Religious Belief in the Later Wittgenstein—A ‘Form of Life’, a ‘Hinge’, a ‘Weltanschauung’, Something Else or None of These?
Abstract
1. Introduction
2. Interpretations of Wittgenstein’s Remarks on Religious Belief
2.1. Religion, or Rather Religious Belief, as Language-Game(s), and/or (Part of a) Form of Life
Yet a language-game, to be distinct from other language-games, must be characterized by a distinctive set of activities (with their attendant beliefs and assumptions) and a distinctive set of rules. However much it may resemble other language-games, it must be unique in its combination of activities and their purposes, as well as in its set of rules. Thus not only are, say, the various scientific disciplines distinct language-games because of their distinctive activities and rules, but science itself is a language-game as distinct from law, politics, commerce, or farming, as practices, as they are from one another and from their theoretical counterparts (jurisprudence, political economy, economics, agriculture) which, in turn, are distinct from one another.
What characterizes that form of life is not the expressions of belief that accompany it, but a way—a way that includes words and pictures, but is far from consisting in just words and pictures of living one’s life, of regulating all of one’s decisions. Here the believer, Kierkegaard, would add something that Wittgenstein does not say, but that I think he would agree with: namely, that a person may think and say all the right words and be living a thoroughly non-religious life.
As opposed to the strict reading of different language-games as being incommensurable and therefore of there being no possibility for religious and secular language-games to interact in any way, this acceptance of a human form of life underlying particular forms of life […] offers a stage upon which the religious form of life and the secular one can perform together.
- The forms of language are the forms of life.
- What is given are the forms of life.
- Ordinary language is all right as it is.
- A philosopher’s task is not to evaluate or criticise language or the forms of life, but to describe them where necessary and to the extent necessary to break philosophical perplexity concerning their operation.
- The different modes of discourse which are distinctive forms of life all have a logic of their own.
- Forms of life taken as a whole are not amenable to criticism; each mode of discourse is in order as it is, for each has its own criteria and each sets its own norms of intelligibility, reality and rationality.
- These general, dispute-engendering concepts, i.e., intelligibility, reality and rationality are systematically ambiguous; then exact meaning can only be determined in the context of a determinate way of life.
- There is no Archimedean point in terms of which a philosopher (or for that matter anyone else) can relevantly criticise whole modes of discourse or, what comes to the same thing, ways of life, for each mode of discourse has its own specific criteria of rationality/irrationality, intelligibility/unintelligibility, and reality/unreality (Nielsen 1967, pp. 192–93).
2.2. Religious Belief as (Part of) a World-Picture, or as Hinge(s)
Some propositions, those I have called M-propositions, form, as it were, the river-bed and are the hardened backdrop against which the others flow. Part of the river-bed is hard rock and susceptible only to an ‘imperceptible’ alteration over time, but some of it is sand, which shifts much more slowly than the flow of water, but more quickly than the stone, changing the appearance of the river. The line between river-bed, sand, and flowing water is not sharp, although one can choose examples of propositions that clearly belong in one category or another.
It appears to me as though a religious belief could only be (something like) passionately committing oneself to a system of coordinates || a system of reference [Koordinatensystem || Bezugssystem]. Hence although it’s belief, it is really a way of living, or a way of judging life. Passionately taking up this interpretation. And so instructing in a religious belief would have to be portraying, describing that system of reference & at the same time appealing to the conscience. And these together would have to result finally in the one under instruction himself, of his own accord, passionately taking up that system of reference. It would be as though someone were on the one hand to let me see my hopeless situation, on the other depict the rescue-anchor, until of my own accord, or at any rate not led by the hand by the instructor, I were to rush up & seize it.(Wittgenstein 1998, p. 73e; presentation of alternative formulations changed and my insertion)
Nevertheless, what makes belief in God a ‘hinge’ is not that this belief must be shared by everyone, but that loss of faith is not the loss of a merely isolated intellectual belief: if I lose my faith in God, I don’t just give up a single, independently specifiable, commitment, I lose a whole ‘world’—the entire Christian ‘system of reference’, for example […].
