Contradiction is that common factor of propositions which no
      proposition has in common with another. Tautology is the common factor
      of all propositions that have nothing in common with one another.
      Contradiction, one might say, vanishes outside all propositions:
      tautology vanishes inside them. Contradiction is the outer limit of
      propositions: tautology is the unsubstantial point at their centre.
   </p>
   <p>5.15 If Tr is the number of the truth-grounds of a proposition 'r', and
      if Trs is the number of the truth-grounds of a proposition 's' that are
      at the same time truth-grounds of 'r', then we call the ratio Trs:
      Tr the degree of probability that the proposition 'r' gives to the
      proposition 's'. 5.151 In a schema like the one above in
   </p>
   <p>5.101, let Tr be the number of 'T's' in the proposition r, and let Trs,
      be the number of 'T's' in the proposition s that stand in columns in
      which the proposition r has 'T's'. Then the proposition r gives to the
      proposition s the probability Trs: Tr.
   </p>
   <p>5.1511 There is no special object peculiar to probability propositions.
   </p>
   <p>5.152 When propositions have no truth-arguments in common with one
      another, we call them independent of one another. Two elementary
      propositions give one another the probability 1/2. If p follows from q,
      then the proposition 'q' gives to the proposition 'p' the probability
   </p>
   <p>1. The certainty of logical inference is a limiting case of probability.
      (Application of this to tautology and contradiction.)
   </p>
   <p>5.153 In itself, a proposition is neither probable nor improbable.
      Either an event occurs or it does not: there is no middle way.
   </p>
   <p>5.154 Suppose that an urn contains black and white balls in equal
      numbers (and none of any other kind). I draw one ball after another,
      putting them back into the urn. By this experiment I can establish that
      the number of black balls drawn and the number of white balls drawn
      approximate to one another as the draw continues. So this is not a
      mathematical truth. Now, if I say, 'The probability of my drawing a
      white ball is equal to the probability of my drawing a black one', this
      means that all the circumstances that I know of (including the laws of
      nature assumed as hypotheses) give no more probability to the occurrence
      of the one event than to that of the other. That is to say, they give
      each the probability 1/2 as can easily be gathered from the above
      definitions. What I confirm by the experiment is that the occurrence of
      the two events is independent of the circumstances of which I have no
      more detailed knowledge.
   </p>
   <p>5.155 The minimal unit for a probability proposition is this: The
      circumstances&mdash;of which I have no further knowledge&mdash;give such and such
      a degree of probability to the occurrence of a particular event.
   </p>
   <p>5.156 It is in this way that probability is a generalization. It
      involves a general description of a propositional form. We use
      probability only in default of certainty&mdash;if our knowledge of a fact
      is not indeed complete, but we do know something about its form. (A
      proposition may well be an incomplete picture of a certain situation,
      but it is always a complete picture of something.) A probability
      proposition is a sort of excerpt from other propositions.
   </p>
   <p>5.2 The structures of propositions stand in internal relations to one
      another.
   </p>
   <p>5.21 In order to give prominence to these internal relations we can
      adopt the following mode of expression: we can represent a proposition
      as the result of an operation that produces it out of other propositions
      (which are the bases of the operation).
   </p>
   <p>5.22 An operation is the expression of a relation between the structures
      of its result and of its bases.
   </p>
   <p>5.23 The operation is what has to be done to the one proposition in
      order to make the other out of it.
   </p>
   <p>5.231 And that will, of course, depend on their formal properties, on
      the internal similarity of their forms.
   </p>
   <p>5.232 The internal relation by which a series is ordered is equivalent
      to the operation that produces one term from another.
   </p>
   <p>5.233 Operations cannot make their appearance before the point at which
      one proposition is generated out of another in a logically meaningful
      way; i.e. the point at which the logical construction of propositions
      begins.
   </p>
   <p>5.234 Truth-functions of elementary propositions are results of
      operations with elementary propositions as bases. (These operations I
      call truth-operations.)
   </p>
   <p>5.2341 The sense of a truth-function of p is a function of the sense
      of p. Negation, logical addition, logical multiplication, etc. etc. are
      operations. (Negation reverses the sense of a proposition.)
   </p>
   <p>5.24 An operation manifests itself in a variable; it shows how we can
      get from one form of proposition to another. It gives expression to the
      difference between the forms. (And what the bases of an operation and
      its result have in common is just the bases themselves.)
   </p>
   <p>5.241 An operation is not the mark of a form, but only of a difference
      between forms.
   </p>
   <p>5.242 The operation that produces 'q' from 'p' also produces 'r' from
      'q', and so on. There is only one way of expressing this: 'p', 'q',
      'r', etc. have to be variables that give expression in a general way to
      certain formal relations.
   </p>
   <p>5.25 The occurrence of an operation does not characterize the sense of
      a proposition. Indeed, no statement is made by an operation, but only by
      its result, and this depends on the bases of the operation. (Operations
      and functions must not be confused with each other.)
   </p>
   <p>5.251 A function cannot be its own argument, whereas an operation can
      take one of its own results as its base.
   </p>
   <p>5.252 It is only in this way that the step from one term of a series
      of forms to another is possible (from one type to another in the
      hierarchies of Russell and Whitehead). (Russell and Whitehead did not
      admit the possibility of such steps, but repeatedly availed themselves
      of it.)
   </p>
   <p>5.2521 If an operation is applied repeatedly to its own results, I speak
      of successive applications of it. ('O'O'O'a' is the result of three
      successive applications of the operation 'O'E' to 'a'.) In a similar
      sense I speak of successive applications of more than one operation to a
      number of propositions.
   </p>
   <p>5.2522 Accordingly I use the sign '[a, x, O'x]' for the general term of
      the series of forms a, O'a, O'O'a,.... This bracketed expression is a
      variable: the first term of the bracketed expression is the beginning
      of the series of forms, the second is the form of a term x arbitrarily
      selected from the series, and the third is the form of the term that
      immediately follows x in the series.
   </p>
   <p>5.2523 The concept of successive applications of an operation is
      equivalent to the concept 'and so on'.
   </p>
   <p>5.253 One operation can counteract the effect of another. Operations can
      cancel one another.
   </p>
   <p>5.254 An operation can vanish (e.g. negation in 'PPp': PPp = p).
   </p>
   <p>5.3 All propositions are results of truth-operations on elementary
      propositions. A truth-operation is the way in which a truth-function
      is produced out of elementary propositions. It is of the essence
      of truth-operations that, just as elementary propositions yield a
      truth-function of themselves, so too in the same way truth-functions
      yield a further truth-function. When a truth-operation is applied to
      truth-functions of elementary propositions, it always generates another
      truth-function of elementary propositions, another proposition. When
      a truth-operation is applied to the results of truth-operations
      on elementary propositions, there is always a single operation on
      elementary propositions that has the same result. Every proposition is
      the result of truth-operations on elementary propositions.
   </p>
   <p>5.31 The schemata in 4.31 have a meaning even when 'p', 'q', 'r',
      etc. are not elementary propositions. And it is easy to see that
      the propositional sign in 4.442 expresses a single truth-function of
      elementary propositions even when 'p' and 'q' are truth-functions of
      elementary propositions.
