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Theology After Wittgenstein

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The philosopher Wittgenstein is considered by many to be the most influential and significant of the 20th century. This book introduces him to students of theology and focuses on his writings dealing with theological issues such as the inner life, immortality of the soul, and the relationship of the believer to church and tradition.

242 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 1986

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About the author

Fergus Kerr

14 books14 followers
Fergus Kerr OP is a Dominican friar, theologian, and philosopher known primarily for his work on Thomas Aquinas and Ludwig Wittgenstein.

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Displaying 1 - 14 of 14 reviews
Profile Image for Moses Yuriyvich Mikheyev.
Author 9 books38 followers
July 3, 2020
I don't think I've read a better philosophy of religion text. My copy is marked up in its entirety. This book influenced my thinking a lot. More than a lot, actually. I cited it and referred to it extensively when doing my masters thesis at Emory. I rarely re-read books. This was one of them. I plan to re-read it again at some point. For those of you interested in philosophy of religion, philosophy of language, and theology--this book is indispensable. I cannot recommend it enough. It's wonderful, packed with many interesting insights, and is beautifully written.
Profile Image for Alfredo Nicolás Dueñas.
44 reviews1 follower
August 16, 2025
Absolutely fantastic book that really brings you, nice and slow, into the Wittgenstein canon. It really is, as the quote on the cover suggests, a great intro into ol' LW but it also provides a fantastic (albeit only preliminary) view into its relevance for theological and phil-of-religion questions both about the self but also about the grammar of God and creation and that sort of stuff. Easy read, to the point, and brought to the fore some important questions I will have to follow up on.
Profile Image for James.
226 reviews20 followers
July 31, 2007
This was surprisingly interesting, and worth a read if only to find out that Bible-thumpers who appear on Borat are as embarrassing for intelligent Christians as for the rest of us. They don't all have their heads in the sand, and they aren't all creationist nutbars. Some of them have even kept up to date with recent non-theological thought, which is perhaps more than could be said for many Dawkins-thumping atheists, who perhaps will appear in the next Borat.
239 reviews1 follower
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June 25, 2025
***"I act with complete certainty. But that certainty is my own"
Profile Image for JonM.
Author 1 book34 followers
October 21, 2013

If I could describe Theology after Wittgenstein in two words, it would be intriguingly disappointing. It's intriguing mainly because of what the title infers. Ordinarily, one does not associate theology proper with the philosophical investigations of Wittgenstein. Nor does one ordinarily think that Wittgenstein could help reshape Christian epistemology. Yet this is the road that Fergus Kerr attempted to pave.

Kerr divided the book into three parts: 1) Stories of the soul, 2) Changing the subject, and 3) Theology without the mental ego. In part one, Kerr sorts through some the ways in which Rene Descarte’s philosophical writings and Saint Augustine’s Confessions have influenced the Western traditions of theology. His concerns are mainly aimed at those traditions of Cartesian-like ego that reduce objectivity in meaning to the mind of the solitary individual, thereby indirectly influencing a fixation of dispassionate objectivity in real knowledge, and the correlative retreat into subjectivism in morallity and aesthetics which dominates many people’s lives in Western culture. Kerr observes that, “The inclination to think of meaning, or any other mental or spiritual activity, as something that is radically private, ‘in our head,’ is explicitly related to the ancient religious myth of the soul” (p. 43). This radically private source of meaning, as Kerr derives from Wittgenstein’s work on the subject, is egocentric and “needs no demonstration” (p. 41). Working with a quotation from Augustine’s Confessions concerning an infant self already aware of its own identity and what is going on around it, prior to and independently of mastering a particular language, Kerr points out a serious dilemma regarding this epistemological identity of ‘self’ in the world. Utilizing Wittgenstein’s observations in this regard, Kerr writes:
Language is assumed to be necessary neither for framing one’s thoughts nor for identifying one’s desire. Prior to, and independently of, all ability to talk, one is supposed to be already aware of one’s mental states and acts. The self is pictured as ‘inside’, fluttering with its limbs, spluttering out words, striving with gruntings, and so on, to get its mind understood by the surrounding company. One has to be taught to read and write, but we apparently learn to speak by a sort of pulling ourselves up by our bootstraps” (p. 41).

