1918  HOCHREIT & OBERALM 

The war saved my life; I don’t know what I’d have done without it. 

Ludwig Wittgenstein in conversation with his nephew Felix Salzer, 1930s 

Wittgenstein’s military card, 1918 

© Wittgenstein Archive Cambridge 

First page of the so-called Engelmann Typescript from August 1918. Wittgenstein had this typescript with him during his war captivity and worked on it. It is also the model for the Tractatus editions by Wilhelm Ostwald 1921 and Kegan Paul 1922. 

© 2017 The Master and Fellows of Trinity College, Cambridge; The Bodleian Libraries, University of Oxford; The University of Bergen, Bergen. 

In August 1918 Wittgenstein dictates the final version of the Tractatus. The long search for a publisher begins. 

1919  PRISONER OF WAR IN CASSINO 

 

I‘ve written a book called „Logisch-Philosophische Abhandlung“ containing all my work of the last 6 years. I believe I‘ve solved our problems finally. This may sound arrogant but I cann‘t help believing it. I finished the book in August 1918 & two month after was made Prigioniere. 

Letter to Bertrand Russel, 13. March 1919 

Cassino – police barracks, from 1916 prisoner of war camp, © Collezione Mauro Lottici 

1919  KUNDMANNGASSE: TRAINING AS A PRIMARY SCHOOL TEACHER 

I’m going to a Teachers’ Training College to become a teacher. So here I am sitting in a schoolroom again, which sound funnier than it is. In fact I find it terribly hard; I can no longer behave like a grammar school boy, and, funny as it sounds, the humiliation is so great for me that I often think I can hardly bear it! 

Wittgenstein to Paul Engelmann, 25 September 1919 

The schoolhouse in the Sophienbruckengasse (later Kundmanngasse) around 1900. On the lower right in the picture the entrance to the former teacher training institute.

© Archiv Dr. Christoph Romer, 1030 Wien 

A school class practice with teachers-in-training in the Kundmanngasse, 1902/03 

© Archive of the Austrian Academy of Sciences, St. Anna, No. W6 

Wittgenstein 1908 – 1912

Wittgenstein moved to Manchester in May 1908, after three semesters studying mechanical engineering

Wittgenstein 1913 – 1914

Wittgenstein designed the house in the spring of 1914, for his next stay in Skjolden. In the meantime, World War I…

Wittgenstein 1914 and 1915

God be with me!
Wartime Diaries

Wittgenstein 1920 to 1922

… My work consists of two parts: of the one which is here, and of everything which I have not written. And precisely this second
part is the important one.

Wittgenstein Tractatus

The Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus exerted a great influence on various philosophical schools, but especially on the Vienna Circle. Among the members of this circle were