ABSTRACT

Remarks in Wittgenstein's On Certainty present a view according to which all knowledge rests on commitments to things we do not know. In his usual manner, Wittgenstein does not present a clearly defined set of premises designed to support this view. Instead, the reasons emerge along with the view through a series of often cryptic remarks. But this does not prevent us from critically assessing the position (or positions) one finds in the work. This chapter attempts to do that in the form of a philosophical dialogue. The challenges to Wittgenstein's view raised here center on: the extent to which hinge commitments can plausibly be regarded as rules of a language-game rather than rationally assessable propositions, mutual support versus bottom-up notions of justification, the subject- and context-relativity of hinge commitments, the difference between justification and persuasion, whether propositions of the form p is hinge are themselves hinge, and the general viability of Wittgenstein's view as an alternative to epistemological skepticism and Moorean anti-skepticism.