Unfortunately, like all other dialecticians, Dietzgen was happy to invent yet another a priori theory and then impose it on the world dogmatically.
In fact, it's hard to believe that anyone takes the above confused 'theory' seriously.
This deserves comment though:
It's a joke linking this material with Wittgenstein (the person who wrote this clearly has only a superficial knowledge of the latter's work). For example Wittgenstein would not begin with a question: "What happens when we think?" but with "How do we use the verb 'to think'"?
So, Dietzgen only gestures at an interest in language, being more concerned to invent some a priori psychology.
Moreover, Wittgenstein went out of his way to argue that not all words are names -- he was in fact one of the very first to point out that this was a mistake found in most forms of traditional philosophy, an error Dietzgen was happy to copy. What for example do "if", "and", "or", "inadvertently" and "nothing" name?
In fact, if all words were names, then sentences would be lists, like this:
"Hat, cat, diamond, letter, Paris, The Nile..."
And lists say nothing, threatening the unity of the proposition:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unity_of_the_proposition
The rest of what Dietzgen says is no better, and is now badly dated -- it is in fact only of interest to those who know little of how philosophy has moved on in the last 100 years, or those who do not care.
Thanks for posting it though; I will add it to my ever growing catalogue of Dialectical Disasters.


