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In search of logotherapy

Australian & New Zealand Journal of Psychiatry, 2021
In his authoritative and extraordinarily influential book Man’s Search for Meaning, psychiatrist Viktor Frankl proposed that any individual’s life task is to find meaning, that meaning cannot be obtained without suffering, and that suffering allows meaning to be identified.
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Treatment of Alcoholics with Logotherapy

International Journal of the Addictions, 1979
This study evaluates the results of group logoanalysis with selected hospitalized alcoholics using the Purpose in Life (PIL) Test as a before-and-after measure of therapeutic outcome in comparison with controls. Results suggest that closed-end logoanalysis groups are superior to open-end groups, and that both are superior to controls in improving the ...
J C, Crumbaugh, G L, Carr
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The challenge of logotherapy

Journal of Religion and Health, 1968
"Every age has its own neurosis, and every age needs its own psychotherapy to cope with it." In these words Viktor Frankl strikes the keynote of the new therapy that he brings to the neurotic condition of our time. Dr. Frankl is head of neurol ogy in the Vienna Poliklinic and Professor in the Medical Faculty, University of Vienna.
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Empirical Research and Logotherapy

Psychological Reports, 2003
The purpose of this paper was to outline suggestions for future logotherapy applications and research. Empirical studies are available on logotherapy constructs, but additional research is sorely needed. The psychometrics of logotherapy measures need to be expanded.
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Logotherapy

Academic Therapy, 1984
Logotherapy offers a sound way to help LD students sort out goals, objectives, meaning, and purpose, both short and long range.
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Logotherapy

Journal of Postcolonial Writing, 2019
Mukoma Wa Ngugi’s poetry book Logotherapy takes quiet risks. The poetry form that the author employs, an easy-reading free verse, puts a fair demand upon the reader: while formal poetry or densely ...
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Logotherapy and Eastern religions

Journal of Religion & Health, 1975
When Viktor Frankl presented his concepts of logotherapy to American audi ences, he was told that they offered a new approach to mental health, at least as compared to psychoanalysis. But, he recalls, "on my tours in Asia, in India and Japan, I was told...
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Logotherapy and talmudic Judaism

Journal of Religion & Health, 1975
Any attempt to correlate logotherapy with some religious group or set of religious ideals is fraught with difficulty, mainly because of the dimensional gap that indicates that logotherapy, as a psychotherapy, and religion work from incommensurate frameworks. Frankl's rightful insistence that logotherapy is a secular theory and practice only accentuates
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Logotherapy as a pastoral tool

Journal of Religion & Health, 1975
The Nazi holocaust of a quarter century ago seemed to have as many victims as survivors. Fortunately for the world of psychology, there was, among the latter, a young Viennese psychiatrist of Jewish parentage named Viktor Frankl. In the time that has elapsed since the end of Nazism the name of Frankl has risen to the forefront among those who are ...
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Logotherapy: An Overview

Journal of Religious Gerontology, 2001
(2001). Logotherapy: An Overview. Journal of Religious Gerontology: Vol. 11, No. 3-4, pp. 9-24.
Melvin A. Kimble, PhD   +1 more
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