   </p>
   <p>5.32 All truth-functions are results of successive applications to
      elementary propositions of a finite number of truth-operations.
   </p>
   <p>5.4 At this point it becomes manifest that there are no 'logical
      objects' or 'logical constants' (in Frege's and Russell's sense).
   </p>
   <p>5.41 The reason is that the results of truth-operations on
      truth-functions are always identical whenever they are one and the same
      truth-function of elementary propositions.
   </p>
   <p>5.42 It is self-evident that C, z, etc. are not relations in the sense
      in which right and left etc. are relations. The interdefinability of
      Frege's and Russell's 'primitive signs' of logic is enough to show that
      they are not primitive signs, still less signs for relations. And it is
      obvious that the 'z' defined by means of 'P' and 'C' is identical with
      the one that figures with 'P' in the definition of 'C'; and that the
      second 'C' is identical with the first one; and so on.
   </p>
   <p>5.43 Even at first sight it seems scarcely credible that there should
      follow from one fact p infinitely many others, namely PPp, PPPPp, etc.
      And it is no less remarkable that the infinite number of propositions of
      logic (mathematics) follow from half a dozen 'primitive propositions'.
      But in fact all the propositions of logic say the same thing, to wit
      nothing.
   </p>
   <p>5.44 Truth-functions are not material functions. For example, an
      affirmation can be produced by double negation: in such a case does it
      follow that in some sense negation is contained in affirmation? Does
      'PPp' negate Pp, or does it affirm p&mdash;or both? The proposition 'PPp' is
      not about negation, as if negation were an object: on the other hand,
      the possibility of negation is already written into affirmation. And
      if there were an object called 'P', it would follow that 'PPp' said
      something different from what 'p' said, just because the one proposition
      would then be about P and the other would not.
   </p>
   <p>5.441 This vanishing of the apparent logical constants also occurs in
      the case of 'P(dx). Pfx', which says the same as '(x). fx', and in the
      case of '(dx). fx. x = a', which says the same as 'fa'.
   </p>
   <p>5.442 If we are given a proposition, then with it we are also given the
      results of all truth-operations that have it as their base.
   </p>
   <p>5.45 If there are primitive logical signs, then any logic that fails
      to show clearly how they are placed relatively to one another and to
      justify their existence will be incorrect. The construction of logic out
      of its primitive signs must be made clear.
   </p>
   <p>5.451 If logic has primitive ideas, they must be independent of one
      another. If a primitive idea has been introduced, it must have been
      introduced in all the combinations in which it ever occurs. It
      cannot, therefore, be introduced first for one combination and
      later reintroduced for another. For example, once negation has been
      introduced, we must understand it both in propositions of the form
      'Pp' and in propositions like 'P(p C q)', '(dx). Pfx', etc. We must not
      introduce it first for the one class of cases and then for the other,
      since it would then be left in doubt whether its meaning were the same
      in both cases, and no reason would have been given for combining the
      signs in the same way in both cases. (In short, Frege's remarks about
      introducing signs by means of definitions (in The Fundamental Laws
      of Arithmetic ) also apply, mutatis mutandis, to the introduction of
      primitive signs.)
   </p>
   <p>5.452 The introduction of any new device into the symbolism of logic
      is necessarily a momentous event. In logic a new device should not
      be introduced in brackets or in a footnote with what one might call
      a completely innocent air. (Thus in Russell and Whitehead's Principia
      Mathematica there occur definitions and primitive propositions expressed
      in words. Why this sudden appearance of words? It would require a
      justification, but none is given, or could be given, since the procedure
      is in fact illicit.) But if the introduction of a new device has proved
      necessary at a certain point, we must immediately ask ourselves, 'At
      what points is the employment of this device now unavoidable?' and its
      place in logic must be made clear.
   </p>
   <p>5.453 All numbers in logic stand in need of justification. Or rather,
      it must become evident that there are no numbers in logic. There are no
      pre-eminent numbers.
   </p>
   <p>5.454 In logic there is no co-ordinate status, and there can be no
      classification. In logic there can be no distinction between the general
      and the specific.
   </p>
   <p>5.4541 The solutions of the problems of logic must be simple, since they
      set the standard of simplicity. Men have always had a presentiment
      that there must be a realm in which the answers to questions are
      symmetrically combined&mdash;a priori&mdash;to form a self-contained system. A
      realm subject to the law: Simplex sigillum veri.
   </p>
   <p>5.46 If we introduced logical signs properly, then we should also have
      introduced at the same time the sense of all combinations of them; i.e.
      not only 'p C q' but 'P(p C q)' as well, etc. etc. We should also have
      introduced at the same time the effect of all possible combinations of
      brackets. And thus it would have been made clear that the real general
      primitive signs are not 'p C q', '(dx). fx', etc. but the most general
      form of their combinations.
   </p>
   <p>5.461 Though it seems unimportant, it is in fact significant that the
      pseudo-relations of logic, such as C and z, need brackets&mdash;unlike real
      relations. Indeed, the use of brackets with these apparently primitive
      signs is itself an indication that they are not primitive signs. And
      surely no one is going to believe brackets have an independent meaning.
   </p>
   <p>5.4611 Signs for logical operations are punctuation-marks.
   </p>
   <p>5.47 It is clear that whatever we can say in advance about the form
      of all propositions, we must be able to say all at once. An elementary
      proposition really contains all logical operations in itself. For
      'fa' says the same thing as '(dx). fx. x = a' Wherever there is
      compositeness, argument and function are present, and where these are
      present, we already have all the logical constants. One could say that
      the sole logical constant was what all propositions, by their very
      nature, had in common with one another. But that is the general
      propositional form.
   </p>
   <p>5.471 The general propositional form is the essence of a proposition.
   </p>
   <p>5.4711 To give the essence of a proposition means to give the essence of
      all description, and thus the essence of the world.
   </p>
   <p>5.472 The description of the most general propositional form is the
      description of the one and only general primitive sign in logic.
   </p>
   <p>5.473 Logic must look after itself. If a sign is possible, then it
      is also capable of signifying. Whatever is possible in logic is also
      permitted. (The reason why 'Socrates is identical' means nothing is that
      there is no property called 'identical'. The proposition is nonsensical
      because we have failed to make an arbitrary determination, and not
      because the symbol, in itself, would be illegitimate.) In a certain
      sense, we cannot make mistakes in logic.
   </p>
   <p>5.4731 Self-evidence, which Russell talked about so much, can become
      dispensable in logic, only because language itself prevents every
      logical mistake.&mdash;What makes logic a priori is the impossibility of
      illogical thought.
   </p>
   <p>5.4732 We cannot give a sign the wrong sense.
   </p>
   <p>5,47321 Occam's maxim is, of course, not an arbitrary rule, nor one that
      is justified by its success in practice: its point is that unnecessary
      units in a sign-language mean nothing. Signs that serve one purpose
      are logically equivalent, and signs that serve none are logically
      meaningless.
   </p>
   <p>5.4733 Frege says that any legitimately constructed proposition must
      have a sense. And I say that any possible proposition is legitimately
      constructed, and, if it has no sense, that can only be because we have
      failed to give a meaning to some of its constituents. (Even if we think
      that we have done so.) Thus the reason why 'Socrates is identical' says
      nothing is that we have not given any adjectival meaning to the word
      'identical'. For when it appears as a sign for identity, it symbolizes
      in an entirely different way&mdash;the signifying relation is a different
      one&mdash;therefore the symbols also are entirely different in the two cases:
      the two symbols have only the sign in common, and that is an accident.
