This monograph examines the private annotations that Ludwig Wittgenstein made to his copy of G.H. Hardyâs classic textbook, A Course of Pure Mathematics. Complete with actual images of the annotations, it gives readers a more complete picture of Wittgensteinâs remarks on irrational numbers, which have only been published in an excerpted form and, as a result, have often been unjustly criticized. The authors first establish the context behind the annotations and discuss the historical role of Hardyâs textbook. They then go on to outline Wittgensteinâs non-extensionalist point of view on real numbers, assessing his manuscripts and published remarks and discussing attitudes in play in the philosophy of mathematics since Dedekind. Next, coverage focuses on the annotations themselves. The discussion encompasses irrational numbers, the law of excluded middle in mathematics and the notion of an âimproper picture," the continuum of real numbers, and Wittgensteinâs attitude toward functions and limits.