Min Huang is Professor in the Department of Philosophy at Sun Yat-sen University, Mainland China. He works on the philosophy of language, epistemology, philosophy of science, and early analytic philosophy.
“This is an ambitious book that synthesizes analytic philosophy with Husserlian phenomenology, reconceiving reference within a framework of transcendental intentionality and developing a theory of meaning accordingly. The idea that drives the strategy is promising. According primacy to the first-person perspective provides for direct reference, while taking our linguistic activities (and not just the mind) to generate intersubjective intentionality allows the third-person perspective to emerge from the first-person perspective. The book draws on a rich range of work in analytic philosophy and phenomenology in developing the approach.” Michael Beaney, Regius Professor of Logic, University of Aberdeen, and Honorary Professor of History of Analytic Philosophy, Humboldt University of Berlin “It is an ambitious theory of meaning-intentionality proposed in the fascinating book. Professor Min Huang, a worldwide-known philosopher of language and logic, explores the mysteries of dimensions of language by presenting his fresh insights on analyticity, intentionality, representation, proposition, predicate, and reference. It is well worth reading for anyone interested in contemporary philosophy.” Yi Jiang, Professor of Philosophy at Shanxi University “In this original and thought-provoking book, Min Huang articulates a response to Quinean skepticism about meaning and analyticity by synthesizing the principal insights of Husserlian intentionality with the later Wittgenstein's rule-following considerations. Huang argues for meaning stability through a conception of intentionality essentially connected to language use. The resulting theoretical framework underpins accounts of representation and truth, of the rehabilitation of negative facts, and of the crucial notion of predication that has been at the center of recent controversies over propositions. Altogether these constitute a valuable intervention in philosophy of language and philosophy of mind.” Sanford Shieh, Professor of Philosophy, Wesleyan University