The document summarizes David Rosenthal Sellars' presentation on thought, speech, and consciousness. It makes three main points:
1) It outlines Wilfrid Sellars' account of how folk theorizing by "Jones" explains the relationship between thinking and speaking, how we can think about thinking, and our first-person access to thoughts.
2) It argues that many philosophers object to Sellars' account because they view access to thoughts as "Given" rather than requiring explanation. This view is what Sellars calls the "Myth of the Given".
3) It applies Sellars' account to analyze current views of thought and speech, and to define precisely what the