[W]hile Wittgenstein is claiming that religious conviction, at its root, is to be understood along arational lines (this is the fideistic part), he is not thereby arguing that all religious belief is to be understood arationally; indeed, one’s non-fundamental religious beliefs may well on this view enjoy a positive rational standing (which is why the view is not a straightforward version of fideism). Moreover, the idea is that religious belief is no different from ordinary non-religious belief in this regard, in that all belief, religious or otherwise, pre-supposes fundamental arational commitments (this is where the hinge epistemology comes in).
For, clearly, in the non-religious case, if it turned out that we cannot hold on to our hinges, this would open the door to forms of radical skepticism which would drag with them all our epistemic methods by means of which we form epistemically rational beliefs.
By contrast, in the religious case, we would certainly receive an existential blow, but nothing detrimental to the proper exercise of our rational faculties. That is, one might lose hope or faith in the meaningfulness of life, or in the possibility of being reunited with one’s loved ones in an afterlife. Yet, one would not lose the ability to form evidentially justified beliefs and, with it, a grip on epistemic rationality altogether.
2.3. Further Possible Systematizing Approaches to Interpretation
2.3.1. Religious Belief as a ‘Weltanschauung’
primary function is to provide a framework for understanding and interpreting the world in which we find ourselves. It would be more accurate to describe religion in this sense as a sub-system of reference, because within a world-picture as the outermost epistemic system of reference for all thought and action, there can certainly exist multiple religious systems of reference, just as Judaism and Christianity can coexist against the backdrop of the European world-picture.
The Christianity that preoccupied Wittgenstein is here defined by the ‘coordinates’ of “salvation, resurrection, judgment, heaven, hell,” which—not least because of the way they are interconnected within the religious coordinate system—describe “the Christian solution of the problem of life” [Wittgenstein 2003, 169]. To the believer, this casts a net of religious convictions over the facts, thereby allowing him to see things in a different light than a non-believer can.(Majetschak 2024, p. 19; my transl. and insertion)
2.3.2. Style of Thinking
Causality stands with the physicist for a style of thinking. Compare in religion the postulate of a creator. In a sense it seems to be an explanation, yet in another it does not explain at all. Compare a workman who finishes something off with a spiral. He can do it so that it ends in a knob or tapers off to a point. So with Creation. God is one style; the nebula another. A style gives us satisfaction; but one style is not more rational as another. Remarks about science have nothing to do with the progress of science. They rather are a style, which gives satisfaction. “Rational” is a word whose use is similar.
I am in a sense making propaganda for one style of thinking as opposed to another. […]
How much we are doing is changing the style of thinking and how much I’m doing is changing the style of thinking and how much I’m doing is persuading people to change their style of thinking.
Religion says: Do this!—Think like that! but it cannot justify this and it only need to try to do so to become repugnant; since for every reason it gives, there is a cogent counter-reason.
It is more convincing to say: “Think like this!—however strange it may seem.—Or: “Won’t you do this?—repugnant as it is—”.
2.4. Critical Views
These include (but are not exhausted by) a stress on religion as a form of life; a conception of religious claims as not competing with scientific explanations; the idea of religion as a framework of interpretation; and an emphasis on religious allegiance as passionate commitment. Wittgenstein’s views may not amount to a systematic theory of religion, or of religious language, but taken together they amount to a distinctive and highly original contribution that no student of the subject can afford to ignore.
3. Evaluation
As strange as it may sound, there is something that can be called religious knowledge or understanding, and one can possess a great deal of it without being very religious, which is a way of life. Some who start to become religious to a certain degree begin with this understanding: religious terms, expressions, start to mean something to them.—Some other, however, come to religion from a different angle. For example, they first become more and more helpful, unselfish, understanding, etc., and eventually religious words begin to mean something to them.—I mean: one person comes to religion almost through a kind of philosophy, another on a path that does not even lead him close to philosophy. […] Like you, I am a thinker. The path that comes naturally to me, and which has taken me relatively far, leads through thinking. But that does not make it the better path! It could rather be called “the path from the outside”(Wittgenstein 2011, 9 October 1947; my transl.).28
The truth of my statements is the test of my understanding of these statements.
That is to say: if I make certain false statements, it becomes uncertain whether I understand them.
