Readit News logoReadit News
brudgers · 4 years ago
In 1921, Wittgenstein was fresh off the completion of the Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus

Wittgenstein was fresh out out of a POW camp. He wrote the Tractatus living within the horrors of war. Working in a rural school was abandoning his training as an aeronautical engineer. It was abandoning his life as scion of a wealthy urban family that commissioned Klimt for family portraits and a Piano Concerto for the Left Hand for his brother.

Silence?

He was an artilleryman.

ggm · 4 years ago
The popsci history on TV strongly suggests he was a poor fit for the role. I'd love to believe otherwise, but I wonder what the kids thought. The ones who didn't adore him, (and there were some) probably hated it.

A teacher has to learn how to handle mixed abilities. Pedagogy is not just for the genius.

This quote from TFM:

The villagers had never heard of anyone pulling their daughters’ braids or boxing their sons’ ears for failing to understand algebra. In all likelihood, no one had tried to teach their children algebra before. Wittgenstein’s time as a schoolmaster came to an ignominious end when he struck a sickly eleven-year-old in Otterthal so hard that he required medical attention, resulting in a legal hearing. He was not charged with a crime, but, to his intense shame, he had to rely on his privileged background to avoid punishment for misconduct.

To his intense shame indeed.

vintermann · 4 years ago
He did at least seek out and apologize to the kids he'd hurt later.
ggm · 4 years ago
Yes. He wasn't evil. I think he was very unhappy a lot of the time, possibly most of his life.
dddw · 4 years ago
He seemed like a very strict teacher, probably not the most enjoyable character.
oh_sigh · 4 years ago
Some of Wittgenstein's behavior towards certain children seemed to be on the spectrum of grooming, at least from a modern perspective.