THE ETHICS OF SILENCE IN THE DELINEAR OF THE SEVENTH PROPOSITION OF TRACTATUS LOGICO-PHILOSOPHICUS
Language. Subject. Voluntary Act. Ethic.
The current approach presents as a theme "The Ethics of Silence in the Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus", delimiting as the central point the proposal of silence regarding ethics, from the analysis of proposition 7 that ratifies the discussion about 'shutting down' Which can not be said. It is intended to reinforce that in writing the Tractatus Wittgenstein did not propose a discussion only logic, but also with a very strong ethical character, fact proven by the experience of the metaphysical subject that in turn presents the ethics to the world, or more precisely presents the ethics in the The world. In order to do so, an analysis of Wittgenstein's first philosophy will be produced considering the relation between the central terms evidenced by the author, namely, language, proposition, figuration, reality, world, state of affairs, case, subject, will, and therefore ethics. In this way we will see the unfolding of the Wittgenstenian philosophy of the Tractatus and its influence on the construction of ethics in the mystical or transcendental sense defended by the author.