Cosenza, Italia
Language, as Wittgenstein argues, simultaneously “describes” what the world is like and “prescribes” how it should be. In this sense, a somewhat law principle is implicit in every linguistic act, which establishes how the world should be, i.e.
which explicit (and more frequently implicit) ‘norm’ it should follow in order to be correctly what it is the case that it is. In this sense, the metaphysical structure of language implies a world order, that is, an order to the world. On the contrary, life as such is only that which resists to such a capture.
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