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Viktor Frankl

Viktor Emil Frankl (26 March 1905 – 2 September 1997)[1] was an Austrian psychiatrist and Holocaust survivor,[2] who founded logotherapy, a school of psychotherapy that describes a search for a life's meaning as the central human motivational force.[3] Logotherapy is part of existential and humanistic psychology theories.[4]

Viktor Frankl
Frankl in 1965
Born
Viktor Emil Frankl

(1905-03-26)26 March 1905
Died2 September 1997(1997-09-02) (aged 92)
Vienna, Austria
Resting placeZentralfriedhof, Vienna, Austria, Old Jewish Section
NationalityAustrian
Alma materUniversity of Vienna (MD, 1930; PhD, 1948)
Occupation(s)Neurologist, psychiatrist
Known forLogotherapy
Existential analysis
Spouse(s)Tilly Grosser, m. 1941 – c. 1944–1945 (her death)
Eleonore Katharina Schwindt, m. 1947
Children1 daughter

Logotherapy was promoted as the third school of Viennese Psychotherapy, after those established by Sigmund Freud, and Alfred Adler.[5]

Frankl published 39 books.[6] The autobiographical Man's Search for Meaning, a best-selling book, is based on his experiences in various Nazi concentration camps.[7]

Early life Edit

Frankl was born the middle of three children to Gabriel Frankl, a civil servant in the Ministry of Social Service, and Elsa (née Lion), a Jewish family, in Vienna, in what was then the Austro-Hungarian Empire.[1] His interest in psychology and the role of meaning developed when he began taking night classes on applied psychology while in junior high school.[1] As a teenager, he began a correspondence with Sigmund Freud upon asking for permission to publish one of his papers.[8][9] After graduation from high school in 1923, he studied medicine at the University of Vienna.

In 1924, Frankl's first scientific paper was published in The International Journal of Psychoanalysis.[10] In the same year, he was president of the Sozialistische Mittelschüler Österreich, the Social Democratic Party of Austria's youth movement for high school students. Frankl's father was a socialist who named him after Viktor Adler, the founder of the party.[1][11] During this time, Frankl began questioning the Freudian approach to psychoanalysis. He joined Alfred Adler's circle of students and published his second scientific paper, "Psychotherapy and Worldview" ("Psychotherapie und Weltanschauung"), in Adler's International Journal of Individual Psychology in 1925.[1] Frankl was expelled from Adler's circle[2] when he insisted that meaning was the central motivational force in human beings. From 1926, he began refining his theory, which he termed logotherapy.[12]

Career Edit

Psychiatry Edit

Between 1928 and 1930, while still a medical student, he organized youth counselling centers[13] to address the high number of teen suicides occurring around the time of end of the year report cards. The program was sponsored by the city of Vienna and free of charge to the students. Frankl recruited other psychologists for the center, including Charlotte Bühler, Erwin Wexberg, and Rudolf Dreikurs. In 1931, not a single Viennese student died by suicide.[14][unreliable source?]

After earning his M.D. in 1930, Frankl gained extensive experience at Steinhof Psychiatric Hospital, where he was responsible for the treatment of suicidal women. In 1937, he began a private practice, but the Nazi annexation of Austria in 1938 limited his opportunity to treat patients.[1] In 1940, he joined Rothschild Hospital, the only hospital in Vienna still admitting Jews, as head of the neurology department. Prior to his deportation to the concentration camps, he helped numerous patients avoid the Nazi euthanasia program that targeted the mentally disabled.[2][15]

In 1942, just nine months after his marriage, Frankl and his family were sent to the Theresienstadt concentration camp. His father died there of starvation and pneumonia. In 1944, Frankl and the surviving members of his family were transported to Auschwitz, where his mother and brother were murdered in the gas chambers. His wife Tilly died later of typhus in Bergen-Belsen. Frankl spent three years in four concentration camps.[7]

Following the war, he became head of the neurology department of the General Polyclinic Vienna hospital, and established a private practice in his home. He worked with patients until his retirement in 1970.[2]

In 1948, Frankl earned a PhD in philosophy from the University of Vienna. His dissertation, The Unconscious God, examines the relationship between psychology and religion,[16] and advocates for the use of the Socratic dialogue (self-discovery discourse) for clients to get in touch with their spiritual unconscious.[17]

 
Grave of Viktor Frankl in Vienna

In 1955, Frankl was awarded a professorship of neurology and psychiatry at the University of Vienna, and, as visiting professor, lectured at Harvard University (1961), Southern Methodist University, Dallas (1966), and Duquesne University, Pittsburgh (1972).[12]

Throughout his career, Frankl argued that the reductionist tendencies of early psychotherapeutic approaches dehumanised the patient, and advocated for a rehumanisation of psychotherapy.[18]

The American Psychiatric Association awarded Frankl the 1985 Oskar Pfister Award for his contributions to religion and psychiatry.[18]

Man's Search for Meaning Edit

While head of the Neurological Department at the general Polyclinic Hospital, Frankl wrote Man's Search for Meaning over a nine-day period.[19] The book, originally titled A Psychologist Experiences the Concentration Camp, was released in German in 1946. The English translation of Man's Search for Meaning was published in 1959, and became an international bestseller.[2] Frankl saw this success as a symptom of the "mass neurosis of modern times" since the title promised to deal with the question of life's meaningfulness.[20] Millions of copies were sold in dozens of languages. In a 1991 survey conducted for the Library of Congress and the Book of the Month Club, Man's Search for Meaning was named one of the ten most influential books in the US.[21]

Logotherapy and existential analysis Edit

Frankl developed logotherapy and existential analysis, which are based on philosophical and psychological concepts, particularly the desire to find a meaning in life and free will.[22][23] Frankl identified three main ways of realizing meaning in life: by making a difference in the world, by having particular experiences, or by adopting particular attitudes.

