In September 1942, Viktor F r a n k l , an eminent Jewish therapist and neurologist in Vienna, was captured and transported to a Nazi inhumane imprisonment along with his wife and folks. After three years, when his camp was freed, a large portion of his family, including his pregnant wife, had died - yet he, detainee number 119104, had lived.
In his top rated 1946 book, Man's Search for Meaning, which he wrote in nine days about his encounters in the camps, Frankl presumed that the contrast between the individuals who had lived and the individuals who had kicked the bucket boiled down to one thing: Meaning, a knowledge he came to right on time in life. When he was a secondary school understudy, one of his science educators proclaimed to the class, "Life is just an ignition process, a procedure of oxidation."
Frankl hopped out of his seat and reacted, "Sir, if this is all in all, then what can be the importance....