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Glossary›Logotherapy

Glossary

Logotherapy

A psychotherapeutic approach developed by Viktor Frankl that centers on the human search for meaning as the primary motivational force in life.

What is Logotherapy?

Logotherapy is a form of existential psychotherapy founded on the premise that the search for meaning constitutes the primary motivational force in human beings. Developed by Austrian neurologist and psychiatrist Viktor Frankl, logotherapy diverges from both Freudian psychoanalysis (centered on pleasure-seeking) and Adlerian individual psychology (centered on power-seeking) to propose that humans are fundamentally driven by what Frankl called the “will to meaning.” The term derives from the Greek logos (meaning) and therapy (healing), thus “healing through meaning.” Frankl positioned logotherapy as “the Third Viennese School of Psychotherapy,” asserting that individuals retain the capacity to find meaning under any circumstances—including extreme suffering—through the exercise of freedom, choice, and personal responsibility.

Origins & Lineage

Viktor Emil Frankl was born in Vienna on March 26, 1905. As a young man in the 1920s, he engaged with the work of Sigmund Freud and corresponded with Alfred Adler, but by 1929 he had begun to articulate his own theory emphasizing meaning over pleasure or power. During the 1930s, while working with suicidal patients and unemployed youth during the Great Depression, Frankl formalized the tenets of logotherapy. He drafted his foundational manuscript The Doctor and the Soul before his deportation to Nazi concentration camps in 1942.

Frankl spent nearly three years in Theresienstadt, Auschwitz, Dachau, and Türkheim, where he lost his wife, parents, and brother. His observations of fellow prisoners—particularly those who maintained a sense of purpose and survived—confirmed his belief that meaning sustains life even amid unimaginable hardship. Upon liberation in 1945, he reconstructed his manuscript and published The Doctor and the Soul in 1946. That same year, he completed Man’s Search for Meaning (originally titled Ein Psycholog erlebt das Konzentrationslager), which became an international bestseller and remains the canonical introduction to logotherapy. Frankl went on to publish more than 40 books and taught at the University of Vienna Medical School until his death in 1997. In 1985, the American Psychiatric Association honored him with the Oskar Pfister Award for contributions to religion and psychiatry.

How It’s Practiced

Logotherapy employs three primary techniques, each designed to address existential frustration and help clients discover personal meaning:

Socratic Dialogue: The logotherapist uses open-ended, probing questions to help clients uncover their own values, beliefs, and sources of meaning. Rather than prescribing solutions, the therapist facilitates self-discovery—questions such as “What gives your life meaning?” or “What would your life look like without this problem?” guide clients toward their unique purpose.

Paradoxical Intention: Used primarily to treat anticipatory anxiety and phobias, this technique asks clients to intentionally wish for or humorously exaggerate the feared outcome. For example, someone who fears insomnia might be instructed to try not to fall asleep. This reverses the hyper-intention that sustains the anxiety, often relieving the symptom.

Dereflection: Clients fixated on their symptoms or problems are guided to redirect attention away from themselves and toward external meaning—another person, a creative project, or a transcendent value. This technique leverages self-transcendence and is particularly effective for obsessive thoughts, performance anxiety, and sexual or sleep disorders.

Sessions typically involve dialogue rather than analysis of the unconscious or past trauma. The focus is forward-looking: What meaning can be found in this moment? What responsibility does this situation call forth? Logotherapists do not impose their own values but assist clients in recognizing counterproductive attitudes and discovering more life-affirming perspectives.

Logotherapy Today

Since the 1990s, logotherapy training institutes have proliferated worldwide, including the Viktor Frankl Institute in Vienna, the Viktor E. Frankl Institute of America, and centers in Israel, Latin America, and Asia. Logotherapeutic concepts have been integrated into cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT), acceptance and commitment therapy (ACT), and burnout prevention programs. The International Classification of Diseases (ICD-11) now includes “demoralization crisis,” a diagnostic category derived from Frankl’s concepts of noogenic neurosis and existential crisis.

Contemporary seekers encounter logotherapy through individual or group psychotherapy, workshops on meaning and values, and university courses in existential psychology. Clinicians trained in logotherapy often blend its techniques with other evidence-based modalities. Research studies—particularly qualitative and mixed-methods investigations—have demonstrated logotherapy’s effectiveness in treating depression, anxiety, PTSD, addiction, grief, and chronic illness. Mobile-based and group logotherapy interventions have shown promise in diverse populations, from combat veterans to mothers of children with disabilities.

Common Misconceptions

Logotherapy is not inherently religious, though Frankl acknowledged a “spiritual unconscious” independent of creed. While the approach resonates with religious communities, it is secular in application and adaptable to any worldview. Critics, notably existentialist psychologist Rollo May, have accused logotherapy of authoritarianism—suggesting the therapist dictates meaning to the client. Frankl refuted this claim, emphasizing that logotherapy teaches clients to discover their own meaning, not receive it from the therapist.

Another misconception is that logotherapy is solely for existential crises or extreme suffering. While Frankl’s Holocaust experience shaped the theory, logotherapy addresses everyday struggles: career transitions, relationship difficulties, purposelessness, and anxiety. Some scholars have questioned whether logotherapy constitutes a scientific psychotherapy or a philosophy of life, noting its metaphysical premises and difficulty in standardization. Frankl himself acknowledged that logotherapy resists rigid protocols, requiring creativity and individualization—every client’s meaning is unique, thus no two cases can be treated identically.

Logotherapy is also distinct from Alfried Längle’s “Personal Existential Analysis,” which emerged in the 1990s and, despite similar nomenclature, diverges significantly in its conception of existence and meaning.

How to Begin

For those new to logotherapy, Man’s Search for Meaning (1946) is the essential starting point—a brief, accessible memoir interweaving Frankl’s concentration camp experience with the theory’s core principles. The Will to Meaning (2014) and The Doctor and the Soul (1986) provide deeper theoretical and clinical exposition. Ann Graber’s Viktor Frankl’s Logotherapy (2019) focuses on practical application.

To experience logotherapy clinically, seek a licensed psychotherapist trained through a recognized institute such as the Viktor Frankl Institute of America or the Viktor Frankl Center. Many practitioners integrate logotherapy with CBT, ACT, or humanistic approaches. Online directories maintained by logotherapy institutes list certified clinicians. Group workshops and continuing education courses for mental health professionals also offer immersive introductions. For self-directed exploration, reflective journaling on questions of personal meaning, values clarification exercises, and engagement with positive psychology’s “Meaning & Valued Living” frameworks can serve as entry points into the logotherapeutic worldview.

Related terms

existential therapyexistentialismhumanistic psychologyacceptance and commitment therapycognitive behavioral therapyshadow work
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