This is a concise and readable study of five intertwined themes at the heart of Wittgenstein's thought, written by one of his most eminent interpreters. David Pears offers penetrating investigations and lucid explications of some of the most influential and yet puzzling writings of twentieth-century philosophy. He focuses on the idea of language as a picture of the world; the phenomenon of linguistic regularity; the famous "private language argument"; logical necessity; and ego and the self.
David Pears Book order
August 8, 1921 – July 1, 2009






- 2006
- 1999
Motivated Irrationality
- 270 pages
- 10 hours of reading
This book is about self-deception and lack of self-control or wishful thinking and acting against one's own better judgement. Steering a course between the skepticism of philosophers, who find the conscious defiance of reason too paradoxical, and the tolerant empiricism of psychologists, it compares the two kinds of irrationality, and relates the conclusions drawn to the views of Freud, cognitive psychologists, and such philosophers as Aristotle, Anscombe, Hare and Davidson.
- 1997
Wittgenstein
- 208 pages
- 8 hours of reading
David Pears provides a superb introduction to one of the world's most influential - and enigmatic - philosophers, now in the new Modern Master livery.