1. Context and Relationship in Psychotherapy: An Introduction2. How Do We Understand Another Person? One-Person and Two-Person Perspectives3. The Dynamics of Personality: One-Person and Two-Person Views4. From Two-Person to Contextual: Beyond Infancy and the Consulting Room5. Drives, Relationships, and the Foundations of the Relational Point of View6. The Limits of the Archaeological Vision: Relational Theory and the Cyclical-Contextual Model7. Self-States, Dissociation, and the Schemas of Subjectivity and Intersubjectivity8. Exploration, Support, Self-Acceptance, and the "School of Suspicion"9. Insight, Direct Experience, and the Implications of a New Understanding of Anxiety10. Enactments, New Relational Experience, and Implicit Relational Knowing11. Confusions about Self-Disclosure: Real Issues, Pseudo-Issues, and the Inevitability of Trade-Offs12. The "Inner" World, the "Outer" World, and the Lived-In World: Mobilizing for Change in the Patient's Daily Life