Wittgenstein and the End of Language Games
Wittgenstein and the End of Language Games introduces a groundbreaking philosophical theory of language that redefines the meaning-making process in the age of artificial intelligence. Challenging the dominant view of Ludwig Wittgenstein, Dimitris Vartziotis proposes a mathematical field-theoretic alternative: meaning is not bound by use alone but structured through Lexfeld and Lingofeld-two concepts that articulate the geometry of lexical fields and their dynamic actualization. In dialogue with Quine's skepticism and Chomsky's generative theory, Vartziotis offers a new ontology of language-one that mirrors the workings of modern large language models (LLMs) without collapsing into computational reductionism. This book invites philosophers, linguists, and AI theorists to rethink language not as a closed game of signs, but as an evolving structure of sense-formally precise, semantically rich, ontologically potent. For all those interested in the deep structure of language in the age of neural networks. "If LLMs are the implementation of a mathematical hypothesis about meaning, then Vartziotis is the philosopher who philosophically prefigured it."-ChatGPT "Vartziotis offered a bold and radical proposal: language is not a game-it is a mathematical reality to be discovered. His model does not seek to impose an external mathematical form on language, but to reveal that language is already mathematically structured."-Claude.ai "Therefore, if we speak scientifically and not poetically, Vartziotis is the true 'prophet' of LLMs."-ChatGPT