   </p>
   <p>5.474 The number of fundamental operations that are necessary depends
      solely on our notation.
   </p>
   <p>5.475 All that is required is that we should construct a system of signs
      with a particular number of dimensions&mdash;with a particular mathematical
      multiplicity.
   </p>
   <p>5.476 It is clear that this is not a question of a number of primitive
      ideas that have to be signified, but rather of the expression of a rule.
   </p>
   <p>5.5 Every truth-function is a result of successive applications to
      elementary propositions of the operation '(&mdash;&mdash;-T)(E,....)'. This
      operation negates all the propositions in the right-hand pair of
      brackets, and I call it the negation of those propositions.
   </p>
   <p>5.501 When a bracketed expression has propositions as its terms&mdash;and the
      order of the terms inside the brackets is indifferent&mdash;then I indicate
      it by a sign of the form '(E)'. '(E)' is a variable whose values
      are terms of the bracketed expression and the bar over the variable
      indicates that it is the representative of all its values in the
      brackets. (E.g. if E has the three values P,Q, R, then (E) = (P, Q, R).
      ) What the values of the variable are is something that is stipulated.
      The stipulation is a description of the propositions that have the
      variable as their representative. How the description of the terms
      of the bracketed expression is produced is not essential. We can
      distinguish three kinds of description: 1. Direct enumeration, in which
      case we can simply substitute for the variable the constants that are
      its values; 2. Giving a function fx whose values for all values of x are
      the propositions to be described; 3. Giving a formal law that governs
      the construction of the propositions, in which case the bracketed
      expression has as its members all the terms of a series of forms.
   </p>
   <p>5.502 So instead of '(&mdash;&mdash;-T)(E,....)', I write 'N(E)'. N(E) is the
      negation of all the values of the propositional variable E.
   </p>
   <p>5.503 It is obvious that we can easily express how propositions may be
      constructed with this operation, and how they may not be constructed
      with it; so it must be possible to find an exact expression for this.
   </p>
   <p>5.51 If E has only one value, then N(E) = Pp (not p); if it has two
      values, then N(E) = Pp. Pq. (neither p nor g).
   </p>
   <p>5.511 How can logic&mdash;all-embracing logic, which mirrors the world&mdash;use
      such peculiar crotchets and contrivances? Only because they are all
      connected with one another in an infinitely fine network, the great
      mirror.
   </p>
   <p>5.512 'Pp' is true if 'p' is false. Therefore, in the proposition 'Pp',
      when it is true, 'p' is a false proposition. How then can the stroke 'P'
      make it agree with reality? But in 'Pp' it is not 'P' that negates, it
      is rather what is common to all the signs of this notation that negate
      p. That is to say the common rule that governs the construction of 'Pp',
      'PPPp', 'Pp C Pp', 'Pp. Pp', etc. etc. (ad inf.). And this common factor
      mirrors negation.
   </p>
   <p>5.513 We might say that what is common to all symbols that affirm both p
      and q is the proposition 'p. q'; and that what is common to all symbols
      that affirm either p or q is the proposition 'p C q'. And similarly we
      can say that two propositions are opposed to one another if they have
      nothing in common with one another, and that every proposition has only
      one negative, since there is only one proposition that lies completely
      outside it. Thus in Russell's notation too it is manifest that 'q: p C
      Pp' says the same thing as 'q', that 'p C Pq' says nothing.
   </p>
   <p>5.514 Once a notation has been established, there will be in it a rule
      governing the construction of all propositions that negate p, a rule
      governing the construction of all propositions that affirm p, and a rule
      governing the construction of all propositions that affirm p or q; and
      so on. These rules are equivalent to the symbols; and in them their
      sense is mirrored.
   </p>
   <p>5.515 It must be manifest in our symbols that it can only be
      propositions that are combined with one another by 'C', '.', etc.
      And this is indeed the case, since the symbol in 'p' and 'q' itself
      presupposes 'C', 'P', etc. If the sign 'p' in 'p C q' does not stand for
      a complex sign, then it cannot have sense by itself: but in that case
      the signs 'p C p', 'p. p', etc., which have the same sense as p, must
      also lack sense. But if 'p C p' has no sense, then 'p C q' cannot have a
      sense either.
   </p>
   <p>5.5151 Must the sign of a negative proposition be constructed with that
      of the positive proposition? Why should it not be possible to express a
      negative proposition by means of a negative fact? (E.g. suppose that "a'
      does not stand in a certain relation to 'b'; then this might be used
      to say that aRb was not the case.) But really even in this case the
      negative proposition is constructed by an indirect use of the positive.
      The positive proposition necessarily presupposes the existence of the
      negative proposition and vice versa.
   </p>
   <p>5.52 If E has as its values all the values of a function fx for all
      values of x, then N(E) = P(dx). fx.
   </p>
   <p>5.521 I dissociate the concept all from truth-functions. Frege and
      Russell introduced generality in association with logical productor
      logical sum. This made it difficult to understand the propositions
      '(dx). fx' and '(x) . fx', in which both ideas are embedded.
   </p>
   <p>5.522 What is peculiar to the generality-sign is first, that it
      indicates a logical prototype, and secondly, that it gives prominence to
      constants.
   </p>
   <p>5.523 The generality-sign occurs as an argument.
   </p>
   <p>5.524 If objects are given, then at the same time we are given all
      objects. If elementary propositions are given, then at the same time all
      elementary propositions are given.
   </p>
   <p>5.525 It is incorrect to render the proposition '(dx). fx' in the
      words, 'fx is possible' as Russell does. The certainty, possibility, or
      impossibility of a situation is not expressed by a proposition, but
      by an expression's being a tautology, a proposition with a sense, or
      a contradiction. The precedent to which we are constantly inclined to
      appeal must reside in the symbol itself.
   </p>
   <p>5.526 We can describe the world completely by means of fully generalized
      propositions, i.e. without first correlating any name with a particular
      object.
   </p>
   <p>5.5261 A fully generalized proposition, like every other proposition, is
      composite. (This is shown by the fact that in '(dx, O). Ox' we have
      to mention 'O' and 's' separately. They both, independently, stand in
      signifying relations to the world, just as is the case in ungeneralized
      propositions.) It is a mark of a composite symbol that it has something
      in common with other symbols.
   </p>
   <p>5.5262 The truth or falsity of every proposition does make some
      alteration in the general construction of the world. And the range that
      the totality of elementary propositions leaves open for its construction
      is exactly the same as that which is delimited by entirely general
      propositions. (If an elementary proposition is true, that means, at any
      rate, one more true elementary proposition.)
   </p>
   <p>5.53 Identity of object I express by identity of sign, and not by using
      a sign for identity. Difference of objects I express by difference of
      signs.
   </p>
   <p>5.5301 It is self-evident that identity is not a relation between
      objects. This becomes very clear if one considers, for example, the
      proposition '(x) : fx. z. x = a'. What this proposition says is simply
      that only a satisfies the function f, and not that only things that have
      a certain relation to a satisfy the function, Of course, it might then
      be said that only a did have this relation to a; but in order to express
      that, we should need the identity-sign itself.
