FiguresTranslator's NoteINTRODUCTIONI. From Surplus Value to Surplus JouissanceThe Inconsistency of the OtherII. The Knowledge Market and Truth (on) StrikeIII. Topology of the OtherIV. Facts and What is SaidV. "I Am What I Is"VI. Toward a Practice of Logic in PsychoanalysisOn Pascal's WagerVII. Introduction to Pascal's WagerVIII. The One and Little aIX. From Fibonacci to PascalX. The Three MatricesXI. Truth's Retardation and the Administration of KnowledgeJouissance: Its FieldXII. "The Freud Event"XIII. On Jouissance Posited as an AbsoluteXIV. The Two Sides of SublimationXV. High FeverXVI. Structures of PerversionJouissance: Its RealXVII. Thought (as) CensorshipXVIII. Inside OutsideXIX. Knowledge and PowerXX. Knowledge and JouissanceXXI. Responses to AporiasJouissance: Its LogicXXII. Paradoxes of Psychoanalytic ActionXXIII. How to Generate Surplus Jouissance LogicallyXXIV. On the One-ExtraEvacuationXXV. The Ravishing Ignominy of the HommelleAppendicesFibonacci as Used by Lacan, by Luc MillerReader's Guide, by Jacques-Alain MillerDossier on the EvacuationIndex
Jacques Lacan (1901-1981) was one of the twentieth century's most influential thinkers. His many works include Écrits, The Four Fundamental Concepts of Psycho-analysis and the many volumes of The Seminar.