We have touched briefly before on the remote Norwegian log cabin above Lake Eidsvatnet Lake in Sogn in which philosopher Ludwig Wittgenstein did some of his finest thinking overlooking the fjord but realised we are guilty on not keeping readers properly up to date on its existence.
Long story short, for many years it was left to degenerate and in a state of some disrepair, but in 2019 it was finally rebuilt/restored after being carefully taken down, windows, roof tiles, timber, and all (and for a while rebuilt on an entirely different site in the nearby village).
His philosopher friend Bertrand Russell commented on Wittgenstein's extended time in the cabin: “I said it would be dark, and he said he hated daylight. I said it would be lonely, and he said he prostituted his mind talking to intelligent people. I said he was mad, and he said God preserve him from sanity. (God certainly will.)” Wittgenstein wrote back: “I am sitting here in a little place inside a beautiful fjord and thinking about the beastly theory of types"
Wittgenstein also wrote in a letter to the English philosopher G E Moore in October 1936: “I can’t imagine that I could have worked anywhere as I do here. It’s the quiet and, perhaps, the wonderful landscapes; I mean, its quiet seriousness.”
The hut is open to visitors though it's literally a bit of a trek to get to it.
CC image courtesy Olaf Meister
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