(2) Intelligence and Intellect 25
J($) Knowing How and Knowing That 27
(4) The Motives of the Intellectualist Legend 32
(5) 'In My Head* 35
(6) The Positive Account of Knowing How 40
(7) Intelligent Capacities versus Habits 42
(8) The Exercise of Intelligence 45
(9) Understanding and Misunderstanding 51
(10) Solipsism 60
III. THE WILL 62
(1) Foreword 62
(2) The Myth of Volitions 62
3) The Distinction Between Voluntary and Involuntary 69
'4) Freedom of the Will 75
(5) The Bogy of Mechanism 76
IV. EMOTION 83
(i) Foreword 83
2) Feelings versus Inclinations 83
3) Inclinations versus Agitations 93
(4) Moods 9#
(5) Agitations and Feelings 104
(6) Enjoying and Wanting 107
(7) The Criteria of Motives no
(8) The Reasons and the Causes of Actions 113
(9) Conclusion 114
VI CONTENTS
V. DISPOSITIONS AND OCCURRENCES Il6
(1) Foreword 116
(2) The Logic of Dispositional Statements 117
(3) Mental Capacities and Tendencies 125
(4) Mental Occurrences 135
(5) Achievements 149
VI. SELF-KNOWLEDGE 154
(1) Foreword 154
(2) Consciousness 156
(3) Introspection 163
(4) Self-Knowledge Without Privileged Access 167
(5) Disclosure by Unstudied Talk t8r
(6) The Self 186
(7) The Systematic Elusiveness of T 195
VII. SENSATION AND OBSERVATION 199
(1) Foreword 199
(2) Sensations 201
(3) The Sense Datum Theory 210
(4) Sensation and Observation 222
(5) Phenomenalism 234
(6) Afterthoughts 239
VIII. IMAGINATION 245
(1) Foreword 245
(2) Picturing and Seeing 246
(3) The Theory of Special Status Pictures 248
(4) Imagining 256
(5) Pretending 258
(6) Pretending, Fancying and Imagining 264
(7) Memory 272
IX. THE INTELLECT 280
(1) Foreword 280
(2) The Demarcation of the Intellect 280
(3) The Construction, Possession and Utilisation of Theories 286
(4) The Application and Misapplication of Epistemological Terms 292
(5) Saying and Teaching 309
(6) The Primacy of the Intellect 314
(7) Epistemology 317
X. PSYCHOLOGY 319
(1) The Programme of Psychology 319
(2) Behaviourism 327