photo

Viktor Frankl

Austrian Psychiatrist
Date of Birth : 26 Mar, 1905
Date of Death : 02 Sep, 1997
Place of Birth : Leopoldstadt, Vienna, Austria
Profession : Psychiatrist
Nationality : Austrian
Viktor Emil Frankl was an Austrian psychiatrist and Holocaust survivor, who founded logotherapy, a school of psychotherapy that describes a search for a life's meaning as the central human motivational force. Logotherapy is part of existential and humanistic psychology theories.

Biography

Frankl’s father was a civil servant in Vienna. The younger Frankl showed an early interest in psychology, and in secondary school he studied psychology and philosophy. As a teenager, he entered into a correspondence with Freud, who asked permission to publish one of his papers. While he was a student at the University of Vienna Medical School, Frankl studied Adler’s theories and delivered lectures on individual psychology. He took a particular interest in studying depression and suicide, and he set up youth counseling centres in Vienna in a successful effort to decrease teen suicide in the city.

After earning a doctorate in medicine in 1930, Frankl joined the staff of the Am Steinhof psychiatric hospital in Vienna, where he headed the female suicide prevention program from 1933 to 1937. He subsequently established a private practice but, he being Jewish, was forced to close it after Nazi Germany annexed Austria in 1938. He then became chief of neurology at Vienna’s Rothschild Hospital, which served the Jewish population. Anti-Semitism was on the rise, however, and in 1942 Frankl and his family were sent to the Theresienstadt concentration camp, where his father perished. In 1944 the surviving Frankls were taken to Auschwitz, where his mother was exterminated; his wife died later in the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp. As Frankl observed the brutality and degradation around him, he theorized that those inmates who had some meaning in their lives were more likely to survive; he himself tried to recreate the manuscript of a book he had been writing before his capture.

Following liberation, Frankl returned to Vienna, where he became head of the neurological department at the General Polyclinic hospital. He produced the classic book Ein Psycholog erlebt das Konzentrationslager (1946; “A Psychologist Experiences the Concentration Camp”; published in English as Man’s Search for Meaning), which he dictated to a team of assistants in nine days and which went on to sell millions of copies in dozens of languages. Frankl also taught at the University of Vienna until 1990 and at a number of American universities. A few months before his death, he published Man’s Search for Ultimate Meaning and Recollections: An Autobiography. The Viktor Frankl Institute in Vienna was founded in 1992 to further his work.

Psychotherapy

Psychotherapy, any form of treatment for psychological, emotional, or behaviour disorders in which a trained person establishes a relationship with one or several patients for the purpose of modifying or removing existing symptoms and promoting personality growth. Psychotropic medications may be used as adjuncts to treatment, but the healing influence in psychotherapy is produced primarily by the words and actions of the therapist and the patient’s responses to them, which in combination are meant to create a safe, intimate, and emotionally meaningful relationship for the open discussion and resolution of the patient’s concerns. Individual and group psychotherapeutic methods are used to treat many forms of psychological distress, in which the symptoms can be emotional, cognitive, behavioral, and physical. These forms include behaviour disorders of children and adults; emotional reactions to the ordinary stresses, hardships, or crises of life; psychotic disorders (characterized by derangements of thinking and behaviour usually so severe as to require hospitalization); neurotic disorders such as anxiety and depression (chronic disorders of personal functioning often accompanied by bodily symptoms of emotional strain); addictions; psychosomatic disorders (in which physical symptoms are caused or aggravated by emotional components); and personality disorders (involving deeply ingrained maladaptive functioning). Psychotherapeutic principles are also emphasized in rehabilitation programs for mentally disabled and chronically ill individuals.

Early treatment of mental illness was based on either a religio-magical or a naturalistic view of disease. The former, originating before recorded history, saw certain forms of personal suffering or of alienation from one’s fellows as caused by an evil spirit that had gained entrance into the sufferer. Treatment was based on participation in suitable rites under the guidance of a priest-physician, medicine man, or shaman (see shamanism). By contrast, the naturalistic tradition viewed mental illness as a phenomenon that could be scientifically studied and treated. Treatment consisted of measures to promote bodily well-being and mental tranquillity. Psychotherapy of nonhospitalized patients in the naturalistic tradition was not distinguishable from ordinary medical practice until the latter half of the 19th century. In the late 18th century, however, a dramatic demonstration by Austrian physician Franz Anton Mesmer showed that many symptoms could be made to disappear by putting a patient into a trance. Mesmerism was the precursor of hypnotism, a widely used psychotherapeutic method (see hypnosis) that arose from the research of Jean-Martin Charcot. (See also Pierre Janet.) Using hypnotism, Josef Breuer and Sigmund Freud together made the epochal observations on the relationship to later mental illness of emotionally charged, damaging experiences in childhood. From these discoveries grew the theory and practice of the first modern “talking cure,” psychoanalysis, which, with its many modifications, influenced the subsequent development of psychotherapy.

