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| | Ludwig Wittgenstein - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | To add insult to injury, those publishers who were interested proved to be mainly interested in the book because of Russell's introduction. |
 | | At last, Wittgenstein found a publisher in Wilhelm Ostwald's journal Annalen der Naturphilosophie, which printed a German edition in 1921, and in Routledge Kegan Paul, which printed a bilingual edition with Russell's introduction and the Ramsey-Ogden translation in 1922. |
 | | At the same time, Wittgenstein was a profoundly changed man: he had embraced the Christianity which previously he had opposed, faced harrowing combat in World War I, and succeeded in crystallizing the upheavals in his intellectual and emotional life with the exhausting composition of the Tractatus. |
| en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Wittgenstein (6414 words) |
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