What counts as an adequate test of a statement belongs to logic. It belongs to the description of the language-game.
The truth of certain empirical propositions belongs to our frame [system] of reference.(Wittgenstein 1975, pp. 80–83; my insertion)
It appears to me as though a religious belief could only be (something like) passionately committing oneself to a system of coordinates || a system of reference [Koordinatensystem || Bezugssystem]. Hence although it’s belief, it is really a way of living, or a way of judging life. Passionately taking up this interpretation. And so instructing in a religious belief would have to be portraying, describing that system of reference & at the same time appealing to the conscience. And these together would have to result finally in the one under instruction himself, of his own accord, passionately taking up that system of reference. It would be as though someone were on the one hand to let me see my hopeless situation, on the other depict the rescue-anchor, until of my own accord, or at any rate not led by the hand by the instructor, I were to rush up & seize it.(Wittgenstein 1998, p. 73e; presentation of alternative formulations changed and my insertion)
4. Conclusions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
1 | See, for example, Wittgenstein (2009, §7): “In the practice of the use of language (2 [the famous example of the builders]) one party calls out the words, the other acts on them. However, in instruction in the language the following process will occur: the learner names the objects; that is, he utters the word when the teacher points at the stone.—Indeed, there will be an even simpler exercise: the pupil repeats the words after the teacher—both of these being speech-like processes. // We can also think of the whole process of using words in (2) as one of those games by means of which children learn their native language. I will call these games ‘language-games’ and will sometimes speak of a primitive language as a language-game. // And the processes of naming the stones and of repeating words after someone might also be called language-games. Think of certain uses that are made of words in games like ring-a-ring-a-roses. // I shall also call the whole, consisting of language and the activities into which it is woven, a ‘language-game’”. See also Wittgenstein (2009, §23), where Wittgenstein lists various instances of language-games (e.g., “Giving orders, and acting on them”, “Constructing an object from a description (a drawing)”, “Forming and testing a hypothesis”, “Acting in a play”, “Requesting, thanking, cursing, greeting, praying”) to draw attention to “the variety of language-games”. |
2 | See, for example, the following remarks by Wittgenstein: “It is easy to imagine a language consisting only of orders and reports in battle.—Or a language consisting only of questions and expressions for answering Yes and No—and countless other things.—And to imagine a language means to imagine a form of life” (Wittgenstein 2009, §19). “The word ‘language-game’ is used here to emphasize the fact that the speaking of language is part of an activity, or of a form of life” (Wittgenstein 2009, §23). “[…] What is true or false is what human beings say; and it is in their language that human beings agree. This is agreement not in opinions, but rather in form of life” (Wittgenstein 2009, §241). |
3 | Kutschera criticizes this view attributed to Wittgenstein; see von Kutschera (1990, pp. 111–14). |
4 | “Wittgenstein devotes much attention to contrasting religious belief and science as separate language-games” (Barrett 1991, p. 167). |
5 | “[R]eligious belief and all that goes with it—ritual, an attitude and a way of life—is a different language-game from dogma and theology” (Barrett 1991, p. 207). |
6 | With regard to the question of how Wittgenstein would have positioned himself with regard to this type of fideism, Nielsen cautiously but nevertheless skeptically states the following: “Let me remark at the outset that I am not sure to what extent Wittgenstein himself would have accepted a Wittgensteinian Fideism. But Wittgenstein’s work has been taken in that way and it is thought in many quarters that such an approach will give us a deep grasp of religion and will expose the shallowness of scepticism. For this reason I shall carefully examine the view I call Wittgensteinian Fideism. But do not forget, what I indeed hope would be true, that Wittgenstein might well wish to say of Wittgensteinians what Freud said of Freudians” (Nielsen 1967, pp. 193–94). |
