Introduction;
1. Lacanian Theory and a Multidimensional and Topological Approach to Diagnoses;
2. The Graph of Desire, the Signifying Chain(s), and the late Lacan;
3. The Clinical Evidence for Psychoanalysis, Standard and Non-Standard Frames, and the Question of Pure and Applied Psychoanalysis;
4. Preliminary Considerations;
5. The Singular Frame, Logical Time, and the Scansion of Sessions;
6. The Subject Supposed to know(ing), Love and Hate, and the Question of the Negative Transference;
7. The Three Payments of the Analyst and the Direction of the Treatment;
8. Interpretation: Punctuation, Citation, and the Scansion of Speech;
9. The Resistance of the Analyst, the Desire of the Analyst, and the Countertransference;
10. The Function of the One in Sexual Difference and the Question of Feminine Jouissance;
11. Time, Phases of Analysis and Oedipus in Analytic Treatments Writ Large (Applied Psychoanalysis);
12. Termination: The Third Phase of Pure Analysis: The Aim and End of Analysis Proper;
13. Clinical Psychoanalysis in the Public Clinic and the Question of Trauma; Appendices