Therapeutic approach

The approach stems from Ludwig Wittgenstein.

[1][2] There is not a single philosophical method, though there are indeed methods, different therapies, as it were.Some noted philosophers who can be said to take a therapeutic approach are John McDowell, Alice Crary, and Richard Rorty.

Quietists, philosophers associated with The New Wittgenstein and anti-philosophy are all pertinent to the therapeutic approach.

Hans-Johann Glock has argued against the plausibility of the therapeutic approach as accurately characterizing Wittgenstein's philosophy.

[3] Hans Sluga and Rupert Read have advocated a "post-therapeutic" or "liberatory" interpretation of Wittgenstein.