Language And Solitude: Wittgenstein, Malinowski... 〈PREMIUM • 2026〉
The "Carpathian Village" model where meaning is entirely dependent on a closed, communal culture. Two Faces of Wittgenstein
In contrast, Gellner presents as the more successful mediator. As the founder of modern fieldwork, Malinowski argued that language serves two primary functions: Pragmatic: Its practical use in daily, active life. Ritual: Its role in binding a community together. Language and Solitude: Wittgenstein, Malinowski...
Gellner argues that both men were shaped by a specific historical crisis: the tension between a fading, traditional multicultural empire and the rise of modern, individualistic universalism. This environment forced a choice between two "solitudes": The "Carpathian Village" model where meaning is entirely
Wittgenstein’s career is often divided into two phases that Gellner views as extreme responses to this dilemma: Ritual: Its role in binding a community together
Propounded a "picture theory" where language is a solitary tool to mirror reality. Gellner critiques this as an ahistorical, "atomic" vision of thought.