7 | For an overview, see, for example, Nielsen and Phillips (2005) and Amesbury (2022, Ch. 2.2.4); for the related debate on whether Wittgenstein should be classified as a non-cognitivist, see, for example, Cottingham (2017, pp. 644–46), Schönbaumsfeld (2023, pp. 44–46) and Pichler (2025). |
8 | Nielsen himself seems to use the terms ‘language-game’ and ‘form of life’ synonymously. While he writes of “forms of life” in the remark quoted above (as well as later, e.g., on p. 206), elsewhere he speaks of “the language game of religion” (Nielsen 1967, p. 196) without pointing out potential differences or arguing for synonymous use. |
9 | For Nielsen’s discussion of the positions of Peter Winch and Norman Malcolm, see, for example, Graham (2014, pp. 33–34). |
10 | In a later text, “Wittgenstein and Religion: Some Fashionable Criticisms” (Phillips [1987] 2005), however, he withdraws this self-criticism. There, he first quotes this remark about “misgivings,” but then goes on to state the following: “Later, however, I rejected this admission as premature. How, then, did I come to make it? I gave the following reason: ‘I suspect that we have heard so-called fideistic … views attributed to us so often that we have almost come to believe in their accuracy ourselves without checking it!’ This is testimony enough to the hold which philosophical fashion can exert on philosophical enquiry” (Phillips [1987] 2005, p. 44). |
11 | Brian Clack, for example, argues against the persuasiveness of such a connection (see Clack 2016, pp. 202–3). |
12 | “The difficulty is to realize the groundlessness of our believing” (Wittgenstein 1975, §166). See also, for example: “But I did not get my picture of the world by satisfying myself of its correctness; nor do I have it because I am satisfied of its correctness. No: it is the inherited background against which I distinguish between true and false”. |
13 | “It might be imagined that some propositions, of the form of empirical propositions, were hardened and functioned as channels for such empirical propositions as were not hardened but fluid; and that this relation altered with time, in that fluid propositions hardened, and hard ones became fluid. // The mythology may change back into a state of flux, the river-bed of thoughts may shift. But I distinguish between movement of the waters on the river-bed, and the shift of the bed itself; though there is not a sharp division of the one from the other. // But if someone were to say ‘So logic too is an empirical science’ he would be wrong. Yet this is right: the same proposition may get treated at one time as something to test by experience, at another as a rule of testing. // And the bank of that river consist partly of hard rock, subject to no alteration or only to an imperceptible one, partly of sand, which now in one place now in another gets washed away, or deposited” (Wittgenstein 1975, §§96–99). |
14 | A term coined by Annalisa Coliva (2015) and Danièle Moyal-Sharrock (Coliva and Moyal-Sharrock 2016). |
15 | For various precursors of hinge epistemology, see Boncompagni (2022). |
16 | “That is to say, the questions we raise and our doubts depend on the fact that some propositions are exempt from doubt, are as it were like hinges, on which those turn. // That is, it belongs to the logic of our scientific investigations that certain things are in deed not doubted. // But it isn’t that the situation is like this: We just can’t investigate everything, and for that reason we are forced to rest content with assumption. If I want the door to turn, the hinges must stay put” (Wittgenstein 1975, §§341–343). “The mathematical proposition has, as it were officially, been given the stamp of incontestability. I.e.: ‘Dispute about other things; this is immovable—it is a hinge on which your dispute can turn’” (Wittgenstein 1975, §655). |
17 | “The truth of certain empirical propositions belongs to our frame [system] of reference” (“Die Wahrheit gewisser Erfahrungssätze gehört zu unserm Bezugssystem”). |
18 | On the question of whether Wittgenstein’s remarks are to be classified as relativism, see, for example, Martin Kusch (2011) and Schönbaumsfeld (2014) for different positions. |
19 | “Religion is part of what one might call Weltanschauung, i.e., a world view, a general way to look at things” (Engelmann 2024, p. 77). |
20 | “Ultimately, ‘I believe p’ does not play the role of a picture in ordinary epistemic belief. However, religious belief plays precisely the role of this particular view, which precedes all epistemic belief—that is, the role of a particular holistic perspective on the world, a worldview [Weltanschauung]. Wittgenstein sees an ‘enormous gulf’ between religious belief and ordinary belief” (Pichler 2024, p. 254; my transl. and insertion). |
