Man Searching for Meaning is about a Psychologist named Victor Frankl. In Vienna Frankl and his family and friends were arrested and sent to a concentration camp. Frankl talks about his and other prisoners experiences in the camps throughout the book. Part 1 start off where Victor Frankl and his family and friends had just arrived to the concentration camp. This is the first of many face to face encounters with faith. With just a single look a guard determine the faith of the new prisoners. If a prisoner was weak, old, or sick the guard sent them to a gas chamber. If you did not fit into any of the categories the guard spared their lives and sent them to the camp. Frankl held his head high and stood up straight to avoid losing his life that day, and he did just that. He then goes on to talk about the many different incidents that tested him and the other prisoners reason for living. Everything that could possibly be taking from them was, and their names was the first to go. Frankl’s new name was now a number. …show more content…
There was an opportunity given to Frankl to choose his own faith. He got too deiced whether he wanted to transfer to a new camp or stay. Despite the rumors about the new camp containing gas chambers and his fellow prison mates pleading with him not to go. Frankl transferred to the new camp to find it to be a rest camp. He talked about how you cannot run from faith. Frankl told a story of a man who fled to avoid death but soon met death when he arrived to his new
Viktor Frankl’s thesis found in Man’s Search for Meaning is repeated multiple times, in different ways throughout his book. On page 111 he states, “According to logotherapy, we can discover this meaning in life in three different ways: (1) by creating a work or doing a deed; (2) by experiencing something or encountering someone; and (3) by the attitude we take toward unavoidable suffering” (Frankl). This is not saying that all of those qualities have to be present to find one’s meaning though especially suffering. The only way to find the meaning of life is by answering your own call for life, not what others value as meaning. Each meaning
Dr. Frankl also explains his theory on neurosis and how it is tied to the meaning of life. Frankl differs from the ideas of Freud. Freud believed that the basis of neurosis is in unconscious motives. Frankl believes that the basis for neurosis is man's search for his own meaning. Furthermore he explains that ones own meaning is constantly changing; therefor, the means for our suffering is constantly changing. Frankl explains, "What matters, therefor, is not the meaning of life in general, but rather the specific meaning of a person's life at a given moment." Frankl describes we discover our specific meaning at a given moment. "We can discover this meaning in life in three different ways: (1) by doing a deed; (2) by
After being cooped up in squalor and surrounded by torture for four years, the prisoners couldn’t grasp the concept of their own freedom: “Its reality did not penetrate into our consciousness; we could not grasp the fact that freedom was ours” (88). They had looked forward to it so much that when it came it was almost like an anti-climax. The freed prisoners also had a strong desire for retribution: “They became instigators, not objects, of willful force and injustice. They justified their behavior by their own terrible experiences” (90). Frankl went onto refute this by saying, “that no one has the right to do wrong, not even if wrong has been done to them” (91). Moreover, the prisoners had kept positive in the camps by thinking that they will see their loved ones upon release. Sadly, for many they found that “the person who should open the door was not there, and would never be there again” (92). To these people Frankl imposed the idea that even suffering has a meaning in life; that it is the individual’s responsibility to overcome it and keep fighting on until their last breath. Ultimately, “there is nothing he need fear anymore-except his God” (93).
In Man's Search for Meaning, Viktor Frankl describes his revolutionary type of psychotherapy. He calls this therapy, logotherapy, from the Greek word "logos", which denotes meaning. This is centered on man's primary motivation of his search for meaning. To Frankl, finding meaning in life is a stronger force than any subconscious drive. He draws from his own experiences in a Nazi concentration camp to create and support this philosophy of man's existence.
In the book Night, the author Elie Wiesel, talks about his experience in the Auschwitz concentration camp. In the beginning, he is a religious young man with very faithful morals. As the book goes on, he experiences situations where he questions his faith and belief in God but also gains maturity without realizing it. The setting of these situations will change his life. Throughout the whole book, Elie Wiesel’s faith gets tested as he endures extreme events within the camp. The three main concepts are; faith is a constant battle, it’s never lost just shaken, and maturity come from challenges.
Drastic events may change the way we view the world. It may cause us to lose our belief in God, family, and humanity. Loss of faith is displayed in Elie Wiesel’s “Night”. “Night” follows Elie’s teenage life in a Nazi German concentration camps at Auschwitz and Buchenwald. Initially Elie has a great faith in family, humanity, and God. As days gone by inside the camp, he witnessed and experienced countless cruel acts by humans against humans. This acts have made Elie question his beliefs. In the memoir people have questioned their faith in humanity, family, and lastly God.