Modern psychotherapeutic methods for directly treating patients include emotional support, problem exploration, interpretation, feedback, and psychosocial-skills training. Behaviour therapies are aimed at correcting specific pathological emotional states or behaviour patterns through appropriate countermeasures. They are based largely on physiologist Ivan P. Pavlov’s conditioned-reflex theory, psychologist B.F. Skinner’s operant conditioning theory, and, most especially, psychologist Albert Bandura’s social learning theory.

Humanistic, psychoanalytic, cognitive (see cognitive behaviour therapy and dialectical behaviour therapy), and interpersonal therapies contribute to general personality growth and problem-resolution skills by helping people gain insight into their feelings and behaviour. To facilitate this development, psychotherapists try to create a therapeutic situation that will enable patients to express themselves with complete freedom while the therapist maintains a consistent, nonjudgmental interest. This approach is meant to help patients discover aspects of their personalities that have been pushed out of awareness. It also causes the individual to experiment with more adaptive ways of thinking and behaving.

Humanistic schools of psychotherapy hold that the empathy, warmth, and consistent “unconditional positive regard” of the therapist for the patient are sufficient to produce important changes. Therapies in the psychoanalytic tradition take a somewhat different approach: while placing similar emphasis on the importance of the therapeutic relationship, psychoanalytic therapies also focus on the analysis of feelings as a means of helping patients understand the emotions they experience. The therapies differ in their concepts and in the relative emphasis placed on the patient’s various symptoms, actions, experiences, or feelings.

Traditional psychoanalysis emphasizes the use of dreams as shortcuts to the patient’s unconscious experience. This approach also puts great attention on helping the patient to rediscover, reexperience, and “work through” any traumatic emotional experiences of early life that are thought to contribute to difficulties in later years. Subsequent modifications of psychoanalysis put greater emphasis on analysis of the patient’s current problems, while others emphasize helping the patient to gain a better philosophy of life. All schools agree that a prolonged relation with the therapist can cause the patient to experience feelings toward the therapist that resemble those which trouble the patient’s relationships with other persons. Because both therapist and patient can observe these transference reactions, as Freud termed them, the exploration of their inappropriateness is deemed a powerful means of resolving them.

Cognitive therapies focus almost exclusively on maladaptive modes of thinking underlying the patient’s symptomatology. A cognitive approach known as rational emotive behaviour therapy, developed by American psychologist Albert Ellis, aims to help the patient overcome irrational beliefs and unrealistic expectations. In Ellis’s cognitive approach, patients are taught to eliminate self-defeating thoughts while focusing on those that are beneficial and self-accepting.

Interpersonal therapies draw upon a broader context, in that they help patients view their symptoms in terms of their social and communicational implications. Successful interpersonal approaches are meant to replace symptomatic interpersonal styles with more adaptive ones.

In group psychotherapy the therapist works with a small number of patients—often no more than 5 or 10—to help resolve individual problems. Although a therapist may have a direct impact on the patients by using many of the methods of individual psychotherapy, the therapist’s primary role is far less direct in group therapy settings. Most importantly, the therapist must create an environment in which members can interact openly and confidently with one another by freely disclosing problematic experiences and exchanging feedback. The group interaction itself—not the therapist’s intervention—is thus the medium of treatment. Cohesion of the group is essential. Other important factors contributing to the effectiveness of group psychotherapy include mutual emotional support, interpersonal learning through confrontation and feedback, a safe climate for experimenting with new behaviours, and the realization that one is not alone in one’s difficulties. While group therapy is used to treat a wide range of psychological problems, it has been especially prevalent in treating addictions and problems characterized by social-skills deficits. Recovery groups such as Alcoholics Anonymous share some of the therapeutic features of group psychotherapy but differ from it in that they lack a therapist.

There is no convincing evidence that the results of one form of treatment are better than any other. Despite differences in emphasis, most schools of psychotherapy share many similarities in their methods of conceptualizing problems and in the therapeutic factors they provide for the patient. For example, most schools emphasize the importance of the therapeutic relationship, an intensive analysis of problem situations, and beneficial alterations in the patient’s thoughts and behaviour.