21 | “The concept of perspicuous presentation is of fundamental importance for us. It denotes the form of our representation, the way we see things. (A kind of ‘World-view’ [Weltanschauung] as it is apparently typical of our time. Spengler)” (Wittgenstein 1993, p. 133; my insertion). |
22 | “The concept of a surveyable representation is of fundamental significance for us. It characterizes the way we represent things, how we look at matters. (Is this a ‘Weltanschauung’?)” (Wittgenstein 2009, §122). |
23 | “Humour is not a mood, but a way of looking at the world [Weltanschauung]. So if it’s right to say that humour was eradicated in Nazi Germany, that does not mean that people were not in good spirits or anything of that sort, but something much deeper & more important” (Wittgenstein 1998, 88e; my insertion). |
24 | “So I am trying to say something that sounds like pragmatism. // Here I am being thwarted by a kind of Weltanschauung” (Wittgenstein 1998, §422). |
25 | This potentially brings a change in the style of thinking close to the conversion discussed by Wittgenstein in On Certainty: “At the end of reasons come persuasion. (Think what happens when missionaries convert natives)” (Wittgenstein 1975, §612). However, the possible link between these two remarks remains as speculative as some of the other references discussed in this essay. |
26 | “Wittgenstein definitely aims at a deeper understanding, firstly, of how religious attitudes are different from scientific or empirical ones, and secondly, of what is, or what it means to have, a religious attitude towards human life and human fate—in other words, what it means to live a religious life” (Kober 2006, p. 100). |
27 | Wittgenstein justifies his approach in this regard not least by means of the concept of ‘family resemblances’ and also describes it in more detail; see, for example, Wittgenstein (2009, §§66–71, 76–77). |
28 | “Es gibt, so seltsam das vielleicht klingt, etwas, was man religiöses Wissen, oder Verständnis, nennen kann, und wovon man viel besitzen kann, ohne doch viel Religion zu besitzen, die ja eine Art des Lebens ist. Mancher der anfängt, bis zu einem gewissen Grade religiös zu werden, fängt mit so einem Verständnis an: die religiösen Begriffe, Ausdrücke, fangen an, ihm etwas zu sagen.—Mancher aber kommt zur Religion von einer andern Seite. Er wird z.B. erst mehr und mehr hilfreich, uneigennützig, einsichtig etc. und am Ende fangen auch die religiösen Worte an ihm etwas zu sagen.—Ich meine: Der Eine kommt zur Religion beinahe durch eine Art von Philosophie, der Andere auf einem Weg, der ihn nicht einmal in die Nähe einer Philosophie führt. […]—Ich selbst bin, so wie Du, ein Denker. Der mir natürliche Weg, der übrigens bei mir vergleichsweise weit geführt hat, führt durch‘s Denken. Aber das ist doch nicht etwa der bessere Weg! Eher könnte man ihn “den Weg von außenherum” nennen”. |
29 | For an overview of Wittgenstein’s remarks and the various interpretations, see Schulte and Majetschak (2022). |
30 | On this point, see for example Addis (2001, pp. 88–92), for a critical discussion of Phillips’ interpretation. |
31 | Wittgenstein also mentions propositions that are explicitly learned, such as “water boils at 100 °C” (Wittgenstein 1975, §293), but in cases where they are doubted, these do not seem to plunge people into complete confusion: “If the water over the gas freezes, of course, I shall be as astonished as can be, but I shall assume some factor I don’t know of, and perhaps leave the matter to physicists to judge” (Wittgenstein 1975, §613). |
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Weiberg, A. Religious Belief in the Later Wittgenstein—A ‘Form of Life’, a ‘Hinge’, a ‘Weltanschauung’, Something Else or None of These? Religions 2025, 16, 1046. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel16081046
Weiberg A. Religious Belief in the Later Wittgenstein—A ‘Form of Life’, a ‘Hinge’, a ‘Weltanschauung’, Something Else or None of These? Religions. 2025; 16(8):1046. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel16081046
Chicago/Turabian StyleWeiberg, Anja. 2025. "Religious Belief in the Later Wittgenstein—A ‘Form of Life’, a ‘Hinge’, a ‘Weltanschauung’, Something Else or None of These?" Religions 16, no. 8: 1046. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel16081046
APA StyleWeiberg, A. (2025). Religious Belief in the Later Wittgenstein—A ‘Form of Life’, a ‘Hinge’, a ‘Weltanschauung’, Something Else or None of These? Religions, 16(8), 1046. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel16081046