
Man's Search for Meaning
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Narrated by:
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Theo Solomon
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By:
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Viktor E. Frankl
About this listen
As relevant today as it was when it was first published, Man’s Search for Meaning is a book for finding strength and purpose in times of great despair.
“This is a book I reread a lot … it gives me hope … it gives me a sense of strength.”—Anderson Cooper, Anderson Cooper 360/CNN
Viktor E. Frankl was a medical doctor at a psychiatric hospital in 1942 when he became a prisoner in Nazi concentration camps in World War II. In 1946, he published this book about his camp experiences and a method of psychotherapy he developed. Forty-five years later, it was still named one of the most influential books in the United States.
Part One describes his three years in four Nazi concentration camps, which took the lives of his wife, father, mother, and brother. He closely observed inmates’ reactions to their situation, as well as how survivors came to terms with their liberation.
Part Two, introducing logotherapy, is an academic discussion of the psychological reactions experienced by all inmates to one degree or another. It solidified Frankl’s early theory that humanity’s primary motivational force is finding meaning in one’s life.
In Germany, titled Ein Psychologe erlebt das Konzentrationslager, or A Psychologist Experiences the Concentration Camp, its title in the first English translation was From Death-Camp to Existentialism. As of 2022, this book has sold 16 million copies and been published in 52 languages.
©1959, 1962, 1984, 1992, 2006 Viktor E. Frankl (P)2024 Blackstone Publishingwhich remove the mind from the hunger and terror to dwell upon scenes of normal, decent life. He pictures his loved ones, even communing with them while digging ditches or standing for hours in the freezing weather. He has found a way round, a way out, and it is this and much more that he brings with him when he is finally liberated from hell on earth.
This book is a treasure, one to reread many times, for the wisdom, common sense and humanity found in its pages. No thirst for revenge here, although he has lost his entire family in the camps, only a mission to use what he knows to make this world a better place, which is what he does for the rest of his life. One feels humble after reading it. What a giant of a man!
Blown Away
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Amazing
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Wow, this hits me at my core.
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It didn’t draw me in
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Loved it
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Amazing story, awful narration.
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Harrowing and inspiring
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Very profound book
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"I do not forget any good deed done to me and I do not carry any grudge for a bad one" Frankl
Wow, what an amazing attitude.
Great book
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Wisdom every human being can relate to
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