Abstract
The so-called ›resolute‹ reading of Wittgenstein, most notably
represented by Cora Diamond and James Conant, claims that the text of
the Tractatus does not convey a philosophical thesis. In engaging with the
text and its literary form, the reader is supposed to cultivate an experience
which will eventually allow her to confront (moral) reality without any
obstructing philosophical abstractions. The article argues that this under-
standing of the text implicitly rests on the traditional and highly problem-
atic distinction between rhetoric and ›serious‹ speech, between a use of
language which describes facts and one which elicits experiences. By re-
constructing the alleged effect of a ›resolute‹ reading of the Tractatus with
the help of Iser’s theory of literary experience, it is shown that the ›real-
ism‹ that the resolute readers argue for can have no substance at all.