The primary techniques offered by logotherapy and existential analysis are:[24][22][23]

  • Paradoxical intention: clients learn to overcome obsessions or anxieties by self-distancing and humorous exaggeration.
  • Dereflection: drawing the client's attention away from their symptoms, as hyper-reflection can lead to inaction.[25]
  • Socratic dialogue and attitude modification: asking questions designed to help a client find and pursue self-defined meaning in life.[26]

His acknowledgement of meaning as a central motivational force and factor in mental health is his lasting contribution to the field of psychology. It provided the foundational principles for the emerging field of positive psychology.[27] Frankl's work has also been endorsed in the Chabad philosophy of Hasidic Judaism.[28]

Controversy Edit

"Auschwitz survivor" testimony Edit

In The Missing Pieces of the Puzzle: A Reflection on the Odd Career of Viktor Frankl, Professor of history Timothy Pytell of California State University, San Bernardino,[29] conveys the numerous discrepancies and omissions in Frankl's "Auschwitz survivor" account and later autobiography, which many of his contemporaries, such as Thomas Szasz, similarly have raised.[30] In Frankl's Man's Search for Meaning, the book devotes approximately half of its contents to describing Auschwitz and the psychology of its prisoners, suggesting a long stay at the death camp, however his wording is contradictory and according to Pytell, "profoundly deceptive", when rather the impression of staying for months, Frankl was held close to the train, in the "depot prisoner" area of Auschwitz and for no more than a few days, he was neither registered there, nor assigned a number before being sent on to a subsidiary work camp of Dachau, known as Kaufering III, that together with Terezín, is the true setting of much of what is described in his book.[31][32][33]

Origins and implications of logotherapy Edit

Frankl's doctrine was that one must instill meaning in the events in one's life, and that work and suffering can lead to finding meaning, with this ultimately what would lead to fulfillment and happiness. In 1982 the scholar and holocaust analyst Lawrence L. Langer, who while also critical of what he called Frankl's distortions on the true experience of those at Auschwitz,[34] and Frankl's amoral focus on "meaning", that in Langer's assessment could just as equally be applied to Nazis "finding meaning in making the world free from Jews",[35] would go on to write "if this [logotherapy] doctrine had been more succinctly worded, the Nazis might have substituted it for the cruel mockery of Arbeit Macht Frei"["work sets free", read by those entering Auschwitz].[36] With, in professor Pytell's view, Langer also penetrating through Frankl's disturbed subtext that Holocaust "survival [was] a matter of mental health." With Langer criticizing Frankl's tone as almost self-congratulatory and promotional throughout, that "it comes as no surprise to the reader, as he closes the volume, that the real hero of Man's Search for Meaning is not man, but Viktor Frankl" by the continuation of the same fantasy of world-view meaning-making, which is precisely what had perturbed civilization into the holocaust-genocide of this era and others.[37]

Pytell later would remark on the particularly sharp insight of Langer's reading of Frankl's holocaust testimony, stating that with Langer's criticism published in 1982 before Pytell's biography, the former had thus drawn the controversial parallels, or accommodations in ideology without the knowledge that Victor Frankl was an advocate/"embraced"[38] the key ideas of the Nazi psychotherapy movement ("will and responsibility"[39]) as a form of therapy in the late 1930s. When at that time Frankl would submit a paper and contributed to the Göring institute in Vienna 1937 and again in early 1938 connecting the logotherapy focus on "world-view" to the "work of some of the leading Nazi psychotherapists",[40] both at a time before Austria was annexed by Nazi Germany in 1938.[41][42] Frankl's founding logotherapy paper, was submitted to and published in the Zentrallblatt fuer Psychotherapie [sic] the journal of the Goering Institute, a psychotherapy movement, with the "proclaimed agenda of building psychotherapy that affirmed a Nazi-oriented worldview".[43]

The origins of logotherapy, as described by Frankl, were therefore a major issue of continuity that Biographer Pytell argues were potentially problematic for Frankl because he had laid out the main elements of logotherapy while working for/contributing to the Nazi-affiliated Göring Institute. Principally Frankl's 1937 paper, that was published by the institute.[42] This association, as a source of controversy, that logotherapy was palatable to Nazism is the reason Pytell suggests, Frankl took two different stances on how the concentration-camp experience affected the course of his psychotherapy theory. Namely, that within the original English edition of Frankl's most well known book, Man's Search for Meaning, the suggestion is made and still largely held that logotherapy was itself derived from his camp experience, with the claim as it appears in the original edition, that this form of psychotherapy was "not concocted in the philosopher's armchair nor at the analyst's couch; it took shape in the hard school of air-raid shelters and bomb craters; in concentration camps and prisoner of war camps." Frankl's statements however to this effect would be deleted from later editions, though in the 1963 edition, a similar statement again appeared on the back of the book jacket of Man's Search for Meaning.

Frankl over the years would with these widely read statements and others, switch between the idea that logotherapy took shape in the camps to the claim that the camps merely were a testing ground of his already preconceived theories. An uncovering of the matter would occur in 1977 with Frankl revealing on this controversy, though compounding another, stating "People think I came out of Auschwitz with a brand-new psychotherapy. This is not the case."[44]

Jewish relations and experiments on the resistance Edit

In the post war years, Frankl's attitude towards not pursuing justice nor assigning collective guilt to the Austrian people for collaborating with or acquiescing in the face of Nazism, led to "frayed" relationships between Frankl, many Viennese and the larger American Jewish community, such that in 1978 when attempting to give a lecture at the institute of Adult Jewish Studies in New York, Frankl was confronted with an outburst of boos from the audience and was called a "nazi pig". Frankl supported forgiveness and held that many in Germany and Austria were powerless to do anything about the atrocities which occurred and could not be collectively blamed.[45][46][47]

In 1988 Frankl would further "stir up sentiment against him" by being photographed next to and in accepting the Great Silver Medal with Star for Services to the Republic of Austria as a Holocaust survivor, from President Waldheim, a controversial president of Austria who concurrent with the medal ceremony, was gripped by revelations that he had lied about his WWII military record and was under investigation for complicity in Nazi War crimes. It was later concluded that he was not involved in war crimes but had knowledge of them. Frankl's acceptance of the medal was viewed by many in the international Jewish community as a betrayal.[47]

In his "Gutachten" Gestapo profile, Frankl is described as "politically perfect" by the Nazi secret police, with Frankl's membership in the Austro-fascist "Fatherland Front" in 1934, similarly stated in isolation. It has been suggested that as a state employee in a hospital he was likely automatically signed up to the party regardless of whether he wanted to or not. Frankl was interviewed twice by the secret police during the war, yet nothing of the expected contents, the subject of discussion or any further information on these interviews, is contained in Frankl's file, suggesting to biographers that Frankl's file was "cleansed" sometime after the war.[48][49]

None of Frankl's obituaries mention the unqualified and unskilled brain lobotomy and trepanation medical experiments approved by the Nazis that Frankl performed on Jews who had committed suicide with an overdose of sedatives, in resistance to their impending arrest, imprisonment and enforced labour in the concentration camp system. The goal of these experiments were to try and revive those who had killed themselves, Frankl justified this by saying that he was trying to find ways to save the lives of Jews. Operating without any training as a surgeon, Frankl would voluntarily request of the Nazis to perform the experiments on those who had killed themselves, and once approved - published some of the details on his experiments, the methods of insertion of his chosen amphetamine drugs into the brains of these individuals, resulting in, at times, an alleged partial resuscitation, mainly in 1942 (prior to his own internment at Theresienstadt ghetto in September, later in that year). Historian Günter Bischof of Harvard University, suggests Frankl's approaching and requesting to perform lobotomy experiments could be seen as a way to "ingratiate" himself amongst the Nazis, as the latter were not, at that time, appreciative of the international scrutiny that these suicides were beginning to create, nor "suicide" being listed on arrest records.[50][51][52][11]

