| Murriana | p. 13 |
| A Preface to the Work, in which Hegel and E.T.A. Hoffman's writing Cat, Murr, consider the Relations between Sensation and Consciousness | |
| The Aesthetic Animal | p. 21 |
| Of the ancient Philosophers, Aristotle most especially, who, like the Cat, spoke much of Sensation, little of Consciousness | |
| The Primary Power | p. 31 |
| Containing Aristotle's Doctrine of the common Sense, the master Faculty by which Animals sense that they are sensing | |
| The Circle And The Point | p. 43 |
| A Likeness of the Philosopher and his Pupils, which links the foregoing common Sense to Time and to Language too | |
| Sentio Ergo Sum | p. 57 |
| In which Aristotle and the ancient Commentators explain why Beasts, so long as they live, cannot fail to notice that they exist | |
| Sleep | p. 65 |
| Containing a Discussion of Aristotle's Account of the insuperable Law which dictates that sentient Beings, if they are ever to be awake, must rest | |
| Awakening | p. 73 |
| A short Chapter, in which Proust, Valery, and Benjamin say much about the Disturbances at the End of Sleep | |
| Company | p. 79 |
| The ancient Concept of Sunaisthesis, the Faculty by which Animals feel when they feel and feel, no less, when they do not | |
| Historia Animalium | p. 91 |
| Containing a Remark or two on the Definition of human animal Nature, from Aristotle to Simplicius | |
| Appropriation | p. 101 |
| A long Chapter, containing an important Notion, as well as the Doctrines of Chrysippus concerning a small Mussel and a Crab, smaller still | |
| Elements Of Ethics | p. 117 |
| A Treatise by Hierocles the Stoic, who sought to prove beyond all Doubt that ôBeasts perceive themselves continuouslyö | |
| The Hound And The Hare | p. 127 |
| Being the shortest Chapter in the Book | |
| Life Science | p. 131 |
| In which Augustine of Hippo invents the inner Sense, with some Help from Aristotle and the Stoics, among Others | |
| The Unnamed King | p. 143 |
| In which Greek passes into Arabic, and the master Sense makes an unexpected Appearance in a Book by al-Farabi | |
| Psychology Of The 449Th Night | p. 151 |
| A short Chapter, in which a costly Slave discourses before a Caliph concerning the Powers contained in the Brain | |
| The Fountain And The Source | p. 157 |
| Another short Chapter, considering the Fortunes of the Arabic Doctrines among the Schoolmen and Others of their Age | |
| Perception Everywhere | p. 163 |
| A long Chapter, on Descartes, Bacon, and most especially Campanella, who held the World to be a large sensing Animal | |
| Of The Merits of Missiles | p. 179 |
| In which Leibniz differs from Descartes and from Locke, calling to Mind slow yet forceful Movements most worthy of Attention | |
| Thorns | p. 193 |
| Another long Chapter, Treating of Leibniz on Perception, Apperception, and the Existence of infinitely small and slightly sharp Sensations | |
| To Myself; or, the Great Dane | p. 211 |
| In which a fearsome Dog famously leaps upon Jean-Jacques Rousseau, putting an End to an otherwise solitary Walk | |
| Of Flying Creatures | p. 219 |
| Wherein Avicenna, Condillac, and Maine de Biran relate startling Findings made by Men and Statues suspended in Space | |
| Coenaesthesis | p. 237 |
| On the medical Idea of the common Feeling, the bodily Sense by which animate Beings dimly perceive that they are alive | |
| Phantoms | p. 253 |
| In which Bodies feel Parts they do not possess, and alternately fail to feel those Parts that are truly theirs | |
| The Anaesthetic Animal | p. 271 |
| Of modern Psychiatry and its Discovery of People who sense, with much Conviction, that they do not exist | |
| Untouchable | p. 291 |
| An End to the Work, containing what the Reader may, perhaps, expect to find in it | |
| Notes | p. 301 |
| Bibliography | p. 349 |
| Index | p. 373 |
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