Viktor Frankl's Contribution to Spirituality and Aging 2014
DOI: 10.4324/9781315821436-3
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Logotherapy: An Overview

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Cited by 4 publications
(6 citation statements)
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“…The founding work of Frankl supports the view that human beings are by nature responsible and respond to the call for purposeful rather than chaotic activity (Kimble & Ellor, 2001). Contemporary research into purpose and older adults specifically has been undertaken to explore the health and well-being benefits and potential for modification.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 94%
“…The founding work of Frankl supports the view that human beings are by nature responsible and respond to the call for purposeful rather than chaotic activity (Kimble & Ellor, 2001). Contemporary research into purpose and older adults specifically has been undertaken to explore the health and well-being benefits and potential for modification.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 94%
“…Of course, meaning therapists in line with Frankl (Breitbart et al, 2010a;Kang et al, 2009;Kimble & Ellor, 2000;Lee, 2006;Lukas, 2000;Schulenberg, 2008) help their clients to become aware of their possibilities in life by exploring several sources of meaning. Of course, meaning therapists in line with Frankl (Breitbart et al, 2010a;Kang et al, 2009;Kimble & Ellor, 2000;Lee, 2006;Lukas, 2000;Schulenberg, 2008) help their clients to become aware of their possibilities in life by exploring several sources of meaning.…”
Section: Inner Navigatormentioning
confidence: 99%
“…24 Logotherapy is rooted in philosophy, spirituality, and psychology. 25 Consistent with existentialism and phenomenology, logotherapy assumes that human experience is inherently subjective and that each person must make his or her own meaning in life. This process further assumes that human beings are irreversibly spiritual creatures and that well-being stems from fully expressing this spiritual motive.…”
Section: Cancer and Coping With The Inevitability Of Deathmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Finally, logotherapy is rooted in the psychoanalytic and existential traditions of psychotherapy, which maintain that emotional distress stems from the frustration of basic human needs and can be compounded by maladaptive efforts to satisfy these needs. 25 Victor Frankl-the founding father of logotherapy-argued that we must never forget that people are capable of finding meaning even in dire circumstances. 26 When faced with interminable frustration or troubling situations that cannot be changed, such…”
Section: Cancer and Coping With The Inevitability Of Deathmentioning
confidence: 99%
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