
I Think of You Constantly with Love
Description
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Their correspondence - consisting of more than 370 letters, cards, and telegrams, along with numerous drawings and attachments - starts in the summer of 1946, and ends in April 1951, just a week before Wittgenstein's death. It gives an incomparably vivid and touching picture of the last five years
of Wittgenstein's life.
His encounter with Richards was perhaps the deepest love and the greatest happiness of Wittgenstein's life. And yet these letters also reveal Wittgenstein as a lonely, vulnerable, and often overbearing man, painfully aware of his dependence on the affection of his much younger beloved friend, and painfully aware of the fragility of their connection.
This collection of letters between Wittgenstein and Richards is not only the single largest correspondence of Wittgenstein's that has survived, but - more importantly - it is by far the most significant and revealing cache of letters between Wittgenstein and someone whom he loved romantically. They offer an entirely new window onto Wittgenstein's inner life, and a profound and moving testament to his emotional and intellectual concerns in his last years.
Like all of Wittgenstein's writings, the letters are shot through with opinions, humour, and insights, delivered in Wittgenstein's typically sharp and powerful manner. In short, this is a most remarkable collection of documents - both for those interested in Wittgenstein's philosophy, and for those interested in the life of one of the 20th century's greatest thinkers.
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Persons
Alfred Schmidt is the Scientific Assistant to the Director-General of the Austrian National Library.
Ray Monk is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature and biographer of Wittgenstein. He is the author of Ludwig Wittgenstein: The Duty of Genius (1991) and Inside the Centre: The Life of J. Robert Oppenheimer (2012).
Content
Introduction
Editorial Note
Letters
I. In Cambridge and Swansea (June 1946 - July 1947)
II. Exile in Ireland (August 1947 - July 1949)
III. With Norman Malcolm, Ithaca (NY) (July - October 1949)
IV. With von Wright in Cambridge, and in Vienna (November 1949 - April 1950)
V. With Miss Anscombe, Oxford (May 1950 - February 1951)
VI. With Dr Bevan, Cambridge (February - April 1951)
VII. Undatable Letters and Cards, and
Messages from "John Smith"
Timeline
Bibliography
Acknowledgements
Index of Persons
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