   </p>
   <p>5.5302 Russell's definition of '=' is inadequate, because according to
      it we cannot say that two objects have all their properties in common.
      (Even if this proposition is never correct, it still has sense.)
   </p>
   <p>5.5303 Roughly speaking, to say of two things that they are identical is
      nonsense, and to say of one thing that it is identical with itself is to
      say nothing at all.
   </p>
   <p>5.531 Thus I do not write 'f(a, b). a = b', but 'f(a, a)' (or 'f(b, b));
      and not 'f(a,b). Pa = b', but 'f(a, b)'.
   </p>
   <p>5.532 And analogously I do not write '(dx, y). f(x, y). x = y', but
      '(dx) . f(x, x)'; and not '(dx, y). f(x, y). Px = y', but '(dx, y). f(x,
      y)'. 5.5321 Thus, for example, instead of '(x): fx z x = a' we write
      '(dx). fx . z: (dx, y). fx. fy'. And the proposition, 'Only one x
      satisfies f( )', will read '(dx). fx: P(dx, y). fx. fy'.
   </p>
   <p>5.533 The identity-sign, therefore, is not an essential constituent of
      conceptual notation.
   </p>
   <p>5.534 And now we see that in a correct conceptual notation
      pseudo-propositions like 'a = a', 'a = b. b = c. z a = c', '(x). x = x',
      '(dx). x = a', etc. cannot even be written down.
   </p>
   <p>5.535 This also disposes of all the problems that were connected with
      such pseudo-propositions. All the problems that Russell's 'axiom of
      infinity' brings with it can be solved at this point. What the axiom of
      infinity is intended to say would express itself in language through the
      existence of infinitely many names with different meanings.
   </p>
   <p>5.5351 There are certain cases in which one is tempted to use
      expressions of the form 'a = a' or 'p z p' and the like. In fact, this
      happens when one wants to talk about prototypes, e.g. about proposition,
      thing, etc. Thus in Russell's Principles of Mathematics 'p is a
      proposition'&mdash;which is nonsense&mdash;was given the symbolic rendering 'p z
      p' and placed as an hypothesis in front of certain propositions in order
      to exclude from their argument-places everything but propositions. (It
      is nonsense to place the hypothesis 'p z p' in front of a proposition,
      in order to ensure that its arguments shall have the right form, if only
      because with a non-proposition as argument the hypothesis becomes not
      false but nonsensical, and because arguments of the wrong kind make the
      proposition itself nonsensical, so that it preserves itself from wrong
      arguments just as well, or as badly, as the hypothesis without sense
      that was appended for that purpose.)
   </p>
   <p>5.5352 In the same way people have wanted to express, 'There are
      no things ', by writing 'P(dx). x = x'. But even if this were a
      proposition, would it not be equally true if in fact 'there were things'
      but they were not identical with themselves?
   </p>
   <p>5.54 In the general propositional form propositions occur in other
      propositions only as bases of truth-operations.
   </p>
   <p>5.541 At first sight it looks as if it were also possible for one
      proposition to occur in another in a different way. Particularly with
      certain forms of proposition in psychology, such as 'A believes that p
      is the case' and A has the thought p', etc. For if these are considered
      superficially, it looks as if the proposition p stood in some kind of
      relation to an object A. (And in modern theory of knowledge (Russell,
      Moore, etc.) these propositions have actually been construed in this
      way.)
   </p>
   <p>5.542 It is clear, however, that 'A believes that p', 'A has the thought
      p', and 'A says p' are of the form '"p" says p': and this does
      not involve a correlation of a fact with an object, but rather the
      correlation of facts by means of the correlation of their objects.
   </p>
   <p>5.5421 This shows too that there is no such thing as the soul&mdash;the
      subject, etc.&mdash;as it is conceived in the superficial psychology of the
      present day. Indeed a composite soul would no longer be a soul.
   </p>
   <p>5.5422 The correct explanation of the form of the proposition, 'A makes
      the judgement p', must show that it is impossible for a judgement to
      be a piece of nonsense. (Russell's theory does not satisfy this
      requirement.)
   </p>
   <p>5.5423 To perceive a complex means to perceive that its constituents
      are related to one another in such and such a way. This no doubt also
      explains why there are two possible ways of seeing the figure as a cube;
      and all similar phenomena. For we really see two different facts. (If I
      look in the first place at the corners marked a and only glance at the
      b's, then the a's appear to be in front, and vice versa).
   </p>
   <p>5.55 We now have to answer a priori the question about all the possible
      forms of elementary propositions. Elementary propositions consist of
      names. Since, however, we are unable to give the number of names with
      different meanings, we are also unable to give the composition of
      elementary propositions.
   </p>
   <p>5.551 Our fundamental principle is that whenever a question can be
      decided by logic at all it must be possible to decide it without more
      ado. (And if we get into a position where we have to look at the world
      for an answer to such a problem, that shows that we are on a completely
      wrong track.)
   </p>
   <p>5.552 The 'experience' that we need in order to understand logic is not
      that something or other is the state of things, but that something
      is: that, however, is not an experience. Logic is prior to every
      experience&mdash;that something is so. It is prior to the question 'How?' not
      prior to the question 'What?'
   </p>
   <p>5.5521 And if this were not so, how could we apply logic? We might put
      it in this way: if there would be a logic even if there were no world,
      how then could there be a logic given that there is a world?
   </p>
   <p>5.553 Russell said that there were simple relations between different
      numbers of things (individuals). But between what numbers? And how is
      this supposed to be decided?&mdash;By experience? (There is no pre-eminent
      number.)
   </p>
   <p>5.554 It would be completely arbitrary to give any specific form.
   </p>
   <p>5.5541 It is supposed to be possible to answer a priori the question
      whether I can get into a position in which I need the sign for a
   </p>
   <p>27-termed relation in order to signify something.
   </p>
   <p>5.5542 But is it really legitimate even to ask such a question? Can we
      set up a form of sign without knowing whether anything can correspond to
      it? Does it make sense to ask what there must be in order that something
      can be the case?
   </p>
   <p>5.555 Clearly we have some concept of elementary propositions quite
      apart from their particular logical forms. But when there is a system by
      which we can create symbols, the system is what is important for logic
      and not the individual symbols. And anyway, is it really possible that
      in logic I should have to deal with forms that I can invent? What I have
      to deal with must be that which makes it possible for me to invent them.
   </p>
   <p>5.556 There cannot be a hierarchy of the forms of elementary
      propositions. We can foresee only what we ourselves construct.
   </p>
   <p>5.5561 Empirical reality is limited by the totality of objects.
      The limit also makes itself manifest in the totality of elementary
      propositions. Hierarchies are and must be independent of reality.
   </p>
   <p>5.5562 If we know on purely logical grounds that there must be
      elementary propositions, then everyone who understands propositions in
      their C form must know It.
   </p>
   <p>5.5563 In fact, all the propositions of our everyday language, just as
      they stand, are in perfect logical order.&mdash;That utterly simple thing,
      which we have to formulate here, is not a likeness of the truth, but
      the truth itself in its entirety. (Our problems are not abstract, but
      perhaps the most concrete that there are.)