Kerr begins by paving a new way of appreciating Christian theology, and that new way is paved by beginning with Wittgenstein and reconsidering his approach to this epistemological dilemma, which was to learn the value of exposing our Cartesian and Augustinian metaphysical illusions about the place of the self in nature and history.

In part two, Kerr dives into the nitty-gritty of how Wittgenstein exposed certain Cartesian and Augustinian metaphysical illusions about the ‘self’ which the Western world has inherited. “Wittgenstein strives to voice our deepest metaphysical inclinations in order to permit ‘an acknowledgement of human limitations which does not leave us chafed by our own skin’.” (p. 76). “Again and again, Wittgenstein reminds the reader that all meaning, even the very gesture of pointing something out, must have conceptual links with the whole system of the human way of doing things together. There is nothing inside one’s head that does not owe its existence to one’s collaboration in a historical community” (p. 76). “Wittgenstein’s constant theme is that, for our inner life, we are radically dependent on customs, uses, and institutions.” (p. 77). Kerr’s unique contribution in this part of the book is to argue that Wittgenstein has been falsely labeled as a struggling realist or idealist of sorts, when in fact he offered a distinctive challenge to both—that our human experience and relation to the world is neither essentially cognitive nor a mere description of brute facts that are mind-independent realities. According to Wittgenstein, “what is primary and foundational” of our relation to the world is “neither ideas nor beliefs nor any other class of mental events, but human beings in a multiplicity of transactions with one another.” (p. 119). For Wittgenstein, even our experiential use of language is better understood as an expressive activity, with the ‘self’ as a responsive agent in vital connection with others (p. 134). “We are so much accustomed to communication through speaking, in conversation,” Wittgenstein observed, “that it looks to us as if the whole point of communication lay in this: someone else grasps the sense of my words—which is something mental: he as it were takes it into his own mind. If he then does something further with it as well, that is no part of the immediate purpose of language.” (p. 141).

In part three, Kerr offers a fresh perspective of Wittgenstein in light of some overlooked theological aspects present in his later writings. He then explores a handful of ways in which Wittgenstein’s insights affect the metaphysical implications of Christian theology.

Some of the most insightful questions in the book that Kerr asks the reader to consider are found on page 147:
Why is it that we doubt it can be in mere words or signs or bodily activities that we discover anything interesting about our inner selves or about the divine? Why is it that we are so strongly tempted to turn away from what we say and do, as if these were not ‘significant’ enough?”

Kerr responds to these questions by, of course, appealing to Wittgenstein’s insights:

“Wittgenstein reminds us that we have no alternative to attending to the signs, the repertoire of gestures and so on that interweave our existence. We have no access to our own minds, non-linguistically. We have no access to the divine, independently of our life and language. It goes against the grain, so captivated are we by the metaphysical tradition, but Wittgenstein keeps reminding us of the obvious fact: we have nothing else to turn to but the whole complex system of signs which is our human world. The great question remains: why do we retreat from our world; why do we withdraw from the body in hope that more direct illumination about our minds and about the gods is to be found by gaining access to something other than what we say and do? This is the hidden theological agenda of Wittgenstein’s later writings.

