To Have or To Be?To Have Or to Be? is one of the seminal books of the second half of the 20th century. Nothing less than a manifesto for a new social and psychological revolution to save our threatened planet, this book is a summary of the penetrating thought of Eric Fromm. His thesis is that two modes of existence struggle for the spirit of humankind: the having mode, which concentrates on material possessions, power, and aggression, and is the basis of the universal evils of greed, envy, and violence; and the being mode, which is based on love, the pleasure of sharing, and in productive activity. To Have Or to Be? is a brilliant program for socioeconomic change. |
From inside the book
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Page v
... origin of the terms 20 Philosophical concepts of being 21 having and consuming 22 2 having and Being in Daily experience 25 learning 25 remembering 27 Conversing 29 reading 30 exercising authority 32 having knowledge and Contents.
... origin of the terms 20 Philosophical concepts of being 21 having and consuming 22 2 having and Being in Daily experience 25 learning 25 remembering 27 Conversing 29 reading 30 exercising authority 32 having knowledge and Contents.
Page vi
Erich Fromm. Conversing 29 reading 30 exercising authority 32 having knowledge and knowing 34 Faith 36 loving 38 3 having and Being in the old and new Testaments and in the Writings of master eckhart 41 The old Testament 41 The new ...
Erich Fromm. Conversing 29 reading 30 exercising authority 32 having knowledge and knowing 34 Faith 36 loving 38 3 having and Being in the old and new Testaments and in the Writings of master eckhart 41 The old Testament 41 The new ...
Page x
... knowledge, both discursive and intuitive, by accepting their interdependence. This is the crisis in consciousness made articulate through the crisis in science. This is the new awakening. each volume presents the thought and belief of ...
... knowledge, both discursive and intuitive, by accepting their interdependence. This is the crisis in consciousness made articulate through the crisis in science. This is the new awakening. each volume presents the thought and belief of ...
Page xi
... knowledge, but has also disclosed analogies in man's position regarding the analysis and synthesis of experience in apparently separated domains of knowledge, suggesting the possibility of an ever more embracing objective description of ...
... knowledge, but has also disclosed analogies in man's position regarding the analysis and synthesis of experience in apparently separated domains of knowledge, suggesting the possibility of an ever more embracing objective description of ...
Page xii
... knowledge. This new consciousness has created a widening of human horizons beyond every parochialism, and a revolution in human thought comparable to the basic assumption, among the ancient Greeks, of the sovereignty of reason ...
... knowledge. This new consciousness has created a widening of human horizons beyond every parochialism, and a revolution in human thought comparable to the basic assumption, among the ancient Greeks, of the sovereignty of reason ...
Contents
The Great Promise its Failure and New Alternatives | 1 |
Part I Understanding the Difference Between Having and Being | 11 |
Part II Analyzing the Fundamental Differences Between the Two Modes of Existence | 57 |
Part III The New Man and the New Society | 113 |
177 | |
183 | |
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Common terms and phrases
achieve activity alienated alive attitude authority aware become behavior believe Blakney Buddhism bureaucratic century character structure Christian Club of rome concept Constantin stanislavski consumer consumption craving culture D. T. suzuki desire disobedience economic epicurus erich Fromm ethical experience expressed fact faith fascism fear feel Félix Guattari freedom Freud function give goal God’s greed hebrew hedonism hence hero human nature humanist ideas idol illusions individual industrial inner insight Jesus knowledge leaders living man’s marketing character marx marx’s master eckhart means mode of existence nations nontheistic object one’s oneself orientation participatory democracy passivity people’s person philosophical pleasure political possession principle problem production qualities Quint radical reality reason religion religious repressed rooted selfishness sense sexual shabbat social character society solidarity spinoza spirit Talmud things thinking Thomas aquinas thought truth understanding well-being word World Perspectives