Psychotherapy and Existentialism: Selected Papers on Logotherapy

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Simon and Schuster, 1967 - Medical - 246 pages
TABLE OF CONTENTS: 1 The Philosophical Foundations of Logotherapy. 2 Existential Dynamics and Neurotic Escapism. 3 Beyond Self-Actualization and Self-Expression. 4 Logotherapy and Existence. 5 Dynamics and Values. 6 Psychiatry and Man's Quest for Meaning. 7 Logotherapy and the Challenge of Suffering. 8 Group Psychotherapeutic Experiences in a Concentration Camp. 9 In Memoriam. 10 Collective Neuroses of the Present Day. 11 Existential Analysis and Dimensional Ontology. 12 Paradoxical Intention; A Logotherapeutic Technique. 13 Psychotherapy, Art, and Religion. 14 An Experimental Study in Existentialism: The Psychometric Approach to Frankl's Concept of Noogenic Neurosis. 15 The Treatment of the Phobic and the Obsessive- Compulsive Patient Using Paradoxical Intention.

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Contents

The Philosophical Foundations of Logotherapy
1
Existential Dynamics and Neurotic Escapism
19
Beyond SelfActualization and SelfExpression
37
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About the author (1967)

Viktor E. Frankl was a man who persevered in living, writing, and helping people, despite suffering for years at the hands of the Nazis. He was born in Vienna on March 26, 1905, and received his doctorate of medicine in 1930. As a psychiatrist, he supervised a ward of suicidal female patients, and later became chief of the neurological department at Rothschild Hospital in Vienna. Frankl's successful career was halted temporarily in 1942 when he was deported to a Nazi concentration camp. In Auschwitz and other camps, he witnessed and experienced daily horrors until 1945. Although he survived, his parents and many other family members did not. Returning to Vienna in 1945, he resumed his work, becoming head physician of the neurological department at the Vienna Polyclinic Hospital. Frankl wrote more than 30 books, the most famous being Man's Search For Meaning. As a professor, he taught at many American universities, including Harvard and Stanford. He is credited with the development of logotherapy, a new style of psychotherapy. He died in Vienna in 1997.

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