Event

Wittgenstein: Language and Silence and the Silence of Language

Event type
In-person
Location
Conference Hall, Oton Župančič Library, Ljubljana, Slovenia (coordinates: 46.055430,14.503870; view on Google Maps)
Language
English, Slovenian
Further information
Call for papers
Yes (paper submission deadline: 15 April 2026 – submissions closed)
Description

The international symposium Wittgenstein: Language and Silence and the Silence of Language, organized by Slovenian Philosophical Society, invites contributions addressing the philosophical development and enduring significance of Ludwig Wittgenstein’s thought. The event aims to bring together international scholars to reflect on Wittgenstein’s intellectual trajectory and to explore dimensions of his philosophy that have often received comparatively less attention in mainstream interpretations.

Few philosophers of the twentieth century have shaped the philosophy of language as profoundly as Wittgenstein. His early work, most notably the Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus, sought to determine the logical limits of language and the structure of meaningful propositions. Yet the work famously concludes with the suggestion that what lies beyond these limits—ethics, aesthetics, and the mystical—cannot be meaningfully articulated but must instead be shown. Wittgenstein’s later philosophy, developed in works such as the Philosophical Investigations, reoriented this project by examining language as a form of human activity embedded in practices and “forms of life,” thereby shifting the focus from logical structure to linguistic use.

This symposium seeks to examine the tension between language and its limits in Wittgenstein’s philosophy, with particular attention to the role of silence, ineffability, and the relationship between expression and what resists articulation. We especially welcome papers engaging with underexplored aspects of Wittgenstein’s thought, including the relation between language and mysticism, the ethical implications of the unsayable, the continuity and discontinuity between his early and later philosophy, as well as broader reflections on the philosophical meaning of silence.

Possible topics include, but are not limited to:

  • Wittgenstein on the limits of language
  • Silence, ineffability, and the mystical in the Tractatus
  • Language-games and forms of life in the later philosophy
  • The transition from the early to the later Wittgenstein
  • Ethical and aesthetic dimensions of the unsayable
  • Wittgenstein and religious language
  • The relevance of Wittgenstein’s thought for contemporary philosophy of language
  • Interpretations of silence and expression in Wittgenstein’s philosophy

Please note that the information displayed in this page may be inaccurate, especially if the event's schedule has been changed by the organisers after this page was created. Make sure you always check the "Further information" link!