The Doctor and the Soul: From Psychotherapy to Logotherapy
First edition (German)
AuthorViktor E. Frankl
Original titleÄrztliche Seelsorge
TranslatorRichard and Clara Winston
Cover artistMatt Mahurin
LanguageEnglish
GenrePsychology, Logotherapy
PublisherFranz Deuticke (Austrian)
Knopf (English)
Publication date
1946 (Vienna, Austria)
1955 (United States)
Pages318
ISBN0394743172
Preceded byMan's Search for Meaning 
Followed byThe Unconscious God 

The Doctor and the Soul is a book by Viktor E. Frankl, the Vienesse psychiatrist and founder of logotherapy.[1][2][3][4]

The book explores topics on the meaning of life in general as well as the meaning of specific areas of one's life, such as work and personal relationships.

Frankl took the original manuscript of the book with him into the Nazi concentration camps where he was held. However, it was soon discarded by other inmates. Frankl later reconstructed the manuscript from memory while still in the concentration camps, and published after the end of World War II.[1]:xi

Contents

The Doctor and the Soul is divided into five sections:

  • From Psychotherapy to Logotherapy
  • From Psychoanalysis to Existential Analysis
  • Logotherapy as a Psychotherapeutic Technique
  • From Secular Confession to Medical Ministry
  • Psychotherapy on Its Way to Rehumanization

Writing

Frankl wrote the book initially during Nazi occupation of Austria.[5] However, he was not able to publish at that time. Instead, he was forced to hide his manuscript and take it with him to the concentration camps. Soon after arriving at the concentration camp, Frankl was forced to discard his work.

A few years later, while still incarcerated, Frankl began reconstructing the manuscript from memory on scraps of paper. Sometime after his release, after the war had ended, Frankl published both Man's Search for Meaning as well as The Doctor and the Soul.[1]:xi

Frankl attributed his survival during the war years to his awareness of the topics written in The Doctor and the Soul. He countered the image of him as portrayed in the American media, that he discovered these ideas in the concentration camps. Instead, said Frankl, discovering this ideas prior to his arrest and detainment helped him overcome the existential crises of losing everything dear to him.[1]:xi

References

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