@article{oai:konan-wu.repo.nii.ac.jp:00000927, author = {香川, 豊}, issue = {39}, journal = {甲南女子大学研究紀要. 人間科学編, Konan Women's University researches of human sciences volume}, month = {Mar}, note = {110000040494, Today we live in an age of crumbling traditions. Universal values are on the wane. That is why ever more people are caught in a feeling of aimlessness and emptiness. However, even if all human values should disappear, life holds a meaning for each and every individual. Man is responsible for giving the right answer to a question he is asked by life. In other words, Man is responsible for what to do, whom to love, and how to suffer, while Man's freedom is freedom to take a stand on whatever conditions might confront him, And taking a stand toward somatic and psychic phenomena implies opening a new dimension, the spiritual dimension. In this dimension, it is still possible to find a world beyond that of Man. According to Frankl's view, the question of an ultimate meaning for human suffering will find an answer in the spiritual dimension. But Man is incapable of understanding the ultimate meaning of human suffering because the ultimate meaning is no longer a matter of thinking but rather a matter of believing. Moreover, faith in the ultimate meaning is preceded by trust in God. But this relationship between God and human existence is ambiguous in Frankl. It is a problem with his viewpoint.}, pages = {9--17}, title = {「生きる意味」について : フランクルの人間観}, year = {2003} }