1st Edition

The World in Perspective Meaning and Intentionality

By Min Huang Copyright 2025
    224 Pages
    by Routledge

    This book aims to reclaim the significance of meaning within the philosophical thinking that has evolved from Descartes and Locke through Kant, Husserl, and Frege, focusing on intentionality—the mind's directedness toward the reality.

     

    The author opens with an epistemological account of analyticity and illustrates the central role of intentionality within it. A transcendentalist view on intentionality is then adopted, in contrast with the prevalent naturalist stance. Addressing key themes in the philosophy of language—truth, representation, propositions, predication, reference, and sense, the book presents a framework for a meaning-intentionality theory, which integrates key insights from Frege, Wittgenstein, Dummett, and Davidson.

     

    The book will appeal to scholars and graduate students of epistemology, philosophy of language, philosophy of mind, theory of meaning, and theory of intentionality.

    1. Analyticity  2. Intentionality  3. Representation  4. Proposition  5. Predicate  6. Reference 

    Biography

    Min Huang is a 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 the early analytic philosophy.