Review of Huw Prices Expressivism, Pragmatism and Representationalism Joshua Gert Forthcoming in Mind. Please cite published version when available. Expressivism, Pragmatism and Representationalism, by Huw Price. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2013. Pp. xii + 204. Paperback £18.99 In his characteristically clear, entertaining, and elegant style, Huw Price here provides an accessible manifesto for the style of philosophizing he has been defending for thirty years. His metaphilosophical goal is to help us scratch metaphysical itches and ease mental cramps in a naturalistic way. And his strategy is to focus on human linguistic activity, being careful to resist a natural danger, when one’s focus is on language, to rely on substantive semantic notions such as reference, truth, or representation. Price’s linguistic-but-not-representational strategy follows in the pragmatist tradition of the later Wittgenstein, Wilfrid Sellars, and Richard Rorty, but is a great deal friendlier to contemporary analytic philosophy; indeed, that is what it is. Because his positive view is laid out in only sixty-four pages (followed by helpful commentaries by Simon Blackburn, Robert Brandon, Paul Horwich, and Michael Williams, and by a substantial postscript and reply by Price himself) the book provides of necessity only a high-level overview. Happily for those who are intrigued by what they see from this height, many more detailed views from lower to the ground can be found in Price’s Naturalism without Mirrors (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2011).