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If humanity cannot live with the dangers and responsibilities
inherent in freedom, it will probably turn to authoritarianism.
This is the central idea of Escape from Freedom, a landmark
work by one of the most distinguished thinkers of our time, and a
book that is as timely now as when first published in 1941. Few
books have thrown such light upon the forces that shape modern
society or penetrated so deeply into the causes of authoritarian
systems. If the rise of democracy set some people free, at the same
time it gave birth to a society in which the individual feels
alienated and dehumanized. Using the insights of psychoanalysis as
probing agents, Fromm’s work analyzes the illness of contemporary
civilization as witnessed by its willingness to submit to
totalitarian rule.
a wake-up call to examine character structure of modern manReviewed by whj, 2010-01-28
This is an important book that examines the character structure of modern man that is faced with the dilemma, "How can mankind save itself from destroying itself by this discrepancy between intellectual-technical overmaturity and emotional backwardness?" The author explains it from the political, cultural, economic and social psychological and historical context and uses the examples of Nazism to explain the authoritarian character---simultaneous presence of masochistic and sadistic drives based on the need for a symbiotic relationship to overcome the aloneness and powerlessness. He analyzes very important but often neglected characteristics of modern man--inability to "think" and "will" and the phenomenon of "pseudo-thinking", and the "despair of human antomaton" which set man up for conformity and "fertile soil for Fascism. The author emphasizes the importance of spontaneity through "love"(affirmation) and "work"(creation as a process, not as an end product). The message is extremely relevant to our current time.
BrilliantReviewed by Lance Nimrod, 2009-12-18
Just a very short review: One of the best books I've ever read.
Well written, insightful and full of wisdom. I've also read To Have
or To Be which was also very good.
[...]
Societal "Bad Faith" as a route to Freedom?Reviewed by Herbert L Calhoun, 2009-08-02
Writing this book in 1941, Fromm, already by then, had become an
extraordinary post-Freudian, post-Modern Existentialist
Psychologist. Even then he saw farther, wider and more deeply than
most of his contemporaries into the soul of the emerging
post-modern man: He saw that post-modern man was headed over a
self-inflicted psychological cliff, one with which seventy years
later, we have now become face-to-face with and all too
familiar.
Speaking primarily about society in the United States, Fromm
identifies a signature problem that we have seen across history, at
least since the Renaissance, recurring as a motif at the subtext of
modern man's existence: using meaningless activity and
contradictory rhetoric to cover up his deeper fears. In this case,
the fear is of the very thing he claims to hold dearest and of
highest value, his individual freedom. However, at the level of his
soul, it is precisely this, the fear of his freedom (like the
companion fear of death) that drives him into a meaningless,
alienated, mindless neurotic frenzy. In the U.S. and most of the
Western world, that frenzy is called modern conformist capitalist
society. In the East, and many other parts of the world, it is
called totalitarian society.
Since before the Renaissance, with the lost of the security of its
medieval arrangements, it has been this mindlessness and
meaningless activity that has served as a frame for the "normal
life" of modern man; and it has been this activity that has driven
him to seek comfort in ever more clever authoritarian schemes. But
the "so-called" normal life of modern man is little more than cheap
cover for his deeper fears, the fear that he indeed may be alone in
this world, and may have nothing to rely on but his own "freedom to
be" as a vehicle to fashion a life out of the utter terror of
discovering that he is alone in this world.
This, of course is a more positive "freedom to be" as opposed to
the more negative "freedom from," a reactionary "pretend freedom"
that is incessantly appealed to, preached and harped about by
ideologues and "chest-beating" radical conservative individualists.
Their kind of "negative freedom from" is in fact just another
Trojan Horse to cover their thinly veiled desires to maintain the
status quo, and ever more desirable arrangements within the
existing social order to continue their entitlements and to
otherwise make the world safer for continuation of their own brand
of exploitation -whether it be direct and brutal totalitarian
schemes, as is the case in the East; or more sophisticated (but no
less brutal) capitalistic forms of exploitation, as is the case in
the West. This "freedom from" is not the kind that lies at the base
of man's relationship with himself and with the world he has to
negotiate in order to ensure the continued survival of the
species.
The book thus is about how modern man has learned to shrink from
this larger less selfish responsibility of engaging in a kind of
creative and positive freedom as a way of underwriting his
survival, and how instead he has taught himself to find comfort and
safety in using his own "bad faith" (in the Sartrean sense) to
construct the very opposite of positive freedom, as he goes about
devising ever more clever totalitarian and authoritarian schemes to
deflect his deeper fears about being alone in the world. We have,
for instance already seen how Hitler came to power under the banner
of anti-Semitic "National Democratic Socialism," and Stalin under
the banner of a "Proletarian Revolution." Now, the U.S. is slowly
traveling now the same totalitarian path in the name and under the
guise of racist capitalist democratic freedom. While on the surface
the rationale looks different, it too is animated by the same
underlying fears and by the same basic lack of awareness of the
human condition.
This then is one of the earliest and most serious critiques of
post-modern society's drift into totalitarianism. As always,
Fromm's perspective is a sweeping one: connecting the human
personality to society via culture, and showing how, due to the
weakness of both, the most natural development is through an
evolution of authoritarian schemes. The crowning achievement of the
book in my view is in the appendix entitled "Character and the
Social Process." Here, in direct defiance of his mentor Freud,
Fromm demonstrates how the individual character is formed by, and
is a child of society, (not of intuited drives and mechanisms). I
highly recommend that the reader not avoid reading this
appendix.
This book is a tour de force. 100 stars.
Freedom and responsibilityReviewed by tigger, 2009-07-14
This book provides an alternative perspective on the varying philosophies that make up the collective human experience. Fromm is insightful and it's hard not to identify with the ideas in his work, which are as relevant today as when he first penned them. He focuses on the paradox of mans need to escape control and his subsequent inability to cope with freedom. A good read.
Knowing OurselvesReviewed by Robin A. Adler, 2009-07-05
Escape From Freedom is the perfect title for a book that is as
applicable today as it was when it was published in 1941.
Mr. Fromm focuses mainly on the Nazis and the Reformation of the
Catholic Church, but his observations could as easily apply to the
followers of Jim Jones or many US Presidents who promise the moon
if only we give up our personal freedoms.
We should all be aware of our inate tendencies to join the group
rather than stand on our own two feet and face the world alone. We
should also be aware of all the evil this tendency has caused when
manipulated by unscrupulous governments and charismatic
autocrats.
Escape From Freedom is an excellent companion to Philip Zimbardo's:
The Lucifer Effect.
I do, however, disagree with Mr. Fromm's negative view of religion,
I believe that I am much better off placing my trust in God than in
Man. It is only when we give up our ability to think that Surrender
becomes a bad thing. Religion does not take away from us as
individuals as long as we do not allow ourselves to be manipulated
by those who would use religion as a means to an end.