   </p>
   <p>5.557 The application of logic decides what elementary propositions
      there are. What belongs to its application, logic cannot anticipate. It
      is clear that logic must not clash with its application. But logic
      has to be in contact with its application. Therefore logic and its
      application must not overlap.
   </p>
   <p>5.5571 If I cannot say a priori what elementary propositions there are,
      then the attempt to do so must lead to obvious nonsense. 5.6 The limits
      of my language mean the limits of my world.
   </p>
   <p>5.61 Logic pervades the world: the limits of the world are also its
      limits. So we cannot say in logic, 'The world has this in it, and
      this, but not that.' For that would appear to presuppose that we were
      excluding certain possibilities, and this cannot be the case, since it
      would require that logic should go beyond the limits of the world; for
      only in that way could it view those limits from the other side as well.
      We cannot think what we cannot think; so what we cannot think we cannot
      say either.
   </p>
   <p>5.62 This remark provides the key to the problem, how much truth there
      is in solipsism. For what the solipsist means is quite correct; only it
      cannot be said, but makes itself manifest. The world is my world: this
      is manifest in the fact that the limits of language (of that language
      which alone I understand) mean the limits of my world.
   </p>
   <p>5.621 The world and life are one.
   </p>
   <p>5.63 I am my world. (The microcosm.)
   </p>
   <p>5.631 There is no such thing as the subject that thinks or entertains
      ideas. If I wrote a book called The World as l found it, I should have
      to include a report on my body, and should have to say which parts were
      subordinate to my will, and which were not, etc., this being a method of
      isolating the subject, or rather of showing that in an important sense
      there is no subject; for it alone could not be mentioned in that book.&mdash;
   </p>
   <p>5.632 The subject does not belong to the world: rather, it is a limit of
      the world.
   </p>
   <p>5.633 Where in the world is a metaphysical subject to be found? You will
      say that this is exactly like the case of the eye and the visual field.
      But really you do not see the eye. And nothing in the visual field
      allows you to infer that it is seen by an eye.
   </p>
   <p>5.6331 For the form of the visual field is surely not like this
   </p>
   <p>5.634 This is connected with the fact that no part of our experience is
      at the same time a priori. Whatever we see could be other than it is.
      Whatever we can describe at all could be other than it is. There is no a
      priori order of things.
   </p>
   <p>5.64 Here it can be seen that solipsism, when its implications are
      followed out strictly, coincides with pure realism. The self of
      solipsism shrinks to a point without extension, and there remains the
      reality co-ordinated with it.
   </p>
   <p>5.641 Thus there really is a sense in which philosophy can talk
      about the self in a non-psychological way. What brings the self into
      philosophy is the fact that 'the world is my world'. The philosophical
      self is not the human being, not the human body, or the human soul, with
      which psychology deals, but rather the metaphysical subject, the limit
      of the world&mdash;not a part of it.
   </p>
  </chapter>
  <chapter>
   <title>6. The general form of a truth-function is [p, E, N(E)].</title>
   <p>This is the general form of a proposition.
   </p>
   <p>6.001 What this says is just that every proposition is a result of
      successive applications to elementary propositions of the operation N(E)
   </p>
   <p>6.002 If we are given the general form according to which propositions
      are constructed, then with it we are also given the general form
      according to which one proposition can be generated out of another by
      means of an operation.
   </p>
   <p>6.01 Therefore the general form of an operation /'(n) is [E, N(E)]' (n)
      ( = [n, E, N(E)]). This is the most general form of transition from one
      proposition to another.
   </p>
   <p>6.02 And this is how we arrive at numbers. I give the following
      definitions x = /0x Def., /'/v'x = /v+1'x Def. So, in accordance with
      these rules, which deal with signs, we write the series x, /'x,
      /'/'x, /'/'/'x,..., in the following way /0'x, /0+1'x, /0+1+1'x,
      /0+1+1+1'x,.... Therefore, instead of '[x, E, /'E]', I write '[/0'x,
      /v'x, /v+1'x]'. And I give the following definitions 0 + 1 = 1 Def., 0 +
   </p>
   <p>1 + 1 = 2 Def., 0 + 1 + 1 +1 = 3 Def., (and so on).
   </p>
   <p>6.021 A number is the exponent of an operation.
   </p>
   <p>6.022 The concept of number is simply what is common to all numbers, the
      general form of a number. The concept of number is the variable number.
      And the concept of numerical equality is the general form of all
      particular cases of numerical equality.
   </p>
   <p>6.03 The general form of an integer is [0, E, E +1].
   </p>
   <p>6.031 The theory of classes is completely superfluous in mathematics.
      This is connected with the fact that the generality required in
      mathematics is not accidental generality.
   </p>
   <p>6.1 The propositions of logic are tautologies.
   </p>
   <p>6.11 Therefore the propositions of logic say nothing. (They are the
      analytic propositions.)
   </p>
   <p>6.111 All theories that make a proposition of logic appear to have
      content are false. One might think, for example, that the words 'true'
      and 'false' signified two properties among other properties, and then it
      would seem to be a remarkable fact that every proposition possessed one
      of these properties. On this theory it seems to be anything but obvious,
      just as, for instance, the proposition, 'All roses are either yellow or
      red', would not sound obvious even if it were true. Indeed, the logical
      proposition acquires all the characteristics of a proposition of natural
      science and this is the sure sign that it has been construed wrongly.
   </p>
   <p>6.112 The correct explanation of the propositions of logic must assign
      to them a unique status among all propositions.
   </p>
   <p>6.113 It is the peculiar mark of logical propositions that one can
      recognize that they are true from the symbol alone, and this fact
      contains in itself the whole philosophy of logic. And so too it is
      a very important fact that the truth or falsity of non-logical
      propositions cannot be recognized from the propositions alone.
   </p>
   <p>6.12 The fact that the propositions of logic are tautologies shows the
      formal&mdash;logical&mdash;properties of language and the world. The fact that
      a tautology is yielded by this particular way of connecting its
      constituents characterizes the logic of its constituents. If
      propositions are to yield a tautology when they are connected in a
      certain way, they must have certain structural properties. So their
      yielding a tautology when combined in this shows that they possess these
      structural properties.
   </p>
   <p>6.1201 For example, the fact that the propositions 'p' and 'Pp' in the
      combination '(p. Pp)' yield a tautology shows that they contradict one
      another. The fact that the propositions 'p z q', 'p', and 'q', combined
      with one another in the form '(p z q). (p):z: (q)', yield a tautology
      shows that q follows from p and p z q. The fact that '(x). fxx:z: fa' is
      a tautology shows that fa follows from (x). fx. Etc. etc.
   </p>
   <p>6.1202 It is clear that one could achieve the same purpose by using
      contradictions instead of tautologies.