Response to Thomas Pytell Edit

Thomas Pytell's critique towards Viktor Frankl was used by Holocaust deniar Theodore O'Keefe, according to Alexander Batthyány. [53] Alexander Batthyány was a researcher and member of staff of the Viktor Frankl Archive in Vienna. Throughout the first chapter of his book "Viktor Frankl and the Shoah", he reflects on Thomas Pytell's work about Viktor Frankl, and the flaws in it. Batthyány points out that Pytell never visited the archive to consult primary sources from the person he was writing about. Batthyány also critiques Pytell for not interviewing Viktor Frankl while Frankl was still alive. Pytell even explains in his book on Frankl that he had the opportunity to meet him – as a friend offered it, yet he decided that he could not meet Frankl.

Decorations and awards Edit

Personal life Edit

In 1941, Frankl married Tilly Grosser, who was a station nurse at Rothschild Hospital. Soon after they were married she became pregnant, but they were forced to abort the child.[54] Tilly died in the Bergen Belsen concentration camp.[2][1]

Frankl's father, Gabriel, originally from Pohořelice, Moravia, died in the Theresienstadt Ghetto concentration camp on 13 February 1943, aged 81, from starvation and pneumonia. His mother and brother, Walter, were both killed in Auschwitz. His sister, Stella, escaped to Australia.[2][1]

In 1947, Frankl married Eleonore "Elly" Katharina Schwindt. She was a practicing Catholic. The couple respected each other's religious backgrounds, both attending church and synagogue, and celebrating Christmas and Hanukkah. They had one daughter, Gabriele, who went on to become a child psychologist.[2][4][55] Although it was not known for 50 years, his wife and son-in-law reported after his death that he prayed every day and had memorized the words of daily Jewish prayers and psalms.[56][28]

Frankl died of heart failure in Vienna on 2 September 1997. He is buried in the Jewish section of the Vienna Central Cemetery.[57]

Bibliography Edit

His books in English are:

  • Man's Search for Meaning. An Introduction to Logotherapy, Beacon Press, Boston, 2006. ISBN 978-0807014271 (English translation 1959. Originally published in 1946 as Ein Psychologe erlebt das Konzentrationslager, "A Psychologist Experiences the Concentration Camp")
  • The Doctor and the Soul, (originally titled Ärztliche Seelsorge), Random House, 1955.
  • On the Theory and Therapy of Mental Disorders. An Introduction to Logotherapy and Existential Analysis. Translated by James M. DuBois. Brunner-Routledge, London & New York, 2004. ISBN 0415950295
  • Psychotherapy and Existentialism. Selected Papers on Logotherapy, Simon & Schuster, New York, 1967. ISBN 0671200569
  • The Will to Meaning. Foundations and Applications of Logotherapy, New American Library, New York, 1988 ISBN 0452010349
  • The Unheard Cry for Meaning. Psychotherapy and Humanism Simon & Schuster, New York, 2011 ISBN 978-1451664386
  • Viktor Frankl Recollections: An Autobiography; Basic Books, Cambridge, MA 2000. ISBN 978-0738203553.
  • Man's Search for Ultimate Meaning. (A revised and extended edition of The Unconscious God; with a foreword by Swanee Hunt). Perseus Book Publishing, New York, 1997; ISBN 0306456206. Paperback edition: Perseus Book Group; New York, 2000; ISBN 0738203548.
  • Yes to Life: In Spite of Everything. Beacon Press, Boston, 2020. ISBN 978-0807005552.

