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Wittgenstein, one of the few and genuine complete solipsists who have ever existed - did he see others inconsequential unbelongingness akin to his own

 Findlay argued that Wittgenstein not only preached solipsism; he lived it. “Wittgenstein, I consider, is one of the few and genuine complete solipsists who have ever existed” (SF: 62). 

He believed that he did not know what it is to be like someone other than Wittgenstein, or that anyone else could gasp what his own life was like.

His pervasive aestheticism certainly displayed a character that some believe, was technically describable as “schizoid”, there was something, queer, detached, surreal, incompletely human about it, some argue.

Did Wittgenstein perceive in others an inconsequential unbelongingness akin to his own. 

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