   </p>
   <p>6.1203 In order to recognize an expression as a tautology, in cases
      where no generality-sign occurs in it, one can employ the following
      intuitive method: instead of 'p', 'q', 'r', etc. I write 'TpF', 'TqF',
      'TrF', etc. Truth-combinations I express by means of brackets, e.g. and
      I use lines to express the correlation of the truth or falsity of the
      whole proposition with the truth-combinations of its truth-arguments,
      in the following way So this sign, for instance, would represent
      the proposition p z q. Now, by way of example, I wish to examine the
      proposition P(p.Pp) (the law of contradiction) in order to determine
      whether it is a tautology. In our notation the form 'PE' is written as
      and the form 'E. n' as Hence the proposition P(p. Pp). reads as follows
      If we here substitute 'p' for 'q' and examine how the outermost T and F
      are connected with the innermost ones, the result will be that the truth
      of the whole proposition is correlated with all the truth-combinations
      of its argument, and its falsity with none of the truth-combinations.
   </p>
   <p>6.121 The propositions of logic demonstrate the logical properties
      of propositions by combining them so as to form propositions that say
      nothing. This method could also be called a zero-method. In a logical
      proposition, propositions are brought into equilibrium with one
      another, and the state of equilibrium then indicates what the logical
      constitution of these propositions must be.
   </p>
   <p>6.122 It follows from this that we can actually do without logical
      propositions; for in a suitable notation we can in fact recognize the
      formal properties of propositions by mere inspection of the propositions
      themselves.
   </p>
   <p>6.1221 If, for example, two propositions 'p' and 'q' in the combination
      'p z q' yield a tautology, then it is clear that q follows from p. For
      example, we see from the two propositions themselves that 'q' follows
      from 'p z q. p', but it is also possible to show it in this way: we
      combine them to form 'p z q. p:z: q', and then show that this is a
      tautology.
   </p>
   <p>6.1222 This throws some light on the question why logical propositions
      cannot be confirmed by experience any more than they can be refuted by
      it. Not only must a proposition of logic be irrefutable by any
      possible experience, but it must also be unconfirmable by any possible
      experience.
   </p>
   <p>6.1223 Now it becomes clear why people have often felt as if it were
      for us to 'postulate' the 'truths of logic'. The reason is that we can
      postulate them in so far as we can postulate an adequate notation.
   </p>
   <p>6.1224 It also becomes clear now why logic was called the theory of
      forms and of inference.
   </p>
   <p>6.123 Clearly the laws of logic cannot in their turn be subject to
      laws of logic. (There is not, as Russell thought, a special law of
      contradiction for each 'type'; one law is enough, since it is not
      applied to itself.)
   </p>
   <p>6.1231 The mark of a logical proposition is not general validity. To be
      general means no more than to be accidentally valid for all things.
      An ungeneralized proposition can be tautological just as well as a
      generalized one.
   </p>
   <p>6.1232 The general validity of logic might be called essential, in
      contrast with the accidental general validity of such propositions
      as 'All men are mortal'. Propositions like Russell's 'axiom of
      reducibility' are not logical propositions, and this explains our
      feeling that, even if they were true, their truth could only be the
      result of a fortunate accident.
   </p>
   <p>6.1233 It is possible to imagine a world in which the axiom of
      reducibility is not valid. It is clear, however, that logic has nothing
      to do with the question whether our world really is like that or not.
   </p>
   <p>6.124 The propositions of logic describe the scaffolding of the world,
      or rather they represent it. They have no 'subject-matter'. They
      presuppose that names have meaning and elementary propositions sense;
      and that is their connexion with the world. It is clear that something
      about the world must be indicated by the fact that certain combinations
      of symbols&mdash;whose essence involves the possession of a determinate
      character&mdash;are tautologies. This contains the decisive point. We have
      said that some things are arbitrary in the symbols that we use and that
      some things are not. In logic it is only the latter that express: but
      that means that logic is not a field in which we express what we wish
      with the help of signs, but rather one in which the nature of the
      absolutely necessary signs speaks for itself. If we know the logical
      syntax of any sign-language, then we have already been given all the
      propositions of logic.
   </p>
   <p>6.125 It is possible&mdash;indeed possible even according to the old
      conception of logic&mdash;to give in advance a description of all 'true'
      logical propositions.
   </p>
   <p>6.1251 Hence there can never be surprises in logic.
   </p>
   <p>6.126 One can calculate whether a proposition belongs to logic, by
      calculating the logical properties of the symbol. And this is what we
      do when we 'prove' a logical proposition. For, without bothering about
      sense or meaning, we construct the logical proposition out of others
      using only rules that deal with signs. The proof of logical propositions
      consists in the following process: we produce them out of other logical
      propositions by successively applying certain operations that always
      generate further tautologies out of the initial ones. (And in fact only
      tautologies follow from a tautology.) Of course this way of showing that
      the propositions of logic are tautologies is not at all essential to
      logic, if only because the propositions from which the proof starts must
      show without any proof that they are tautologies.
   </p>
   <p>6.1261 In logic process and result are equivalent. (Hence the absence of
      surprise.)
   </p>
   <p>6.1262 Proof in logic is merely a mechanical expedient to facilitate the
      recognition of tautologies in complicated cases.
   </p>
   <p>6.1263 Indeed, it would be altogether too remarkable if a proposition
      that had sense could be proved logically from others, and so too could a
      logical proposition. It is clear from the start that a logical proof of
      a proposition that has sense and a proof in logic must be two entirely
      different things.
   </p>
   <p>6.1264 A proposition that has sense states something, which is shown by
      its proof to be so. In logic every proposition is the form of a proof.
      Every proposition of logic is a modus ponens represented in signs. (And
      one cannot express the modus ponens by means of a proposition.)
   </p>
   <p>6.1265 It is always possible to construe logic in such a way that every
      proposition is its own proof.
   </p>
   <p>6.127 All the propositions of logic are of equal status: it is not
      the case that some of them are essentially derived propositions. Every
      tautology itself shows that it is a tautology.
   </p>
   <p>6.1271 It is clear that the number of the 'primitive propositions
      of logic' is arbitrary, since one could derive logic from a single
      primitive proposition, e.g. by simply constructing the logical product
      of Frege's primitive propositions. (Frege would perhaps say that
      we should then no longer have an immediately self-evident primitive
      proposition. But it is remarkable that a thinker as rigorous as Frege
      appealed to the degree of self-evidence as the criterion of a logical
      proposition.)
   </p>
   <p>6.13 Logic is not a body of doctrine, but a mirror-image of the world.
      Logic is transcendental.
   </p>
   <p>6.2 Mathematics is a logical method. The propositions of mathematics are
      equations, and therefore pseudo-propositions.
   </p>
   <p>6.21 A proposition of mathematics does not express a thought.
   </p>
   <p>6.211 Indeed in real life a mathematical proposition is never what
      we want. Rather, we make use of mathematical propositions only in
      inferences from propositions that do not belong to mathematics to others
      that likewise do not belong to mathematics. (In philosophy the question,
      'What do we actually use this word or this proposition for?' repeatedly
      leads to valuable insights.)
   </p>
   <p>6.22 The logic of the world, which is shown in tautologies by the
      propositions of logic, is shown in equations by mathematics.
   </p>
   <p>6.23 If two expressions are combined by means of the sign of equality,
      that means that they can be substituted for one another. But it must be
      manifest in the two expressions themselves whether this is the case
      or not. When two expressions can be substituted for one another, that
      characterizes their logical form.