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h Frankl, Viktor Emil (2000). Viktor Frankl Recollections: An Autobiography. Basic Books. ISBN 978-0738203553. from the original on 22 March 2015. Retrieved 24 May 2016.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h Haddon Klingberg (2001). When life calls out to us: the love and lifework of Viktor and Elly Frankl. Doubleday. p. 155. ISBN 978-0385500364. from the original on 23 March 2017. Retrieved 24 May 2016.
  3. ^ Längle, Alfried (2015). From Viktor Frankl's Logotherapy to Existential Analytic psychotherapy; in: European Psychotherapy 2014/2015. Austria: Home of the World's Psychotherapy. Serge Sulz, Stefan Hagspiel (Eds.). p. 67.
  4. ^ a b Redsand, Anna (2006). Viktor Frankl: A Life Worth Living. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. ISBN 978-0618723430. from the original on 22 March 2017. Retrieved 24 May 2016.
  5. ^ Corey, G. (2021). Theory and practice of counseling and psychotherapy (10th ed.). Cengage.
  6. ^ "Viktor Frankl – Life and Work". www.viktorfrankl.org. Viktor Frankl Institute Vienna. 2011. from the original on 14 May 2020. Retrieved 2 August 2016.
  7. ^ a b Schatzmann, Morton (5 September 1997). "Obituary: Viktor Frankl". The Independent (UK). from the original on 1 September 2020. Retrieved 21 April 2020.
  8. ^ "Viktor Frankl | Biography, Books, Theory, & Facts". Encyclopedia Britannica. from the original on 16 June 2021. Retrieved 6 July 2021.
  9. ^ Hatala, Andrew (2010). "Frankl and Freud: Friend or Foe? Towards Cultural & Developmental Perspectives of Theoretical Ideologies" (PDF). Psychology and Society. 3: 1–25. (PDF) from the original on 9 July 2021. Retrieved 6 July 2021.
  10. ^ . Archived from the original on 18 July 2019.
  11. ^ a b Pytell, T. (2000). The Missing Pieces of the Puzzle: A Reflection on the Odd Career of Viktor Frankl. Journal of Contemporary History, 35(2), 281–306. doi:10.1177/002200940003500208
  12. ^ a b "Viktor Frankl Biography". Viktor Frankl Institute Vienna. from the original on 13 May 2020. Retrieved 24 April 2020.
  13. ^ Batthyány, Alexander, ed. (2016). Logotherapy and Existential Analysis. Proceedings of the Viktor Frankl Institute Vienna, Volume 1. Springer International. pp. 3–6. ISBN 978-3319805689.
  14. ^ Frankl, Viktor E. (Viktor Emil), 1905–1997 (2005). Frühe Schriften, 1923–1942. Vesely-Frankl, Gabriele. Wien: W. Maudrich. ISBN 3851758129. OCLC 61029472.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  15. ^ Neugebauer, Wolfgang (2002). Von der Zwangssterilisierung zur Ermordung. Zur Geschichte der NS-Euthanasie in Wien Teil II. Wien/Köln/Weimar: Böhlau. pp. 99–111. ISBN 978-3205993254.
  16. ^ Boeree, George. "Personality Theories: Viktor Frankl." 3 November 2019 at the Wayback Machine Shippensburg University. Accessed 18 April 2014.
  17. ^ Lantz, James E. "Family logotherapy." Contemporary Family Therapy 8, no. 2 (1986): 124–135.
  18. ^ a b Frankl, Viktor (2000). Man's search for ultimate meaning. Perseus Pub. ISBN 978-0738203546. from the original on 22 March 2017. Retrieved 24 May 2016.
  19. ^ "The Life of Viktor Frankl". Viktor Frankl Institute of America. from the original on 6 August 2020. Retrieved 24 April 2020.
  20. ^ Frankl, Viktor (2010). The Feeling of Meaninglessness. Marquette University Press. ISBN 978-0874627589.
  21. ^ Fein, Esther B. (20 November 1991). "New York Times, 11-20-1991". The New York Times. from the original on 28 April 2020. Retrieved 21 April 2020.
  22. ^ a b Frankl, Viktor (2014). The Will to Meaning: Foundations and Applications of Logotherapy. New York: Penguin/Plume. ISBN 978-0142181263.
  23. ^ a b "What is Logotherapy/Existential Analysis". from the original on 13 May 2020. Retrieved 24 April 2020.
  24. ^ Frankl, Viktor (2019). The Doctor and the Soul. From Psychotherapy to Logotherapy. New York: Vintage Books. ISBN 978-0525567042.
  25. ^ Frankl, Viktor E. (1975). "Paradoxical intention and dereflection". Psychotherapy: Theory, Research & Practice. 12 (3): 226–237. doi:10.1037/h0086434.
  26. ^ Ameli, M., & Dattilio, F. M. (2013). "Enhancing cognitive behavior therapy with logotherapy: Techniques for clinical practice". Psychotherapy. 50 (3): 387–391. doi:10.1037/a0033394. PMID 24000857.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  27. ^ Viktor Frankl’s Meaning-Seeking Model and Positive Psychology 19 July 2021 at the Wayback Machine Chapter from book 'Meaning in Positive and Existential Psychology' (pp. 149–184)
  28. ^ a b Biderman, Jacob. "The Rebbe and Viktor Frankl".
  29. ^ Pytell, Timothy (2003). "Redeedming the Unredeemable: Auschwitz and Man's Search for Meaning". Holocaust and Genocide Studies. 17 (1): 89–113. doi:10.1093/hgs/17.1.89.
  30. ^ Szasz, T.S. (2003). The secular cure of souls: "Analysis" or dialogue? Existential Analysis, 14: 203-212 (July).
  31. ^ [Viktor Frankl's Search for Meaning: An Emblematic 20th-Century Life By Timothy Pytell pg 104]
  32. ^ List of inmates who were transferred to Kaufering III camp, 11/07/1944-16/04/1945
  33. ^ See Martin Weinmann, ed., Das nationalsozialistische Lagersystem (Frankfurt: Zweitausendeins, 1990), pp.195, 558.
  34. ^ [Suicide Prohibition: The Shame of Medicine By Thomas Szasz. pg 60-62]
  35. ^ [Suicide Prohibition: The Shame of Medicine By Thomas Szasz pg 62]
  36. ^ [Lawrence Langer, Versions of Survival: The Holocaust and the Human Spirit (Albany: State University of New York Press, 1982), p.24. [End Page 107]]
  37. ^ Lawrence Langer, Versions of Survival: The Holocaust and the Human Spirit (Albany: State University of New York Press, 1982) As "So nonsensically unspecific is this universal principle of being that one can imagine Heinrich Himmler announcing it to his SS men, or Joseph Goebbels sardonically applying it to the genocide of the Jews!"
  38. ^ Austrian Lives By Günter Bischof pg 241-242
  39. ^ Viktor Frankl's Search for Meaning: An Emblematic 20th-Century Life By Timothy Pytell pg 70-72, 111
  40. ^ Austrian Lives By Günter Bischof pg 242
  41. ^ Austrian Lives By Günter Bischof p.255
  42. ^ a b "What is perhaps most impressive about Langer's reading is that he was unaware of Frankl's 1937 article promoting a form of psychotherapy palatable to the Nazis".
  43. ^ "Is There a Fascist Impulse in All of Us? | Psychology Today".
  44. ^ Pytell, Timothy (3 June 2003). "Redeedming the Unredeemable: Auschwitz and Man's Search for Meaning". Holocaust and Genocide Studies. 17 (1): 89–113. doi:10.1093/hgs/17.1.89. ISSN 1476-7937.
  45. ^ Austrian Lives By Günter Bischof p.255
  46. ^ "Psychotherapie: Wille zum Sinn - Viktor Frankl wäre am 26. März 100 geworden". 5 March 2005.
  47. ^ a b [Freud's World: An Encyclopedia of His Life and Times, By Luis A. Cordón. pg 147]
  48. ^ "Austrian Jews Respond to Nazism, Part 2 | Psychology Today".
  49. ^ Pytell, Timothy (2015). Viktor Frankl's Search for Meaning: An Emblematic 20th-Century Life. Berghahn Books. p. 62.
  50. ^ Pytell, Timothy (3 June 2003). "Redeedming the Unredeemable: Auschwitz and Man's Search for Meaning". Holocaust and Genocide Studies. 17 (1): 89–113. doi:10.1093/hgs/17.1.89. ISSN 1476-7937.
  51. ^ Austrian Lives By Günter Bischof 241 to 255
  52. ^ [Suicide Prohibition: The Shame of Medicine By Thomas Szasz. pg 60-62]
  53. ^ Batthyány, Alexander (15 October 2021). Viktor Frankl and the Shoah. Springer Cham. pp. 3–12. doi:10.1007/978-3-030-83063-2. ISSN 2192-8363.
  54. ^ Bushkin, Hanan; van Niekerk, Roelf; Stroud, Louise (31 August 2021). "Searching for meaning in chaos: Viktor Frankl's story". Europe's Journal of Psychology. 17 (3): 233–242. doi:10.5964/ejop.5439. ISSN 1841-0413. PMC 8763215. PMID 35136443.
  55. ^ Scully, Mathew (1995). . First Things. Archived from the original on 1 May 2012.
  56. ^ Klingberg 2001[page needed]
  57. ^ Noble, Holcomb B. (4 September 1997). "Dr. Viktor E. Frankl of Vienna, Psychiatrist of the Search for Meaning, Dies at 92". The New York Times. p. B-7. from the original on 12 October 2009. Retrieved 6 September 2009.

