Although Ludwig Wittgenstein's famously original and difficult philosophical work never translated into distinct school of thought, it did inspire two of the most influential movemements in 20th century philosophy - logical positivism and ordinary language philosophy. Wittgenstein's influence remains prominent throughout analytic philosophy, emerging in the works of thinkers as diverse as Michael Dummett, Daniel Dennett, John Searle, Donald Davidson, Saul Kripke, and John McDowell.
The Early Wittgenstein
Logical Atomism
Logik
The Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus
Influence on Logical Positivism
The New Reading
The Later Wittgenstein
Meaning as Use
= Dummett on Harmony
Chomsky and Generative Linguistics
Inferential Role Semantics
Fodor's Critique
Language Games
The Private Language Argument
Kripke on Rules and Private Language
Inverted Spectrum Arguments
Influence on Ordinary Language Philosophy
On Certainty and Epistemology
Wittgenstein's Philosophy of Mathematics
Wittgenstein & Godel
Truth-Conditions vs. Assertion-Conditions
The New Reading