Over 16 million copies sold worldwide 'Every human being should read this book' Simon Sinek One of the outstanding classics to emerge from the Holocaust, Man's Search for Meaning is Viktor Frankl's story of his struggle for survival in ...
This gift edition come with endpapers, supplementary photographs, and several of Frankl’s previously unpublished letters, speeches, and essays. This book was published with two different covers.
Viktor Emil Frankl. able to view our human condition wisely and with compassion . Dr. Frankl's words have a profoundly honest ring , for they rest on experiences too deep for deception . What he has to say gains in prestige because of ...
New York, Human Sciences Press, 1979. , "From Confusion to Fusion," in The Other Side of the Couch: What Therapists Believe, E. Mark Stern, ed. New York, The Pilgrim Press, 1981. , "Logotherapy and Judaism — Some Philosophical ...
The Daily Stoic offers 366 days of Stoic insights and exercises, featuring all-new translations from the Emperor Marcus Aurelius, the playwright Seneca, or slave-turned-philosopher Epictetus, as well as lesser-known luminaries like Zeno, ...
Viktor Emil Frankl (Ein Wegbereiter der modernen Erlebnispädagogik?) Lüneburg: Verlag Klaus Neubauer, 1991. Nagata, K., ed. Logotherapy no Rinsho (Practice of Logotherapy). Tokyo: Ishiyaku, 1991. Pareja Herrera, Guillermo.
In these selected essays, written between 1947 and 1977, Dr. Frankl illustrates the vital importance of the human dimension in psychotherapy.
Frankl's elaboration of his theory that man's primary motvational force is the search for meaning.
Eleven months after he was liberated from the Nazi concentration camps, Viktor E. Frankl held a series of public lectures in Vienna.
Details the life of Viktor Frankl, a Holocaust survivor and the author of "Man's Search for Meaning, " who, after losing his family, used his work to overcome his grief and developed a new form of psychotherapy that encouraged patients to ...
Defending the superiority of evidence-based reasoning over religious faith and philosophical thought experiments, Thagard argues that minds are brains and that reality is what science can discover.