External links Edit

  • Viktor Frankl Institute Vienna
  • Viktor Frankl Institute of America
  • Who Was Viktor Frankl? by Dr. Henry Abramson

viktor, frankl, viktor, emil, frankl, march, 1905, september, 1997, austrian, psychiatrist, holocaust, survivor, founded, logotherapy, school, psychotherapy, that, describes, search, life, meaning, central, human, motivational, force, logotherapy, part, existe. Viktor Emil Frankl 26 March 1905 2 September 1997 1 was an Austrian psychiatrist and Holocaust survivor 2 who founded logotherapy a school of psychotherapy that describes a search for a life s meaning as the central human motivational force 3 Logotherapy is part of existential and humanistic psychology theories 4 Viktor FranklFrankl in 1965BornViktor Emil Frankl 1905 03 26 26 March 1905Vienna Austria HungaryDied2 September 1997 1997 09 02 aged 92 Vienna AustriaResting placeZentralfriedhof Vienna Austria Old Jewish SectionNationalityAustrianAlma materUniversity of Vienna MD 1930 PhD 1948 Occupation s Neurologist psychiatristKnown forLogotherapyExistential analysisSpouse s Tilly Grosser m 1941 c 1944 1945 her death Eleonore Katharina Schwindt m 1947Children1 daughterLogotherapy was promoted as the third school of Viennese Psychotherapy after those established by Sigmund Freud and Alfred Adler 5 Frankl published 39 books 6 The autobiographical Man s Search for Meaning a best selling book is based on his experiences in various Nazi concentration camps 7 Contents 1 Early life 2 Career 2 1 Psychiatry 2 2 Man s Search for Meaning 2 3 Logotherapy and existential analysis 3 Controversy 3 1 Auschwitz survivor testimony 3 2 Origins and implications of logotherapy 3 3 Jewish relations and experiments on the resistance 3 4 Response to Thomas Pytell 4 Decorations and awards 5 Personal life 6 Bibliography 7 See also 8 References 9 External linksEarly life EditFrankl was born the middle of three children to Gabriel Frankl a civil servant in the Ministry of Social Service and Elsa nee Lion a Jewish family in Vienna in what was then the Austro Hungarian Empire 1 His interest in psychology and the role of meaning developed when he began taking night classes on applied psychology while in junior high school 1 As a teenager he began a correspondence with Sigmund Freud upon asking for permission to publish one of his papers 8 9 After graduation from high school in 1923 he studied medicine at the University of Vienna In 1924 Frankl s first scientific paper was published in The International Journal of Psychoanalysis 10 In the same year he was president of the Sozialistische Mittelschuler Osterreich the Social Democratic Party of Austria s youth movement for high school students Frankl s father was a socialist who named him after Viktor Adler the founder of the party 1 11 During this time Frankl began questioning the Freudian approach to psychoanalysis He joined Alfred Adler s circle of students and published his second scientific paper Psychotherapy and Worldview Psychotherapie und Weltanschauung in Adler s International Journal of Individual Psychology in 1925 1 Frankl was expelled from Adler s circle 2 when he insisted that meaning was the central motivational force in human beings From 1926 he began refining his theory which he termed logotherapy 12 Career EditPsychiatry Edit Between 1928 and 1930 while still a medical student he organized youth counselling centers 13 to address the high number of teen suicides occurring around the time of end of the year report cards The program was sponsored by the city of Vienna and free of charge to the students Frankl recruited other psychologists for the center including Charlotte Buhler Erwin Wexberg and Rudolf Dreikurs In 1931 not a single Viennese student died by suicide 14 unreliable source After earning his M D in 1930 Frankl gained extensive experience at Steinhof Psychiatric Hospital where he was responsible for the treatment of suicidal women In 1937 he began a private practice but the Nazi annexation of Austria in 1938 limited his opportunity to treat patients 1 In 1940 he joined Rothschild Hospital the only hospital in Vienna still admitting Jews as head of the neurology department Prior to his deportation to the concentration camps he helped numerous patients avoid the Nazi euthanasia program that targeted the mentally disabled 2 15 In 1942 just nine months after his marriage Frankl and his family were sent to the Theresienstadt concentration camp His father died there of starvation and pneumonia In 1944 Frankl and the surviving members of his family were transported to Auschwitz where his mother and brother were murdered in the gas chambers His wife Tilly died later of typhus in Bergen Belsen Frankl spent three years in four concentration camps 7 Following the war he became head of the neurology department of the General Polyclinic Vienna hospital and established a private practice in his home He worked with patients until his retirement in 1970 2 In 1948 Frankl earned a PhD in philosophy from the University of Vienna His dissertation The Unconscious God examines the relationship between psychology and religion 16 and advocates for the use of the Socratic dialogue self discovery discourse for clients to get in touch with their spiritual unconscious 17 nbsp Grave of Viktor Frankl in ViennaIn 1955 Frankl was awarded a professorship of neurology and psychiatry at the University of Vienna and as visiting professor lectured at Harvard University 1961 Southern Methodist University Dallas 1966 and Duquesne University Pittsburgh 1972 12 Throughout his career Frankl argued that the reductionist tendencies of early psychotherapeutic approaches dehumanised the patient and advocated for a rehumanisation of psychotherapy 18 The American Psychiatric Association awarded Frankl the 1985 Oskar Pfister Award for his contributions to religion and psychiatry 18 Man s Search for Meaning Edit While head of the Neurological Department at the general Polyclinic Hospital Frankl wrote Man s Search for Meaning over a nine day period 19 The book originally titled A Psychologist Experiences the Concentration Camp was released in German in 1946 The English translation of Man s Search for Meaning was published in 1959 and became an international bestseller 2 Frankl saw this success as a symptom of the mass neurosis of modern times since the title promised to deal with the question of life s meaningfulness 20 Millions of copies were sold in dozens of languages In a 1991 survey conducted for the Library of Congress and the Book of the Month Club Man s Search for Meaning was named one of the ten most influential books in the US 21 Logotherapy and existential analysis Edit Frankl developed logotherapy and existential analysis which are based on philosophical and psychological concepts particularly the desire to find a meaning in life and free will 22 23 Frankl identified three main ways of realizing meaning in life by making a difference in the world by having particular experiences or by adopting