All of this leads me to finally mention why I originally described this book as intriguingly disappointing. As I trenched through the muddy terrain of Cartesian philosophical bias’ and epistemological dilemmas, I longed for the goal of practical application. Instead, when I reached the end where I thought I would learn the profound impact of Wittgenstein upon practical theological affairs, I found more of the same regurgitated ideas about radically questioning the whole way of thinking about one’s ‘self’ in relation to God and others in this world. That, to me, was a big let down. Even though the journey through Kerr’s research of Wittgenstein initially peaked my interest and held it for a while, in the end I found it to be disappointing, at least, as far as his own stated application of those insights are concerned. I might have missed it, but Kerr seems to have overlooked all of the orthodox Trinitarian insights that arise from his research. I suspect that he avoided a full-fledged discussion of those insights because Wittgenstein would not have contributed favorably, having repudiated any need to advance traditional metaphysical jargon altogether in the way we speak about God and the nature of reality.
Profile Image for Mark Wendland.
17 reviews18 followers
August 15, 2015
After reading Stanley Cavell and Rowan Williams first, the book was not terribly surprising. I came away mostly with an appreciation of how deeply Kerr had influenced the former Archbishop. The theological appropriation of Kerr's Wittgenstein does not magically solve all problems, as Kerr readily admits, but it does open up a different way to think as it deconstructs some old Cartesian (really old Western in general) habits of mind deriving from the central image of the "hermit in the head". In some ways the discussion has moved on from Kerr's examples. In particular the abandonment of a substantival soul was prophetic. Nancy Murphy and Walter Brown, for example, in more recent years have made this an attractive and common position. If you are not familiar with Wittgenstein at all, and you have an interest in Christian theology, this is an easy read to begin with. Only the most important ideas of Wittgenstein are highlighted, and shown to be interconnected, so it never gets bogged down in discussions that a reader trying to feel their way around might be annoyed by.
Profile Image for Brad East.
Author 7 books65 followers
April 13, 2016
Indescribably helpful in understanding Wittgenstein, his context, his opponents, the implications of his thought, and more. Even where I differed in judgment with Kerr, the book is outstanding. Recommended to anyone interested in LW or in how his thought relates to theology.
Profile Image for CJSilvie.
22 reviews7 followers
August 13, 2015
The Cartesian conception of the mind plays such a massive role in our common thoughts on...well thought, our idea of an ultimately isolated self never truly expressed and indeed religious beliefs and doctrine . A trapped mind and even soul. This book is as interesting a work for philosophy of language as it is for theology. This book shows Wittgenstein's own obsession with language and how highly he held human interaction over inner thought. His later writings tackle Descartes as well as Augustine and countless philosophers and theologians after them. Wittgenstein's argument provides a counter model to Cartesian thought and this, perhaps surprisingly for some, has direct implications for theology if not only how we conceive language, society and objective or subjective truths . Despite maybe being slightly less theologically focused as is implied it really is a great read and certainly left me thinking.
Profile Image for Matthew.
226 reviews
October 7, 2011
This is one of the best introductions to Wittgenstein that I have read. Kerr has written specifically to encourage theologians to grapple with Wittgenstein's work, so if you (like me) are a theologian, then this book is for you. That being said, it is not an easy read, though Kerr's clarifications and thoughts are very helpful. Wittgenstein can be dense, and it will take a slow read to appreciate what he has to offer for the theologian.
Profile Image for Donald Brooks.
Author 13 books
April 27, 2016
Overall, this a very good introduction to Wittgenstein's thought (even beyond how it applies to the problem of the self and theology). In fact, this is better than many introductions to his thought-in-general. For anyone curious about theology based on more refined philosophical processes, this is a good book (and Wittgenstein a good thinker) to explore. I'd give it a 4.5 if it were an option.
Profile Image for Tylor Lovins.
Author 2 books19 followers
May 8, 2015
This book is a very clear and convincing introduction to Wittgenstein's work. Other than that, it has great theological import with its discussion on the affects that metaphysics has had on the Christian tradition and how Wittgenstein viewed the function of religious language. Great read.
Profile Image for Eve Lumerto.
Author 9 books15 followers
October 21, 2021
Wittgenstein is a really interesting thinker and this book seemed to do him justice.
Displaying 1 - 14 of 14 reviews

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