Elie Wiesel was moved to camp to camp. The men and women were separated and Elie see’s his mother and sister vanishing in the distance. He holds onto his father and is determined not to lose him. A prisoner tells Elie to say he is eighteen when really he is fourteen so he is not clarified as a child, he also tells Elie father to say he was forty when he actually is fifty.Elie questioned himself “where is god” “Why should i blessen his name” but throughout the few days he’s been in camp he believed god is there and God will help. He did not give up on his religion. The days he has spent in camp he seen people being buried and shot, innocent people were dying and new ones were getting brought
Man’s Search for Meaning by Viktor Frankl is filled to the brim with rhetorical devices from all three sections of the text. Particularly in his section about logotherapy, Frankl’s practice to find an individual’s meaning of life, he explores the three main meanings of life: accomplishment, love, and suffering. This area uses a plethora of comparison, such as parallelism and metaphor. Recurring themes are used to draw back to Frankl’s three life meanings, like word repetition and alliteration. Frankl’s use of rhetorical devices allows his audience to focus on their individual possibilities and incorporate his ideology into society.
Man’s Search For Meaning details Viktor Frankl’s horrifying experiences in Nazi concentration camps during the holocaust, and during that time he found meaning in his life. And he describes three things that were the most important factors that contributed to his and some prisoners survival: love, work, and suffering. It was because of those three things that they were able to survive. Many found hope in the thought that a love one was waiting , others were so preoccupied with work they were un able to think, and most effective was
Man’s Search for Meaning, is a biography and the personal memoir of Victor Frankl’s experience in a Nazi Concentration Camp. The book was initially published in 1946 in German and was then published in 1959 in English, under the title From Death-Camp to Existentialism. Prior to World War II, Victor Frankl was a psychiatrist working in Vienna and then later was responsible for running the neurology department at a Jewish Hospital in Rothschild. In 1942 he and his family were arrested and deported. They were separated and sent to concentration
Logotherapy is the thought that each human is motivated by a “will to meaning” or finding his or her meaning in life. This idea was created by Viktor Frankl (Unknown). After reading Dr. Stephan Schulenberg’s articles "Logotherapy for Clinical Practice" and "On the Measurement of Meaning,” I got a better understanding of what logotherapy can actually do. Knowing that Frankl spent time in a concentration camp during World War II, I can easily see how this was a comforting coping mechanism for him (Frankl). Frankl gives three ways that people can find their meaning in life. These three topics come down to: love, work, and suffering. He describes it as encountering something or someone, for example, in “Man’s Search for Meaning,” he was always able to think of his wife through the miserable conditions in the camp. Once again, in the same book, his “work” was the book he was writing. He kept little scraps of paper to write his thoughts down and
In this paper I will be analysing/ reflecting on Viktor Frankl’s Man 's Search for Meaning. In my reflection I will compare the main philosophical message of frankl 's experience and try to compare its meaning to my very own life experience. In order to do this I must give you some personal background while growing up I was born with some challenging complications due to a lack of oxygen at birth I was diagnosed with ataxic cerebral palsy. The thing about ataxic cerebral palsy is that it has affected my life in many ways some miniscule others immense. I can write an entire book on my childhood / adolescence and some of the many challenges I have faced but that 's neither here
The premise of Frankl’s book is that mankind’s desire for meaning is much stronger than its desire for power or pleasure and that if man can find meaning in life he can survive anything. Frankl introduces this idea [which he calls the theory of logotherapy] throughout his concentration camp experiences in the book’s first section and delves deeper into it in the second section. Referencing Nietzsche, Frankl tells us “Those who have a 'why' to live, can bear with almost any 'how'” (p. 80). The most important thing to be learned from this statement is that no matter what your circumstances are, you can be happy, or at least survive, if you find a meaning or purpose in life. While in the concentration camp Frankl tells us that in order to maintain his desire to have a meaningful life he focused on three main things: suffering, work, and love. Of sacrifice
While being held prisoner in the death camps, Frankl began to observe his fellow inmates. He payed close attention to
Experiences encompassed in times of struggle can lead to a new transformative perspective of one’s relationship with self and the world. William Shakespeare’s last play “The Tempest” (1610), canvasses loss catalysing rediscovering the importance of life resulting in a greater understanding of how our flaws compromise our humanity. Prospero, the usurped Duke of Milan, shows this to be true, moving from a mindset focused on vengeance to a profound discovery of self. Similarly, in “Man’s Search for Meaning” (1946), fulfillment with discovering how we choose to cope and find meaning/purpose in life through unrelenting struggle is illustrated. The three-part non-fiction told by psychiatrist Viktor E. Frankl, depicts his ordeal inside of concentration camps during the Second World War, elaborating on finding true meaning in life even under the most horrific circumstances. Frankl shares his process of discovery demonstrating his ability to overcome the most overwhelming experience leading to doorway of meaning, purpose and happiness.