particular attitudes The primary techniques offered by logotherapy and existential analysis are 24 22 23 Paradoxical intention clients learn to overcome obsessions or anxieties by self distancing and humorous exaggeration Dereflection drawing the client s attention away from their symptoms as hyper reflection can lead to inaction 25 Socratic dialogue and attitude modification asking questions designed to help a client find and pursue self defined meaning in life 26 His acknowledgement of meaning as a central motivational force and factor in mental health is his lasting contribution to the field of psychology It provided the foundational principles for the emerging field of positive psychology 27 Frankl s work has also been endorsed in the Chabad philosophy of Hasidic Judaism 28 Controversy Edit Auschwitz survivor testimony Edit In The Missing Pieces of the Puzzle A Reflection on the Odd Career of Viktor Frankl Professor of history Timothy Pytell of California State University San Bernardino 29 conveys the numerous discrepancies and omissions in Frankl s Auschwitz survivor account and later autobiography which many of his contemporaries such as Thomas Szasz similarly have raised 30 In Frankl s Man s Search for Meaning the book devotes approximately half of its contents to describing Auschwitz and the psychology of its prisoners suggesting a long stay at the death camp however his wording is contradictory and according to Pytell profoundly deceptive when rather the impression of staying for months Frankl was held close to the train in the depot prisoner area of Auschwitz and for no more than a few days he was neither registered there nor assigned a number before being sent on to a subsidiary work camp of Dachau known as Kaufering III that together with Terezin is the true setting of much of what is described in his book 31 32 33 Origins and implications of logotherapy Edit Frankl s doctrine was that one must instill meaning in the events in one s life and that work and suffering can lead to finding meaning with this ultimately what would lead to fulfillment and happiness In 1982 the scholar and holocaust analyst Lawrence L Langer who while also critical of what he called Frankl s distortions on the true experience of those at Auschwitz 34 and Frankl s amoral focus on meaning that in Langer s assessment could just as equally be applied to Nazis finding meaning in making the world free from Jews 35 would go on to write if this logotherapy doctrine had been more succinctly worded the Nazis might have substituted it for the cruel mockery of Arbeit Macht Frei work sets free read by those entering Auschwitz 36 With in professor Pytell s view Langer also penetrating through Frankl s disturbed subtext that Holocaust survival was a matter of mental health With Langer criticizing Frankl s tone as almost self congratulatory and promotional throughout that it comes as no surprise to the reader as he closes the volume that the real hero of Man s Search for Meaning is not man but Viktor Frankl by the continuation of the same fantasy of world view meaning making which is precisely what had perturbed civilization into the holocaust genocide of this era and others 37 Pytell later would remark on the particularly sharp insight of Langer s reading of Frankl s holocaust testimony stating that with Langer s criticism published in 1982 before Pytell s biography the former had thus drawn the controversial parallels or accommodations in ideology without the knowledge that Victor Frankl was an advocate embraced 38 the key ideas of the Nazi psychotherapy movement will and responsibility 39 as a form of therapy in the late 1930s When at that time Frankl would submit a paper and contributed to the Goring institute in Vienna 1937 and again in early 1938 connecting the logotherapy focus on world view to the work of some of the leading Nazi psychotherapists 40 both at a time before Austria was annexed by Nazi Germany in 1938 41 42 Frankl s founding logotherapy paper was submitted to and published in the Zentrallblatt fuer Psychotherapie sic the journal of the Goering Institute a psychotherapy movement with the proclaimed agenda of building psychotherapy that affirmed a Nazi oriented worldview 43 The origins of logotherapy as described by Frankl were therefore a major issue of continuity that Biographer Pytell argues were potentially problematic for Frankl because he had laid out the main elements of logotherapy while working for contributing to the Nazi affiliated Goring Institute Principally Frankl s 1937 paper that was published by the institute 42 This association as a source of controversy that logotherapy was palatable to Nazism is the reason Pytell suggests Frankl took two different stances on how the concentration camp experience affected the course of his psychotherapy theory Namely that within the original English edition of Frankl s most well known book Man s Search for Meaning the suggestion is made and still largely held that logotherapy was itself derived from his camp experience with the claim as it appears in the original edition that this form of psychotherapy was not concocted in the philosopher s armchair nor at the analyst s couch it took shape in the hard school of air raid shelters and bomb craters in concentration camps and prisoner of war camps Frankl s statements however to this effect would be deleted from later editions though in the 1963 edition a similar statement again appeared on the back of the book jacket of Man s Search for Meaning Frankl over the years would with these widely read statements and others switch between the idea that logotherapy took shape in the camps to the claim that the camps merely were a testing ground of his already preconceived theories An uncovering of the matter would occur in 1977 with Frankl revealing on this controversy though compounding another stating People think I came out of Auschwitz with a brand new psychotherapy This is not the case 44 Jewish relations and experiments on the resistance Edit In the post war years Frankl s attitude towards not pursuing justice nor assigning collective guilt to the Austrian people for collaborating with or acquiescing in the face of Nazism led to frayed relationships between Frankl many Viennese and the larger American Jewish community such that in 1978 when attempting to give a lecture at the institute of Adult Jewish Studies in New York Frankl was confronted with an outburst of boos from the audience and was called a nazi pig Frankl supported forgiveness and held that many in Germany and Austria were powerless to do anything about the atrocities which occurred and could not be collectively blamed 45 46 47 In 1988 Frankl would further stir up sentiment against him by being photographed next to and in accepting the Great Silver Medal with Star for Services to the Republic of Austria as a Holocaust survivor from President Waldheim a controversial president of Austria who concurrent with the medal ceremony was gripped by revelations that