Husan

About

Reading

Writing

Agency

Husan


Man's Search for Meaning

By: Viktor Frankl - Read: February 2, 2024 - Rating: 9/10

A human can endure almost any suffering if he finds meaning in it. That's Viktor's main claim. And no, he is not advocating for suffering or throwing the idea that one should use suffering to find meaning. Absolutely not. Yes, he does suffer, but it is his way of proving that even in the harshest situations (which surely come from intense suffering) that strip away meaning, joy, happiness, and literally any emotion from one's life, one can keep a light of hope (meaning) alive and keep shining. Click the title to read more.

My Notes

The first half of the book gives Viktor's accounts of settling and living in a Nazi concentration camp. He meticulously documents his camp life, which readers get to read, was dehumanizing and arbitrarily violent. Viktor also describes the psychological stages of meaninglessness that the prisoners experienced.

As I wrote earlier, Frankl doesn't romanticize suffering. He just accounts for his observations of how some prisoners kept their dignity and maintained meaning, while others just deteriorated.

The second half of the book introduces logotherapy. It is Frankl's therapeutic approach is meant to help find meaning through creating work, experiencing love, or choosing one's attitude toward unavoidable suffering. Unlike Freud's hedonism or Adler's will to power, uncle Frankl believes "will to meaning" is humanity's primary drive.

The book is neither a feel-good one or a making-sense-of-trauma one. It's a clinician studying and analyzing hell and extracting a framework for the alive. And I also like how the writing is precise and sometimes profound without sounding gimmicky or manipulative. It is a philosophical provocation. A psychological observation.