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Man's search for meaning and finality in a cruel, ambiguous world?
These notes were later used for "Man's Search for Meaning."
So the rule is, you must say the movie is "really about a man's search for meaning," or "two sisters' enduring love for one another."
Winkler is a comic account of one man's search for meaning, identity and a suitable response to the burden of history.
Physics, Jones argues, is a metaphor, a symbolic expression of man's search for meaning and understanding, and always a creative enterprise.
In another related meaning, the 1946 book Man's Search for Meaning brought the word to the wider public domain.
Man's Search for Meaning.
Consistent among both early and later songs is the allusive and metaphorical nature of Caterer's lyrics, often focusing upon man's search for meaning.
Viktor E. Frankl, in Man's Search for Meaning, wrote:
See also Man's Search for Meaning, by Victor Frankl, detailing his experience with the importance of religion in surviving the Holocaust.
In his seminal 1946 book "Man's Search for Meaning," he offered to the world a psychiatric theory emphasizing self-determination and personal responsibility in dealing with emotional suffering.
The Statue of Responsibility was suggested first by scholar Viktor Frankl in his book Man's Search for Meaning.
Examples of the English pluperfect (past perfect) are found in the following sentence (from Viktor Frankl's Man's Search for Meaning):
In Man's Search for Meaning, Frankl compared his third Viennese school of psychotherapy with Adler's psychoanalytic interpretation of the will to power:
The book's common full English title is Man's Search for Meaning: An Introduction to Logotherapy, although this subtitle is often not referred to on modern book covers.
In her honors philosophy/literature class, Esther has been reading Nietzsche, Kierkegaard, "Sophie's Choice" and Viktor Frankl's "Man's Search for Meaning."
He, his wife and his parents were deported in 1942 to concentration camps; only Dr. Frankl survived, writing of his Auschwitz experiences in "Man's Search for Meaning."
The famous Viennese psychiatrist died at 92 after writing dozens of self-help works on "Man's Search for Meaning," which was the title of his masterpiece, one of the most influential books of the century.
The book was Viktor E. Frankl's "Man's Search for Meaning," which related the horrors of the concentration camp at Auschwitz, "and what human beings were capable of doing to each other."
Most of the article dealt with an analysis of the symbols within the tale, equating the search for the skulls with man's search for meaning and wisdom, and for resolution of his duality.
According to a survey conducted by the Book-of-the-Month Club and the Library of Congress, Man's Search For Meaning belongs to a list of "the ten most influential books in the United States."
Mr. Young explains how in the 1960's he first plunged into the Holocaust literature and had been most impressed by Victor Frankel, a survivor, whose book, "Man's Search for Meaning," plumbed the meanings of survival.
This role has been described in many books, among them Primo Levi's If This Is a Man, and Viktor Frankl's Man's Search for Meaning, the latter treating it from a psychiatrist's standpoint.