Chances of successful treatment generally correspond to the degree of the patient’s involvement in the treatment process. This is influenced not only by the intensity of a patient’s distress but also by the level of confidence a patient has in the therapist and the treatment method. Expectations of help are enhanced by the therapist’s ability to convince patients that he or she understands them intimately and is dedicated to their welfare. Personal qualities of the therapist are considered important to the development of a successful therapeutic relationship. See also behaviour therapy; nondirective psychotherapy; group therapy.

Neurology

Neurology, medical specialty concerned with the nervous system and its functional or organic disorders. Neurologists diagnose and treat diseases and disorders of the brain, spinal cord, and nerves.

The first scientific studies of nerve function in animals were performed in the early 18th century by English physiologist Stephen Hales and Scottish physiologist Robert Whytt. Knowledge was gained in the late 19th century about the causes of aphasia, epilepsy, and motor problems arising from brain damage. French neurologist Jean-Martin Charcot and English neurologist William Gowers described and classified many diseases of the nervous system. The mapping of the functional areas of the brain through selective electrical stimulation also began in the 19th century. Despite these contributions, however, most knowledge of the brain and nervous functions came from studies in animals and from the microscopic analysis of nerve cells.

The electroencephalograph (EEG), which records electrical brain activity, was invented in the 1920s by Hans Berger. Development of the EEG, analysis of cerebrospinal fluid obtained by lumbar puncture (spinal tap), and development of cerebral angiography allowed neurologists to increase the precision of their diagnoses and develop specific therapies and rehabilitative measures. Further aiding the diagnosis and treatment of brain disorders were the development of computerized axial tomography (CT) scanning in the early 1970s and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) in the 1980s, both of which yielded detailed, noninvasive views of the inside of the brain. (See brain scanning.) The identification of chemical agents in the central nervous system and the elucidation of their roles in transmitting and blocking nerve impulses have led to the introduction of a wide array of medications that can correct or alleviate various neurological disorders including Parkinson disease, multiple sclerosis, and epilepsy. Neurosurgery, a medical specialty related to neurology, has also benefited from CT scanning and other increasingly precise methods of locating lesions and other abnormalities in nervous tissues.

Personal Life

In 1941, Frankl married Tilly Grosser, who was a station nurse at Rothschild Hospital. Soon after they were married she became pregnant, but they were forced to abort the child. Tilly died in the Bergen Belsen concentration camp.

Frankl's father, Gabriel, originally from Pohořelice, Moravia, died in the Theresienstadt Ghetto concentration camp on 13 February 1943, aged 81, from starvation and pneumonia. His mother and brother, Walter, were both killed in Auschwitz. His sister, Stella, escaped to Australia.

In 1947, Frankl married Eleonore "Elly" Katharina Schwindt. She was a practicing Catholic. The couple respected each other's religious backgrounds, both attending church and synagogue, and celebrating Christmas and Hanukkah. They had one daughter, Gabriele, who went on to become a child psychologist. Although it was not known for 50 years, his wife and son-in-law reported after his death that he prayed every day and had memorized the words of daily Jewish prayers and psalms.

Death

Frankl died of heart failure in Vienna on 2 September 1997. He is buried in the Jewish section of the Vienna Central Cemetery.

Quotes

Total 25 Quotes
Between stimulus and response there is a space. In that space is our power to choose our response. In our response lies our growth and our freedom.
Forces beyond your control can take away everything you possess except one thing, your freedom to choose how you will respond to the situation.
When we are no longer able to change a situation - we are challenged to change ourselves.
Life is not primarily a quest for pleasure, as Freud believed, or a quest for power, as Alfred Adler taught, but a quest for meaning. The greatest task for any person is to find meaning in his or her own life.
We who lived in concentration camps can remember the men who walked through the huts comforting others, giving away their last piece of bread. They may have been few in number, but they offer sufficient proof that everything can be taken from a man but one thing: the last of the human freedoms -- to choose one's attitude in any given set of circumstances, to choose one's own way.
When a person can’t find a deep sense of meaning, they distract themselves with pleasure.
Life is never made unbearable by circumstances, but only by lack of meaning and purpose.
Decisions, not conditions, determine what a man is.
Everything can be taken from a man but one thing: the last of human freedoms - to choose one's attitude in any given set of circumstances, to choose one's own way.
Success, like happiness, is the unexpected side effect of one's personal dedication to a cause greater than oneself.