...a well-structured, well written book...
Georg Ki*cll, The Journal of Lingustics
In Minimal Mind Design, Wolfram Hinzen laid out the philosophical foundations of a minimalist naturalization of meaning. Most philosophers would have been satisfied with that important contribution; Hinzen took it as a mere first step. In this sequel, he embarks on a far-reaching program, aiming at rethinking the old chestnuts of concepts, names and truth within a radically Chomskyan paradigm. I simply do not know of any other work of this scope and profoundness that is as well-versed on current syntactic theorizing.
Juan Uriagereka, Professor of Linguistics, The University of Maryland at College Park
The book marks a signal step in the evolution of generative grammar and the unification of mind and brain. It should command the attention of linguists, philosophers, psychologists and the field of cognitive science.
Tom Roeper, University of Massachusetts, Amherst
...a book like Hinzen's is welcome...
Ileana Paul and Robert J. Stainton, Mind
In this finely crafted essay Hinzen argues that quintessentially semantic notions like Truth and Reference are in fact deeply grounded in natural language syntax. This is nothing less than the beginning of a Copernican revolution in philosophy of language and mind. This should be on everyone's required reading list.
Cedric Boeckx, Harvard University