I want to explore the thesis that mind is non-local. Although it is a dangerous practice to allude to what one is not saying -- since there will always be a reader who fails to notice the word ``not'' -- it is important to understand the difference between this thesis and many other proposals about mind. In particular, there is such a prevalence of writings arguing that mind is located in some higher dimensional space that I need to make a sharp distinction between these writings and my own views. To begin with, let me stress that I am not arguing that mind is extended; rather, I am saying that it is not located in space at all. Next, I want to go even further, claiming not only that mind is not located in ordinary 3-D physical space, but that it is notlocated in a higher dimensional space, and it is not located in a generalised space, for most of the generalised concepts of space that I shall describe shortly. These more general structures are certainly implicated in the study of mind, and we cannot understand mind without them, but in most cases they do not provide a location for mind.