<p>1. Introduction, <em>Mathieu Marion and Jimmy Plourde.- </em>2. Wittgenstein’s pre-<em>Tractatus</em> Conception of Philosophy: From the originally assumed view of the task of philosophy to the symbolic turn and isomorphism, <em>Jimmy Plourde.- </em>3. The Early Wittgenstein’s Atomic Logic, Categories and the Necessary A Posteriori, <em>Fraser MacBride.- </em>4. A Path to the <em>Tractatus</em>: From Facts and Forms through Picturing to Modality, <em>Sanford Shieh.- </em>5. Essence and Modality: From Husserl to Wittgenstein, <em>Kevin Mulligan.- </em>6. Is There Room for a Transcendental Aesthetic in Wittgenstein’s Early Thought?, <em>Hanne Appelqvist.- </em>7. How does a tautology say nothing?, <em>Ian Proops.- </em>8. Analysis of a Conversation on the Sheffer stroke and W-F schemes between Bertrand Russell and Ludwig Wittgenstein in April 1913,<em>Martin Pilch.- </em>9. Wittgenstein on Negation, Bipolarity, and Symmetry, <em>Guido Bonino.-</em> 10. “<em>To fulfill the purposeof existence</em>”: Wittgenstein’s <em>Notebooks</em> and the search for meaning, <em>Janyne Sattler.</em></p><p><br></p>