he had lied about his WWII military record and was under investigation for complicity in Nazi War crimes It was later concluded that he was not involved in war crimes but had knowledge of them Frankl s acceptance of the medal was viewed by many in the international Jewish community as a betrayal 47 In his Gutachten Gestapo profile Frankl is described as politically perfect by the Nazi secret police with Frankl s membership in the Austro fascist Fatherland Front in 1934 similarly stated in isolation It has been suggested that as a state employee in a hospital he was likely automatically signed up to the party regardless of whether he wanted to or not Frankl was interviewed twice by the secret police during the war yet nothing of the expected contents the subject of discussion or any further information on these interviews is contained in Frankl s file suggesting to biographers that Frankl s file was cleansed sometime after the war 48 49 None of Frankl s obituaries mention the unqualified and unskilled brain lobotomy and trepanation medical experiments approved by the Nazis that Frankl performed on Jews who had committed suicide with an overdose of sedatives in resistance to their impending arrest imprisonment and enforced labour in the concentration camp system The goal of these experiments were to try and revive those who had killed themselves Frankl justified this by saying that he was trying to find ways to save the lives of Jews Operating without any training as a surgeon Frankl would voluntarily request of the Nazis to perform the experiments on those who had killed themselves and once approved published some of the details on his experiments the methods of insertion of his chosen amphetamine drugs into the brains of these individuals resulting in at times an alleged partial resuscitation mainly in 1942 prior to his own internment at Theresienstadt ghetto in September later in that year Historian Gunter Bischof of Harvard University suggests Frankl s approaching and requesting to perform lobotomy experiments could be seen as a way to ingratiate himself amongst the Nazis as the latter were not at that time appreciative of the international scrutiny that these suicides were beginning to create nor suicide being listed on arrest records 50 51 52 11 Response to Thomas Pytell Edit Thomas Pytell s critique towards Viktor Frankl was used by Holocaust deniar Theodore O Keefe according to Alexander Batthyany 53 Alexander Batthyany was a researcher and member of staff of the Viktor Frankl Archive in Vienna Throughout the first chapter of his book Viktor Frankl and the Shoah he reflects on Thomas Pytell s work about Viktor Frankl and the flaws in it Batthyany points out that Pytell never visited the archive to consult primary sources from the person he was writing about Batthyany also critiques Pytell for not interviewing Viktor Frankl while Frankl was still alive Pytell even explains in his book on Frankl that he had the opportunity to meet him as a friend offered it yet he decided that he could not meet Frankl Decorations and awards Edit1956 Promotion Award for Public Education of the Ministry of Education Austria 1962 Cardinal Innitzer Prize Austria 1969 Austrian Cross of Honour for Science and Art 1st class 1976 Prize of the Danubia Foundation 1980 Honorary Ring of Vienna Austria 1981 Austrian Decoration for Science and Art 1985 Oskar Pfister Award US 1986 Honorary doctorate from the University of Vienna Austria 1986 Honorary member of the association Burgervereinigung Landsberg im 20 Jahrhundert 1988 Great Silver Medal with Star for Services to the Republic of Austria 1995 Hans Prinzhorn Medal 1995 Honorary Citizen of the City of Vienna 1995 Great Gold Medal with Star for Services to the Republic of AustriaPersonal life EditIn 1941 Frankl married Tilly Grosser who was a station nurse at Rothschild Hospital Soon after they were married she became pregnant but they were forced to abort the child 54 Tilly died in the Bergen Belsen concentration camp 2 1 Frankl s father Gabriel originally from Pohorelice Moravia died in the Theresienstadt Ghetto concentration camp on 13 February 1943 aged 81 from starvation and pneumonia His mother and brother Walter were both killed in Auschwitz His sister Stella escaped to Australia 2 1 In 1947 Frankl married Eleonore Elly Katharina Schwindt She was a practicing Catholic The couple respected each other s religious backgrounds both attending church and synagogue and celebrating Christmas and Hanukkah They had one daughter Gabriele who went on to become a child psychologist 2 4 55 Although it was not known for 50 years his wife and son in law reported after his death that he prayed every day and had memorized the words of daily Jewish prayers and psalms 56 28 Frankl died of heart failure in Vienna on 2 September 1997 He is buried in the Jewish section of the Vienna Central Cemetery 57 Bibliography EditHis books in English are Man s Search for Meaning An Introduction to Logotherapy Beacon Press Boston 2006 ISBN 978 0807014271 English translation 1959 Originally published in 1946 as Ein Psychologe erlebt das Konzentrationslager A Psychologist Experiences the Concentration Camp The Doctor and the Soul originally titled Arztliche Seelsorge Random House 1955 On the Theory and Therapy of Mental Disorders An Introduction to Logotherapy and Existential Analysis Translated by James M DuBois Brunner Routledge London amp New York 2004 ISBN 0415950295 Psychotherapy and Existentialism Selected Papers on Logotherapy Simon amp Schuster New York 1967 ISBN 0671200569 The Will to Meaning Foundations and Applications of Logotherapy New American Library New York 1988 ISBN 0452010349 The Unheard Cry for Meaning Psychotherapy and Humanism Simon amp Schuster New York 2011 ISBN 978 1451664386 Viktor Frankl Recollections An Autobiography Basic Books Cambridge MA 2000 ISBN 978 0738203553 Man s Search for Ultimate Meaning A revised and extended edition of The Unconscious God with a foreword by Swanee Hunt Perseus Book Publishing New York 1997 ISBN 0306456206 Paperback edition Perseus Book Group New York 2000 ISBN 0738203548 Yes to Life In Spite of Everything Beacon Press Boston 2020 ISBN 978 0807005552 See also Edit nbsp Austria portal nbsp Philosophy portal nbsp Psychology portalList of logotherapy institutes many named after Frankl Meaning makingReferences Edit a b c d e f g h Frankl Viktor Emil 2000 Viktor Frankl Recollections An Autobiography Basic Books ISBN 978 0738203553 Archived from the original on 22 March 2015 Retrieved 24 May 2016 a b c d e f g h Haddon Klingberg 2001 When life calls out to us the love and lifework of Viktor and Elly Frankl Doubleday p 155 ISBN 978 0385500364 Archived from the original on 23 March 2017 Retrieved 24 May 2016 Langle Alfried 2015 From Viktor Frankl s Logotherapy to Existential Analytic psychotherapy in European Psychotherapy 2014 2015 Austria Home of the World s Psychotherapy Serge Sulz Stefan Hagspiel Eds p 67 a b Redsand Anna 2006 Viktor Frankl A Life