   </p>
   <p>6.231 It is a property of affirmation that it can be construed as double
      negation. It is a property of '1 + 1 + 1 + 1' that it can be construed
      as '(1 + 1) + (1 + 1)'.
   </p>
   <p>6.232 Frege says that the two expressions have the same meaning but
      different senses. But the essential point about an equation is that it
      is not necessary in order to show that the two expressions connected by
      the sign of equality have the same meaning, since this can be seen from
      the two expressions themselves.
   </p>
   <p>6.2321 And the possibility of proving the propositions of mathematics
      means simply that their correctness can be perceived without its being
      necessary that what they express should itself be compared with the
      facts in order to determine its correctness.
   </p>
   <p>6.2322 It is impossible to assert the identity of meaning of two
      expressions. For in order to be able to assert anything about their
      meaning, I must know their meaning, and I cannot know their meaning
      without knowing whether what they mean is the same or different.
   </p>
   <p>6.2323 An equation merely marks the point of view from which I consider
      the two expressions: it marks their equivalence in meaning.
   </p>
   <p>6.233 The question whether intuition is needed for the solution of
      mathematical problems must be given the answer that in this case
      language itself provides the necessary intuition.
   </p>
   <p>6.2331 The process of calculating serves to bring about that intuition.
      Calculation is not an experiment.
   </p>
   <p>6.234 Mathematics is a method of logic.
   </p>
   <p>6.2341 It is the essential characteristic of mathematical method that
      it employs equations. For it is because of this method that every
      proposition of mathematics must go without saying.
   </p>
   <p>6.24 The method by which mathematics arrives at its equations is the
      method of substitution. For equations express the substitutability of
      two expressions and, starting from a number of equations, we advance to
      new equations by substituting different expressions in accordance with
      the equations.
   </p>
   <p>6.241 Thus the proof of the proposition 2 t 2 = 4 runs as follows:
      (/v)n'x = /v x u'x Def., /2 x 2'x = (/2)2'x = (/2)1 + 1'x = /2' /2'x =
      /1 + 1'/1 + 1'x = (/'/)'(/'/)'x =/'/'/'/'x = /1 + 1 + 1 + 1'x = /4'x.
   </p>
   <p>6.3 The exploration of logic means the exploration of everything that is
      subject to law. And outside logic everything is accidental.
   </p>
   <p>6.31 The so-called law of induction cannot possibly be a law of logic,
      since it is obviously a proposition with sense.&mdash;-Nor, therefore, can it
      be an a priori law.
   </p>
   <p>6.32 The law of causality is not a law but the form of a law.
   </p>
   <p>6.321 'Law of causality'&mdash;that is a general name. And just as in
      mechanics, for example, there are 'minimum-principles', such as the law
      of least action, so too in physics there are causal laws, laws of the
      causal form.
   </p>
   <p>6.3211 Indeed people even surmised that there must be a 'law of least
      action' before they knew exactly how it went. (Here, as always, what is
      certain a priori proves to be something purely logical.)
   </p>
   <p>6.33 We do not have an a priori belief in a law of conservation, but
      rather a priori knowledge of the possibility of a logical form.
   </p>
   <p>6.34 All such propositions, including the principle of sufficient
      reason, tile laws of continuity in nature and of least effort in nature,
      etc. etc.&mdash;all these are a priori insights about the forms in which the
      propositions of science can be cast.
   </p>
   <p>6.341 Newtonian mechanics, for example, imposes a unified form on the
      description of the world. Let us imagine a white surface with irregular
      black spots on it. We then say that whatever kind of picture these make,
      I can always approximate as closely as I wish to the description of it
      by covering the surface with a sufficiently fine square mesh, and then
      saying of every square whether it is black or white. In this way I shall
      have imposed a unified form on the description of the surface. The form
      is optional, since I could have achieved the same result by using a net
      with a triangular or hexagonal mesh. Possibly the use of a triangular
      mesh would have made the description simpler: that is to say, it might
      be that we could describe the surface more accurately with a coarse
      triangular mesh than with a fine square mesh (or conversely), and so on.
      The different nets correspond to different systems for describing the
      world. Mechanics determines one form of description of the world by
      saying that all propositions used in the description of the world must
      be obtained in a given way from a given set of propositions&mdash;the axioms
      of mechanics. It thus supplies the bricks for building the edifice of
      science, and it says, 'Any building that you want to erect, whatever it
      may be, must somehow be constructed with these bricks, and with these
      alone.' (Just as with the number-system we must be able to write down
      any number we wish, so with the system of mechanics we must be able to
      write down any proposition of physics that we wish.)
   </p>
   <p>6.342 And now we can see the relative position of logic and mechanics.
      (The net might also consist of more than one kind of mesh: e.g. we
      could use both triangles and hexagons.) The possibility of describing a
      picture like the one mentioned above with a net of a given form tells us
      nothing about the picture. (For that is true of all such pictures.)
      But what does characterize the picture is that it can be described
      completely by a particular net with a particular size of mesh. Similarly
      the possibility of describing the world by means of Newtonian mechanics
      tells us nothing about the world: but what does tell us something about
      it is the precise way in which it is possible to describe it by these
      means. We are also told something about the world by the fact that it
      can be described more simply with one system of mechanics than with
      another.
   </p>
   <p>6.343 Mechanics is an attempt to construct according to a single plan
      all the true propositions that we need for the description of the world.
   </p>
   <p>6.3431 The laws of physics, with all their logical apparatus, still
      speak, however indirectly, about the objects of the world.
   </p>
   <p>6.3432 We ought not to forget that any description of the world by means
      of mechanics will be of the completely general kind. For example, it
      will never mention particular point-masses: it will only talk about any
      point-masses whatsoever.
   </p>
   <p>6.35 Although the spots in our picture are geometrical figures,
      nevertheless geometry can obviously say nothing at all about their
      actual form and position. The network, however, is purely geometrical;
      all its properties can be given a priori. Laws like the principle of
      sufficient reason, etc. are about the net and not about what the net
      describes.
   </p>
   <p>6.36 If there were a law of causality, it might be put in the following
      way: There are laws of nature. But of course that cannot be said: it
      makes itself manifest.
   </p>
   <p>6.361 One might say, using Hertt:'s terminology, that only connexions
      that are subject to law are thinkable.
   </p>
   <p>6.3611 We cannot compare a process with 'the passage of time'&mdash;there is
      no such thing&mdash;but only with another process (such as the working of a
      chronometer). Hence we can describe the lapse of time only by relying on
      some other process. Something exactly analogous applies to space: e.g.
      when people say that neither of two events (which exclude one another)
      can occur, because there is nothing to cause the one to occur rather
      than the other, it is really a matter of our being unable to describe
      one of the two events unless there is some sort of asymmetry to be
      found. And if such an asymmetry is to be found, we can regard it as the
      cause of the occurrence of the one and the non-occurrence of the other.
   </p>
   <p>6.36111 Kant's problem about the right hand and the left hand, which
      cannot be made to coincide, exists even in two dimensions. Indeed, it
      exists in one-dimensional space in which the two congruent figures,
      a and b, cannot be made to coincide unless they are moved out of
      this space. The right hand and the left hand are in fact completely
      congruent. It is quite irrelevant that they cannot be made to coincide.
