Erich Fromm - Political Psychophilosopher
Erich Fromm was born in Germany in
1900. He grew up a Jew in a country full of anti-Semitism. He
witnessed World War I when he was an early teen and the rise of the Nazi party
fifteen years later. His interest in war and politics grew from these
experiences and much of his theories were derived as a result of his desire to
understand why individuals followed leaders into acts of destruction.
His initial book, and likely his most
influential work, was called Escape From Freedom, published near the
beginning of World War II. In it he described freedom as the greatest
problem for most individuals. With freedom, according to Fromm, comes an
overwhelming sense of aloneness and an inability to exert individual power.
He argued that we use several different techniques to alleviate the anxiety
associated with our perception of freedom, including automaton, conformity,
authoritarianism, destructiveness, and individuation.
The most common of these is automaton
conformity. Fromm argued that with the anxiety associated with
our inability to express power and our fear of aloneness, we conform ourselves
to a larger society. By acting like everyone else, holding the same
values, purchasing the same products, and believing in the same morals, we gain
a sense of power. This power of the masses assists us in not feeling
alone and helpless. Unfortunately, according to Fromm, it also removes
our individuality and prevents us from truly being ourselves.
Authoritarianism is a
technique that others use to ward off the anxiety. Following an entity
outside of the self and perceived greater than the self is the main feature of
authoritarianism. As the individual feels alone and powerless, he gains
strength from the belief that there is a greater power beyond himself.
This entity could be a religious figure, a political leader, or social
belief. By giving up power to the powerful, we become the powerful and no
longer feel alone. In this sense authoritarianism is two sided or what
Fromm describes as sadism/masochism, where we submit to our leader (such as
Adolph Hitler) and demand power over our perceived enemies (Jews).
Others use the technique Fromm called destructiveness,
which refers to an attempt to destroy those we perceive as having the
power. Because of our desire for power, we may feel that this finite
resource must be taken from those who possess it. There are many ways to
attempt this destruction, including the alignment with hate groups, religious
extremism, or even patriotism. While our actions are often antisocial,
cruel, and misguided, we rationalize them by claiming a sense of duty, a god
given order, or the love of country.
Fromm believed that all three of these
techniques used to overcome our anxiety associated with freedom are
unhealthy. The only healthy technique is to embrace this freedom and
express our true selves rather than what we perceive as giving us power.
He argued that true power comes from individuality and freedom and doing what
you want to do rather than what you are suppose to do is the only way to
achieve individuation; the ability to be yourself and embrace the
power associated with true freedom.
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