Introduction
Reshef Agam-Segal and Edmund Dain
1 Wittgenstein’s Moral Thought
Edmund Dain
2 Wittgenstein, Ethics and Philosophical Clarification
Oskari Kuusela
3 Moral Thought in Wittgenstein: Clarity and Changes in Attitude
Reshef Agam-Segal
4 Logic, Ethics and Existence in Wittgenstein’s Tractatus
Eli Friedlander
5 Logic, Ethics, Aesthetics: Wittgenstein and the Transcendental
Kristin Boyce
6 Sketches of Blurred Landscapes: Wittgenstein and Ethics
Duncan Richter
7 ‘What is Ethical Cannot be Taught’ – Moral Theories as Descriptions of Grammar
Anne-Marie Søndergaard Christensen
8 Perception, Perspectives, and Moral Necessity: Wittgenstein, Winch, and the Good Samaritan
Martin Gustafsson
9 An "Exclusively Self-Regarding" Ethics: Response to Sluga
Kevin M. Cahill
10 From Nonsense to Openness – Wittgenstein on Moral Sense
Joel Backström
Biography
Reshef Agam-Segal is Assistant Professor of Philosophy at the Virginia Military Institute. He held a visiting position at the University of Chicago (2007-2008), and taught at Auburn University (2008-2012). He specializes in Ethics and the philosophy of Wittgenstein.
Edmund Dain is Associate Professor of Philosophy at Providence College. He has also taught at the University of Chicago (2006-2011) and Cardiff University (2001-2006), and held a visiting position at the University of Bergen (2014). His work focuses on interpreting and applying the insights of Wittgenstein’s philosophy in Ethics, Philosophy of Mind, Epistemology and Philosophy of Language.