      A right-hand glove could be put on the left hand, if it could be turned
      round in four-dimensional space.
   </p>
   <p>6.362 What can be described can happen too: and what the law of
      causality is meant to exclude cannot even be described.
   </p>
   <p>6.363 The procedure of induction consists in accepting as true the
      simplest law that can be reconciled with our experiences.
   </p>
   <p>6.3631 This procedure, however, has no logical justification but only a
      psychological one. It is clear that there are no grounds for believing
      that the simplest eventuality will in fact be realized.
   </p>
   <p>6.36311 It is an hypothesis that the sun will rise tomorrow: and this
      means that we do not know whether it will rise.
   </p>
   <p>6.37 There is no compulsion making one thing happen because another has
      happened. The only necessity that exists is logical necessity.
   </p>
   <p>6.371 The whole modern conception of the world is founded on the
      illusion that the so-called laws of nature are the explanations of
      natural phenomena.
   </p>
   <p>6.372 Thus people today stop at the laws of nature, treating them as
      something inviolable, just as God and Fate were treated in past ages.
      And in fact both are right and both wrong: though the view of the
      ancients is clearer in so far as they have a clear and acknowledged
      terminus, while the modern system tries to make it look as if everything
      were explained.
   </p>
   <p>6.373 The world is independent of my will.
   </p>
   <p>6.374 Even if all that we wish for were to happen, still this would
      only be a favour granted by fate, so to speak: for there is no logical
      connexion between the will and the world, which would guarantee it, and
      the supposed physical connexion itself is surely not something that we
      could will.
   </p>
   <p>6.375 Just as the only necessity that exists is logical necessity, so
      too the only impossibility that exists is logical impossibility.
   </p>
   <p>6.3751 For example, the simultaneous presence of two colours at the same
      place in the visual field is impossible, in fact logically impossible,
      since it is ruled out by the logical structure of colour. Let us think
      how this contradiction appears in physics: more or less as follows&mdash;a
      particle cannot have two velocities at the same time; that is to say, it
      cannot be in two places at the same time; that is to say, particles that
      are in different places at the same time cannot be identical. (It
      is clear that the logical product of two elementary propositions can
      neither be a tautology nor a contradiction. The statement that a point
      in the visual field has two different colours at the same time is a
      contradiction.)
   </p>
   <p>6.4 All propositions are of equal value.
   </p>
   <p>6.41 The sense of the world must lie outside the world. In the world
      everything is as it is, and everything happens as it does happen: in it
      no value exists&mdash;and if it did exist, it would have no value. If there
      is any value that does have value, it must lie outside the whole sphere
      of what happens and is the case. For all that happens and is the case
      is accidental. What makes it non-accidental cannot lie within the world,
      since if it did it would itself be accidental. It must lie outside the
      world.
   </p>
   <p>6.42 So too it is impossible for there to be propositions of ethics.
      Propositions can express nothing that is higher.
   </p>
   <p>6.421 It is clear that ethics cannot be put into words. Ethics is
      transcendental. (Ethics and aesthetics are one and the same.)
   </p>
   <p>6.422 When an ethical law of the form, 'Thou shalt...' is laid down,
      one's first thought is, 'And what if I do, not do it?' It is clear,
      however, that ethics has nothing to do with punishment and reward in the
      usual sense of the terms. So our question about the consequences of an
      action must be unimportant.&mdash;At least those consequences should not be
      events. For there must be something right about the question we posed.
      There must indeed be some kind of ethical reward and ethical punishment,
      but they must reside in the action itself. (And it is also clear that
      the reward must be something pleasant and the punishment something
      unpleasant.)
   </p>
   <p>6.423 It is impossible to speak about the will in so far as it is
      the subject of ethical attributes. And the will as a phenomenon is of
      interest only to psychology.
   </p>
   <p>6.43 If the good or bad exercise of the will does alter the world, it
      can alter only the limits of the world, not the facts&mdash;not what can
      be expressed by means of language. In short the effect must be that it
      becomes an altogether different world. It must, so to speak, wax and
      wane as a whole. The world of the happy man is a different one from that
      of the unhappy man.
   </p>
   <p>6.431 So too at death the world does not alter, but comes to an end.
   </p>
   <p>6.4311 Death is not an event in life: we do not live to experience
      death. If we take eternity to mean not infinite temporal duration
      but timelessness, then eternal life belongs to those who live in the
      present. Our life has no end in just the way in which our visual field
      has no limits.
   </p>
   <p>6.4312 Not only is there no guarantee of the temporal immortality of the
      human soul, that is to say of its eternal survival after death; but, in
      any case, this assumption completely fails to accomplish the purpose
      for which it has always been intended. Or is some riddle solved by my
      surviving for ever? Is not this eternal life itself as much of a riddle
      as our present life? The solution of the riddle of life in space and
      time lies outside space and time. (It is certainly not the solution of
      any problems of natural science that is required.)
   </p>
   <p>6.432 How things are in the world is a matter of complete indifference
      for what is higher. God does not reveal himself in the world.
   </p>
   <p>6.4321 The facts all contribute only to setting the problem, not to its
      solution.
   </p>
   <p>6.44 It is not how things are in the world that is mystical, but that it
      exists.
   </p>
   <p>6.45 To view the world sub specie aeterni is to view it as a whole&mdash;a
      limited whole. Feeling the world as a limited whole&mdash;it is this that is
      mystical.
   </p>
   <p>6.5 When the answer cannot be put into words, neither can the question
      be put into words. The riddle does not exist. If a question can be
      framed at all, it is also possible to answer it.
   </p>
   <p>6.51 Scepticism is not irrefutable, but obviously nonsensical, when it
      tries to raise doubts where no questions can be asked. For doubt can
      exist only where a question exists, a question only where an answer
      exists, and an answer only where something can be said.
   </p>
   <p>6.52 We feel that even when all possible scientific questions have been
      answered, the problems of life remain completely untouched. Of course
      there are then no questions left, and this itself is the answer.
   </p>
   <p>6.521 The solution of the problem of life is seen in the vanishing of
      the problem. (Is not this the reason why those who have found after a
      long period of doubt that the sense of life became clear to them have
      then been unable to say what constituted that sense?)
   </p>
   <p>6.522 There are, indeed, things that cannot be put into words. They make
      themselves manifest. They are what is mystical.
   </p>
   <p>6.53 The correct method in philosophy would really be the following:
      to say nothing except what can be said, i.e. propositions of natural
      science&mdash;i.e. something that has nothing to do with philosophy&mdash;and
      then, whenever someone else wanted to say something metaphysical, to
      demonstrate to him that he had failed to give a meaning to certain signs
      in his propositions. Although it would not be satisfying to the
      other person&mdash;he would not have the feeling that we were teaching him
      philosophy&mdash;this method would be the only strictly correct one.
   </p>
   <p>6.54 My propositions are elucidatory in this way: he who understands me
      finally recognizes them as senseless, when he has climbed out through
      them, on them, over them. (He must so to speak throw away the ladder,
      after he has climbed up on it.) He must transcend these propositions,
      and then he will see the world aright.
   </p>
  </chapter>
  <chapter>
    <title>7. What we cannot speak about we must pass over in silence.</title>
  </chapter>
 </body>
</book>
