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|  |  | | Customer Reviews: | | | Average Customer Review: Write an online review and share your thoughts with other customers.
2 of 2 found the following review helpful:
Where Have You Been All My Life? Oct 10, 2009 I had received "Man's Search For Meaning" a couple of years ago as a gift. Since that time it had languished on my bookshelf, overcome by other priorities. After all, it was written in 1959, so it could wait a bit longer, right? Having just finished this book I really wish I would have made the time earlier. The lessons within could have easily been applied earlier and with great results. This book is simply remarkable. At 165 pages, "Man's Search For Meaning" is lightweight compared to some of my other reads, but this book took me some time to read, not because the subject matter was difficult, but because it really caused me to stop and reflect many a time. Great things really do come in small packages - less is more. "Man's Search For Meaning" is a life changing book that you simply cannot afford to pass up.
1 of 1 found the following review helpful:
Man's Search For Meaning review Sep 09, 2009 Read this book as soon as possible no matter who you are. The first half is Viktor Frankl's experience in concentration camps during WWII. In the second half he explains logotherapy, logo from the Greek word for "meaning." He wrote something like 10 volumes during his life explaining logotherapy, so this is a short synopsis, but I am able to apply the logotherapy to my life to make it more meaningful. The book is wonderfully written. You will appreciate this amazing man after reading this book.
1 of 6 found the following review helpful:
not as advertised Aug 28, 2009 I thought this book dealt with man's search for meaning too indirectly and too briefly (although sufficiently deeply when it occassionally is touched upon). While the personal Holocaust stories are moving, these are not why I picked up the book. About the second half of the book is a description of logotherapy, which went way over my head. This should be interesting for students and practitioners of psychology. In the final analysis, I didn't find this book especially compelling or worthy of recommendation.
1 of 4 found the following review helpful:
Touching Story Aug 27, 2009 Man's Search for Meaning by Viktor E. Frankl is a book about one man's struggle to find meaning in a life of imprisonment in Auschwitz and other concentration camps. Through all his hardships Frankl decided that man's deepest desire is to search for meaning and purpose in life. A very touching and religious story.
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Are you a spiritual retard, or are you on the path to ENLIGHTENMENT?
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I like this book... Aug 20, 2009 ... I really do. It's a great departure from the metaphysics of Jung and the sex-centered Freud. It might have been more helpful to present his theory of logotherapy before his account of the camps, but it still worked. And to all the people who bashed the book for not being complete in some way read page 97, Frankl flat outs says that it would be impossible to condense his entire theory down to 20-30 pages when it took volume upon volume in his native German to lay it all out. If you're going to bash a book on these bases you might not want to forget the author's own disclaimer (or maybe you do because then you wouldn't have anything to whine about).
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