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Abbreviations for Wittgenstein's Works; 1 Introduction ; References; 2 Minima Visibilia, Single-Colored Patches, Points: Logical Analysis and its Visual Instances in Wittgenstein's Early Notebooks ; 2.1 Spatial Complexes; 2.2 Complete Analysis, Infinite Complexity, and Determinacy of Sense: The New Explanatory Syntactic Notion; 2.3 Definite Descriptions, Terms for Complexes, and Statements About Spatial Complexes; References; 3 Incompatible Colours and the Development of Wittgenstein's Philosophy ; References; 4 Tractatus Objects and the Logic of Color Incompatibility.

4.1 Space, Time, Color4.2 Ostensibly Conflicting Concepts of Elementarsätze; 4.3 Modality and Universal Semantics; 4.4 General Form of Proposition in Tractatus Logic; 4.5 Color Incompatibility Challenge; 4.6 Color Incompatibility Problem for Wittgenstein's Tractatus; 4.7 Color-Space-Time Constructions Versus Tractatus Elementarsätze; 4.8 Doubtful Status of TLP Elementarsätze and Simple Objects; 4.9 Untried Wittgensteinian Solution to the Color Incompatibility Problem; References; 5 What Does a Phenomenological Language Do? (Revisiting Some Remarks on Logical Form in Its Context)

5.1 Introduction: A Contrast of Views on the Phenomenological Language5.2 On the Very Status of Some Remarks on Logical Form; 5.3 What Does a Phenomenological Language (Symbolism) Do?; 5.4 Absent Arguments Concerning the Basic Spatial Structure of the Visual Field; 5.5 The Symbolism for the Visual Field and "Logical Form"; 5.6 Shortness (and Weakness) and What Comes Next; References; 6 Logic and Phenomenology: WittgensteinRamseySchlick in Colour-Exclusion ; 6.1 The "Colour-Exclusion Case"; 6.2 Necessity, Possibility, Impossibility; 6.2.1 A Tractarian Background; 6.2.2 Colours and Swans.

6.2.3 Analysis: Physical Vs. Logical6.3 Contradiction, Collision, Foreseeability; 6.3.1 Ascriptions of Colour Degrees Are Un-Analysable; 6.3.2 The Logical Product of Colour Ascriptions Is Logically Un-Foreseeable; 6.3.3 Substitutability Does not Back up Foreseeability; 6.4 Syntheticity, Aprioricity, and Their Quarrel; 6.4.1 Philosophy and Its Future; 6.4.2 A Dismissal of Would-be Scientific Phenomenology; 6.5 Trivialities, Tautologies, Phenomenologies; 6.5.1 A Mid-Wittgensteinian Response; 6.5.2 Mid-Wittgenstein's Own Response; 6.6 Logical Uniformity and Phenomenological Multicolourity.

6.6.1 A Tractarian Appeal6.6.2 A More Comprehensive Syntax; 6.6.3 Outwith Fundamentality and Regionality; References; 7 The "Color Problem": Infinity and the Development of Wittgenstein's Thinking ; 7.1 Division of Labor (Logic and its Application) and Infinity; 7.2 Forms of Infinity in the Tractatus; 7.3 Actual Infinity and Potential Infinity; 7.4 The "Exemption Thesis" and Some Comments on Two Passages; 7.5 The Case of Arithmetic; 7.6 The Problem of Degrees of Belief; 7.7 The Problem of Numbers Entering into the Logical Form of Elementary Propositions; References.

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