Rating:  Summary: Kinda basic but interesting. Review: The first half of this book is the authors struggles held in a Nazi prison camp during the second world war. No matter how many times we here these stories they still hit you hard. But to survive the atrocities commited in these situations takes a mental attitude of the most extreme strength.The second half of this book is a term called logotherapy. The Doctor decribes this as how are thought patterns can make us or break us in intense situations. How some prisoners lost all hope and eventually died or got sick. And how some just continued to hope and made it. It tries to describe the meaning of life that man is always asking himself. The doctor actually says that the meaning of life is the meaning that you give it in any certain situations. I like that philosophy. Other than that the basic concept I got from it is you think your way to happiness or gloom.
Rating:  Summary: Very good, but read SB: 1 or God by Karl Mark Maddox Review: I found the background material in this book (The Nazi camps to be specific) to be nearly one hundred percent of Viktors premise for writing this good but not totally balanced search for meaning. I know this is a bold statement directed at someone who had suffered so much to bring us this enlightening read. However I cannot give one hundred percent support to confined experience, which trys to encompass complete meaning to life. I know this book will help many, but writers at this level need to be reminded of balance in their supportive evidense. Persons in modern day prison settings grope for meaning especially when their terms are lengthy, or crimes have abased their position. I do however credit Viktor for much, I do say yes, read this with understanding , I also recommend reading SB 1 or God by Karl Maddox, it's the most complete book on meaning of life I have ever come across.
Rating:  Summary: Superb Review: Frankl's imperative is: "Live as if you were living already for the second time and as if you had acted the first time as wrongly as you are about to act now!" Nothing more needs to be said.
Rating:  Summary: Meaning for life found in a Concentration Camp Review: I've read numerous books on philosophy and psychology, but of all the books I've read, I would say that this book should be compulsory reading for everyone. Not only does he explore the basic psychological motivation and purpose of our existence, he does it in an unusual way, by describing his own experiences at Auschwitz under Nazi occupation. By giving insight into human behaviour in its most vulnerable and exposed state, he provides us with an insight into our own psyches. It's also a reminder of the extraordinary evil that men can do with very little incentive. (...)
Rating:  Summary: concentration camps? Review: Bob Book Review Mans Search for Meaning by: Viktor Frankl This book is broken down into two parts. The first of which is a real life experience about being in a concentration camp in World War II. The second analyzing what went on and how he used his knowledge to help himself and others. He breaks down how many people acted and reacted to the gruesomeness of what he saw in the camps. He says that there are three stages of the mind in the concentration camp. The first being when you first get there, second being when you get into the work schedule, the third being when you get released. The first revolves around realizing that life is over, as you know it to be. The second is just a repetition of doing and putting up with what the German soldiers and Capo do to them. The third revolves to being numb to happiness and not being able to be happy because everything and everyone you knew was gone. This reaction was caused by being in a deep depression or posttraumatic stress disorder. He describes helping people to find hope for something, a will to live. In the second part of the book he describes that the meaning of life for anyone person changes at any point in time. That we need to find our own meaning and that he who has a why to live for can bear almost any how. I loved the first part of the book about his personal experiences but failed to understand most of the second half of the book. I would recommend this book to everyone who is looking for a meaning in life.
Rating:  Summary: a great book, i love it Review: Just hearing about his time in Concentration Camp was very inspiring and amazing. Even in those conditions, those who found meaning and future in their suffering were able to live. I like how he puts it, If you break your neck, don't let it break you. CASE FOR: I was very impressed with a lot of the information he provided, my favorite is on success. The whole book unfolds beautifully. He touches up fear, love, sexuality and clears up some of the distorted views, explaining why we miss certain targets in life. CASE AGAINST: his answer to man's meaning is no true meaning at all. He provided example of a man who thought he was going to be released on a certain date, and so he lived for that date. But when it didn't happen, he got sick and died. So he was saying how we need a meaning, a goal in life. He was pointing how we each have an earthly meaning to fulfill. But that example contradicts him and proves how foolish it is to put a meaning in earthly things, here today and gone tomorrow. And when they disappear, so does your meaning to life. Yes, man creates a meaning to life, but just like everything else man builds, it is temporary and deadly
Rating:  Summary: I learned that every bad experience can be overcome Review: I read this book during the weekend. I had to write a report on it for psychology class in college, and the book was presented in such a way that I could not put it down. It's a good book for detailed account and experience for one person at the concentration camp, and it also helps teach that at some point no matter how bad an experience one undergoes, you have to learn from it and move on. I have to admit that I think this book changed me since the time I read it 10 years ago. I have become more adaptive to negative and extreneous situations. It's the only book in college that I really completely read and enjoyed. I commend Dr. Frankl for writting this book.
Rating:  Summary: Psychotherapy Thoughts: Circa 1946, then 1984 Review: I realize that this book probably has historical significance for the field of psychotherapy. Parts One (Concentration Camp) and Two (Logotherapy) were originally published in Austria in 1946. The author, apparently a distinguished psychiatrist, spent three years in Nazi concentration camps when he was in his late 30s. His education was circa 1920s-30s, at the University of Vienna (Freudian influences certainly abounded at that time.) From a 2003 (and a layperson's) perspective, this book touches upon many ideas, and not in a particularly concise or unified way. These ideas, from my perspective, are often the embryonic stages and "seeds" of thought often more specifically and fully expressed in future and current psychology. Interestingly, he questions pure Freudian theory--maybe this was fairly novel in 1946. Self actualization, self-transcendence, finding an authentic self are ideas later espoused by Maslow, Dr. Phil MacGraw, and other psychologists. Perhaps the book would have been more effective for me if I had read it in 1946, but I wasn't born yet. I believe the best audience for it in 2003 are psychologists/psychiatrists--there are ideas/"seeds" for graduate students to expound upon and develop. I much prefer The Diary of Ann Frank, or The Pianist, in terms of artfulness and my developing empathy for the characters, than Frankl's somewhat detached professional espousal of Holocaust atrocities. A dated, sometimes rambling discourse. The 1984 postscript seems "cobbled onto" the original. There are 40 pages of bibliography that append the book-is this included for his professional audience? Not uninteresting, but not worth revisiting.
Rating:  Summary: Everything You Need Know About This Book: Absolute Genius. Review: Read the other lengthy reviews for detail.
Rating:  Summary: The deepest Review: The most moving books I've read have been this book, The power of now, Love, The Little Guide To Happiness, and believe it or not, Oh the places you'll go. Now, this one. Excellent.
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