within infinite possibility. He does not confuse his own limitations with ultimate limitation, nor does he mistake his own being with ultimate being. There is also an extraordinary sense of tolerance in his thinking--a graciousness in his concession that our symbols for ultimate meaning only point to a reality we cannot experience directly. The concentration camps in which he suffered and in which his loved ones died were, after all, created to annihilate those who were different. And so Frankl leaves room for the breadth of human ex- perience of the metaphysical. Let God take on an anthropomorphic form for some. For others, let God be confused with the self. After all, ul- timate meaning is certainly able to absorb the finitude of our attempts to understand and describe infinity. But for Frankl, such tolerance does not imply a lack of judgment. For there is evil in the world, and his life bears the scars. The unconscious search for ultimate meaning can lead to nefarious ends: flagrant nationalism, obsessive jealousies, ethnic hate, compulsive work. Half a century since this volume was conceived, I spent an after- noon with Elly and Viktor speaking not only of Ausch- witz, but also of Srebrenica: a diabolic and perverted meaning found by some in sadistic debauchery. So we are reminded once again that abstract theory is not an end in itself. It must shape concrete living. From this small volume, there is a great moral imperative to be pondered. As we reflect on Frankl's thought, we may take time to muse on what we personally hold most dear and, even in the moment of that intimate dialogue, contribute to the universal force for goodness. Tolerance, jealousy, benevolence, hate, decency. What will be ultimate in our lives? As Viktor Frankl would remind us, the choice is ours. Swanee Hunt United States Ambassador to Austria -10- |