In twentieth-century philosophy, the limits of language and the scope of meaning were addressed together with the question of how thought regulates its own field of operation. While Ludwig Wittgenstein’s early and later texts reveal different aspects of this debate, approaches that treat the two periods as wholly opposed tend to relegate to the background the methodological orientations that display continuity in his thought. This study examines how the orientations of delimitation, descriptive orientation, relational order, and reticence, which become apparent in Wittgenstein’s philosophical method and show continuity between his early and later periods, are concretized in the façade, plan, and interior organization of the Wittgenstein House, designed between 1926 and 1928. Rather than adopting the assumption that philosophical content is directly transferred into architecture, the study aims to explain analytically the structural parallels between the ways in which thought limits itself and the strategies of spatial organization. Text-based close reading and analytical architectural analysis are employed together: in the first stage, Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus and Philosophical Investigations are examined in order to identify the four orientations; in the second stage, the building is evaluated in terms of proportional relations, spatial hierarchy, and representational intensity. In conclusion, the correspondences of these four orientations at the levels of façade, plan, interior, and detail are presented through a comparative table. The study interprets their convergence as a form of architectural silence grounded not in aesthetic minimalism but in the deliberate restriction of representation, and offers an analytical framework for approaching the relationship between Wittgenstein’s philosophical method and the practices of architecture and interior architecture through structural parallels.
Rıza Fatih Mendilcioğlu (Mon,) studied this question.