To Have or To Be?From the legendary psychoanalyst who wrote The Art of Loving and Escape from Freedom: A profound critique of materialism in favor of living with meaning. Life in the modern age began when people no longer lived at the mercy of nature and instead took control of it. We planted crops so we didn’t have to forage, and produced planes, trains, and cars for transport. With televisions and computers, we don’t have to leave home to see the world. Somewhere in that process, the natural tendency of humankind went from one of being and of practicing our own human abilities and powers, to one of having by possessing objects and using tools that replace our own powers to think, feel, and act independently. Fromm argues that positive change—both social and economic—will come from being, loving, and sharing. This ebook features an illustrated biography of Erich Fromm including rare images and never-before-seen documents from the author’s estate. |
From inside the book
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... Examples in Various Poetic Expressions Idiomatic Changes Origin of the Terms Philosophical Concepts of Being Having and Consuming II. Having and Being in Daily Experience Learning Remembering Conversing Reading Exercising Authority ...
... Examples in Various Poetic Expressions Idiomatic Changes Origin of the Terms Philosophical Concepts of Being Having and Consuming II. Having and Being in Daily Experience Learning Remembering Conversing Reading Exercising Authority ...
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... example of this widespread attitude: Koestler sat in the comfortable villa of a friend while the advance of Franco's troops was reported; there was no doubt that they would arrive during the night, and very likely he would be shot; he ...
... example of this widespread attitude: Koestler sat in the comfortable villa of a friend while the advance of Franco's troops was reported; there was no doubt that they would arrive during the night, and very likely he would be shot; he ...
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... examples from daily experience that readers can easily relate to in their own personal experience . Chapter III presents the views on having and being in the Old and the New Testaments and in the writings of Master Eckhart . Subsequent ...
... examples from daily experience that readers can easily relate to in their own personal experience . Chapter III presents the views on having and being in the Old and the New Testaments and in the writings of Master Eckhart . Subsequent ...
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... Examples. in. Various. Poetic. Expressions. As an introduction to understanding the difference between the having and being modes of existence, let me use as an illustration two poems of similar content that the late D.T. Suzuki referred to ...
... Examples. in. Various. Poetic. Expressions. As an introduction to understanding the difference between the having and being modes of existence, let me use as an illustration two poems of similar content that the late D.T. Suzuki referred to ...
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... example , I have a watch , I have must be understood in its proper sense ; but in I have an idea , I have is said only by way of imitation . It is a borrowed expression . I have an idea means I think , I conceive of in such and such a ...
... example , I have a watch , I have must be understood in its proper sense ; but in I have an idea , I have is said only by way of imitation . It is a borrowed expression . I have an idea means I think , I conceive of in such and such a ...
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Common terms and phrases
activity alienated alive Aquinas attitude authority become behavior Blakney bureaucratic capitalism century character structure Christian Cloud of Unknowing Club of Rome concept consumer consumption craving culture desire disobedience E. F. Schumacher economic Epicurus ERICH ERICH ERICH FROMM Escape from Freedom ethical experience expressed faith fascism fear feel freedom Freud FROMM FROMM function give goal God’s greed hedonism hence human nature humanistic idea idol illusions individuals industrial inner interest Jesus knowledge leaders living marketing character Marx Marx's Master Eckhart means mode of existence object one’s oneself orientation passivity people’s person philosophical pleasure political possession problem production psychoanalytic qualities radical rational reality religion religious representatives rooted selfishness sense sexual Shabbat social character socialist society solidarity Spinoza spirit Talmud things thinking Thomas Aquinas thought translation truth understand Verlag well-being word York Zen Buddhism