Worth Living Houghton Mifflin Harcourt ISBN 978 0618723430 Archived from the original on 22 March 2017 Retrieved 24 May 2016 Corey G 2021 Theory and practice of counseling and psychotherapy 10th ed Cengage Viktor Frankl Life and Work www viktorfrankl org Viktor Frankl Institute Vienna 2011 Archived from the original on 14 May 2020 Retrieved 2 August 2016 a b Schatzmann Morton 5 September 1997 Obituary Viktor Frankl The Independent UK Archived from the original on 1 September 2020 Retrieved 21 April 2020 Viktor Frankl Biography Books Theory amp Facts Encyclopedia Britannica Archived from the original on 16 June 2021 Retrieved 6 July 2021 Hatala Andrew 2010 Frankl and Freud Friend or Foe Towards Cultural amp Developmental Perspectives of Theoretical Ideologies PDF Psychology and Society 3 1 25 Archived PDF from the original on 9 July 2021 Retrieved 6 July 2021 List of books and articles about Viktor Frankl Archived from the original on 18 July 2019 a b Pytell T 2000 The Missing Pieces of the Puzzle A Reflection on the Odd Career of Viktor Frankl Journal of Contemporary History 35 2 281 306 doi 10 1177 002200940003500208 a b Viktor Frankl Biography Viktor Frankl Institute Vienna Archived from the original on 13 May 2020 Retrieved 24 April 2020 Batthyany Alexander ed 2016 Logotherapy and Existential Analysis Proceedings of the Viktor Frankl Institute Vienna Volume 1 Springer International pp 3 6 ISBN 978 3319805689 Frankl Viktor E Viktor Emil 1905 1997 2005 Fruhe Schriften 1923 1942 Vesely Frankl Gabriele Wien W Maudrich ISBN 3851758129 OCLC 61029472 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Neugebauer Wolfgang 2002 Von der Zwangssterilisierung zur Ermordung Zur Geschichte der NS Euthanasie in Wien Teil II Wien Koln Weimar Bohlau pp 99 111 ISBN 978 3205993254 Boeree George Personality Theories Viktor Frankl Archived 3 November 2019 at the Wayback Machine Shippensburg University Accessed 18 April 2014 Lantz James E Family logotherapy Contemporary Family Therapy 8 no 2 1986 124 135 a b Frankl Viktor 2000 Man s search for ultimate meaning Perseus Pub ISBN 978 0738203546 Archived from the original on 22 March 2017 Retrieved 24 May 2016 The Life of Viktor Frankl Viktor Frankl Institute of America Archived from the original on 6 August 2020 Retrieved 24 April 2020 Frankl Viktor 2010 The Feeling of Meaninglessness Marquette University Press ISBN 978 0874627589 Fein Esther B 20 November 1991 New York Times 11 20 1991 The New York Times Archived from the original on 28 April 2020 Retrieved 21 April 2020 a b Frankl Viktor 2014 The Will to Meaning Foundations and Applications of Logotherapy New York Penguin Plume ISBN 978 0142181263 a b What is Logotherapy Existential Analysis Archived from the original on 13 May 2020 Retrieved 24 April 2020 Frankl Viktor 2019 The Doctor and the Soul From Psychotherapy to Logotherapy New York Vintage Books ISBN 978 0525567042 Frankl Viktor E 1975 Paradoxical intention and dereflection Psychotherapy Theory Research amp Practice 12 3 226 237 doi 10 1037 h0086434 Ameli M amp Dattilio F M 2013 Enhancing cognitive behavior therapy with logotherapy Techniques for clinical practice Psychotherapy 50 3 387 391 doi 10 1037 a0033394 PMID 24000857 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Viktor Frankl s Meaning Seeking Model and Positive Psychology Archived 19 July 2021 at the Wayback Machine Chapter from book Meaning in Positive and Existential Psychology pp 149 184 a b Biderman Jacob The Rebbe and Viktor Frankl Pytell Timothy 2003 Redeedming the Unredeemable Auschwitz and Man s Search for Meaning Holocaust and Genocide Studies 17 1 89 113 doi 10 1093 hgs 17 1 89 Szasz T S 2003 The secular cure of souls Analysis or dialogue Existential Analysis 14 203 212 July Viktor Frankl s Search for Meaning An Emblematic 20th Century Life By Timothy Pytell pg 104 List of inmates who were transferred to Kaufering III camp 11 07 1944 16 04 1945 See Martin Weinmann ed Das nationalsozialistische Lagersystem Frankfurt Zweitausendeins 1990 pp 195 558 Suicide Prohibition The Shame of Medicine By Thomas Szasz pg 60 62 Suicide Prohibition The Shame of Medicine By Thomas Szasz pg 62 Lawrence Langer Versions of Survival The Holocaust and the Human Spirit Albany State University of New York Press 1982 p 24 End Page 107 Lawrence Langer Versions of Survival The Holocaust and the Human Spirit Albany State University of New York Press 1982 As So nonsensically unspecific is this universal principle of being that one can imagineHeinrich Himmler announcing it to his SS men or Joseph Goebbels sardonically applying it to the genocide of the Jews Austrian Lives By Gunter Bischof pg 241 242 Viktor Frankl s Search for Meaning An Emblematic 20th Century Life By Timothy Pytell pg 70 72 111 Austrian Lives By Gunter Bischof pg 242 Austrian Lives By Gunter Bischof p 255 a b What is perhaps most impressive about Langer s reading is that he was unaware of Frankl s 1937 article promoting a form of psychotherapy palatable to the Nazis Is There a Fascist Impulse in All of Us Psychology Today Pytell Timothy 3 June 2003 Redeedming the Unredeemable Auschwitz and Man s Search for Meaning Holocaust and Genocide Studies 17 1 89 113 doi 10 1093 hgs 17 1 89 ISSN 1476 7937 Austrian Lives By Gunter Bischof p 255 Psychotherapie Wille zum Sinn Viktor Frankl ware am 26 Marz 100 geworden 5 March 2005 a b Freud s World An Encyclopedia of His Life and Times By Luis A Cordon pg 147 Austrian Jews Respond to Nazism Part 2 Psychology Today Pytell Timothy 2015 Viktor Frankl s Search for Meaning An Emblematic 20th Century Life Berghahn Books p 62 Pytell Timothy 3 June 2003 Redeedming the Unredeemable Auschwitz and Man s Search for Meaning Holocaust and Genocide Studies 17 1 89 113 doi 10 1093 hgs 17 1 89 ISSN 1476 7937 Austrian Lives By Gunter Bischof 241 to 255 Suicide Prohibition The Shame of Medicine By Thomas Szasz pg 60 62 Batthyany Alexander 15 October 2021 Viktor Frankl and the Shoah Springer Cham pp 3 12 doi 10 1007 978 3 030 83063 2 ISSN 2192 8363 Bushkin Hanan van Niekerk Roelf Stroud Louise 31 August 2021 Searching for meaning in chaos Viktor Frankl s story Europe s Journal of Psychology 17 3 233 242 doi 10 5964 ejop 5439 ISSN 1841 0413 PMC 8763215 PMID 35136443 Scully Mathew 1995 Viktor Frankl at Ninety An Interview First Things Archived from the original on 1 May 2012 Klingberg 2001harvnb error no target CITEREFKlingberg2001 help page needed Noble Holcomb B 4 September 1997 Dr Viktor E Frankl of Vienna Psychiatrist of the Search for Meaning Dies at 92 The New York Times p B 7 Archived from the original on 12 October 2009 Retrieved 6 September 2009 External links Edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Viktor Frankl Viktor Frankl Institute Vienna Viktor Frankl Institute of America Who Was Viktor Frankl by Dr Henry Abramson Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Viktor Frankl amp oldid 1176177217, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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