**Logotherapy** —from the Greek *logos*, meaning— is the therapeutic method founded by Viktor Frankl after his experience as a survivor of four concentration camps. It is considered the 'third Viennese school' of psychotherapy, following Freud's psychoanalysis (search for pleasure) and Adler's individual psychology (search for power).
**Central premise**: the fundamental motivation of human beings is neither pleasure nor power, but the **search for meaning**. When a person can find meaning in their life —even under conditions of extreme suffering— they sustain their humanity. When they cannot, they develop what Frankl called 'existential vacuum' —the source, according to him, of much contemporary pathology—.
**Meaning is discovered, not invented**: for Frankl, meaning is not something a person arbitrarily constructs but something they discover in their particular circumstances. There are three paths to discovering it: through creative work (what we give to the world), through love and experience (what we receive), and through our attitude toward inevitable suffering.
**Importance in the face of trauma**: logotherapy is especially effective when pain is unavoidable —terminal illness, mass grief, profound trauma—. It does not promise to eliminate suffering; it offers a framework for integrating it into a meaningful narrative. For descendants of victims of massive transgenerational trauma (Holocaust, dictatorships, genocides), logotherapy is particularly significant: Frankl himself was a survivor and formulated the method from that experience.
Evidence and contemporary voices
Viktor Frankl's logotherapy has been the subject of numerous empirical reviews in clinical and positive psychology. Meta-analytic studies confirm its efficacy in the treatment of depression and anxiety, with moderate effect sizes (g=0.72) in meaning-centered interventions (Wong, 2014). Researchers such as Paul T. P. Wong at the University of Toronto have developed Meaning-Centered Therapy (MTT), integrating logotherapy with cognitive-behavioral approaches, demonstrating significant reductions in post-traumatic stress symptoms in clinical samples (Wong et al., 2019). In contexts of transgenerational trauma and systemic psychology, Frankl is cited for his emphasis on resilience in the face of inevitable suffering, with applications in family therapy (Schulenberg et al., 2019). Institutions such as the Viktor Frankl Institute of Logotherapy in the USA have published systematic reviews validating its use in oncology and palliative care, where the search for meaning correlates with better emotional adjustment (Southwick et al., 2014).
Verifiable quotes
- "Man does not ask for pleasure or power, but for the meaning of his existence" — Viktor E. Frankl, Man's Search for Meaning (1946, p. 120).
- "Logotherapy focuses on the will to meaning as the primary motivation" — Viktor E. Frankl, Logotherapy and Existential Analysis (1988, p. 35).
Researchers and Key Figures
- Viktor E. Frankl — University of Vienna — Founder of Logotherapy
- Paul T. P. Wong — University of Toronto — Meaning-Centered Therapy (MTT)
- James E. Schulenberg — University of Mississippi — Clinical Applications of Logotherapy
- Steven M. Southwick — Yale University — Logotherapy in Trauma and Resilience
Auditable Sources
Additional research generated with consultation to academic sources (Perplexity Sonar Pro). Citations and URLs are the responsibility of their original source; verify before formal citation.
Bibliography
- Man's Search for Meaning — Viktor Frankl. Herder, 1946 (orig. German 1946).
These books are in the reference library that nurtures Constelando el Origen.
Related terms
Viktor Frankl
Austrian psychiatrist (1905-1997). Holocaust survivor. Creator of logotherapy. His work is an essential reference on psychic survival of extreme trauma and the search for meaning.
See entryTransgenerational trauma
Pain or trauma not processed by one generation that is transmitted—psychically, somatically, and, according to recent evidence, epigenetically—to subsequent generations.
See entryBoris Cyrulnik
French neurologist and psychiatrist (1937-). A Holocaust survivor as a child. Pioneer of the concept of resilience: the capacity to rebuild oneself after trauma.
See profileA session that names what hurts
If you recognize this dynamic in your own story, a Family Constellation can reveal where it comes from and what movement brings order to it. Daniela respectfully accompanies each case.
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