Lark
Rothchildian Agent
- MBTI
- ENTJ
- Enneagram
- 9
I'm going to summarise, pretty sloppy I'd guess, one of the big ideas from one of my favourite psycho-analytical theorists here because I'd like to hear others views about whether they think its valid or not or even how it could be researched.
It's of course a theory from Erich Fromm, Fromm believed that humans have an innate drive towards freedom, for themselves and, via the medium of being biophilious if nothing has happened to you to derail you from human nature, that of others, even animals and other living things.
However, Fromm felt that being free, being conscious, was experienced by most people as terrifying or at least really challenging, either consciously or unconsciously, mostly unconsciously, but it is what sets mankind, cognitive, cerebral, thinking and reflecting, apart from animals or simpler forms of life which are just totally obedient to instinctual drives. The progressive record of human history has only made freedom more challenging. All sorts of primary bonds have disappeared, been collectively dropped, socially abandoned and in the life of any individual growing up from child to adult they have to break some primary bonds themselves in the process.
So, Fromm suggested that in dealing with the challenge and the emotional conflicts it gives rise to, with other powerful drives, the drive to relate to others for instance which Fromm felt was as big as the drive to freedom, can involve aversive strategies - authoritarianism, automaton conformity and destructiveness - Fromm explained the Nazi period in Germany as a consequence of the prevalence of authoritarianism as an aversive strategy, even Hitler was typical of this strategy, he felt himself a middle man, engaging in the "kiss up, piss down" but his superior was "God", "Nation", "Future", "Race" rather than a person.
Do you think this is a valid theory? Does it make any sense to you? Or resonate? If its invalid why? Can it be tested? Fromm supported his hypothesis with allusions, allegories and descriptions and literature review in his book Fear of Freedom but he did other research on the working class in weimer germany and the population of a mexican village which was much more comprehensive, surveys, questionnaires, interviews, rorschach etc. etc.
Could you design a study today which would vindicate or invalidate his hypothesis? Would it be worthwhile in anycase? And if you were considering it would you add any other aversive strategies for our day and age which perhaps Fromm wouldnt have thought of or couldnt have thought of?
It's of course a theory from Erich Fromm, Fromm believed that humans have an innate drive towards freedom, for themselves and, via the medium of being biophilious if nothing has happened to you to derail you from human nature, that of others, even animals and other living things.
However, Fromm felt that being free, being conscious, was experienced by most people as terrifying or at least really challenging, either consciously or unconsciously, mostly unconsciously, but it is what sets mankind, cognitive, cerebral, thinking and reflecting, apart from animals or simpler forms of life which are just totally obedient to instinctual drives. The progressive record of human history has only made freedom more challenging. All sorts of primary bonds have disappeared, been collectively dropped, socially abandoned and in the life of any individual growing up from child to adult they have to break some primary bonds themselves in the process.
So, Fromm suggested that in dealing with the challenge and the emotional conflicts it gives rise to, with other powerful drives, the drive to relate to others for instance which Fromm felt was as big as the drive to freedom, can involve aversive strategies - authoritarianism, automaton conformity and destructiveness - Fromm explained the Nazi period in Germany as a consequence of the prevalence of authoritarianism as an aversive strategy, even Hitler was typical of this strategy, he felt himself a middle man, engaging in the "kiss up, piss down" but his superior was "God", "Nation", "Future", "Race" rather than a person.
Do you think this is a valid theory? Does it make any sense to you? Or resonate? If its invalid why? Can it be tested? Fromm supported his hypothesis with allusions, allegories and descriptions and literature review in his book Fear of Freedom but he did other research on the working class in weimer germany and the population of a mexican village which was much more comprehensive, surveys, questionnaires, interviews, rorschach etc. etc.
Could you design a study today which would vindicate or invalidate his hypothesis? Would it be worthwhile in anycase? And if you were considering it would you add any other aversive strategies for our day and age which perhaps Fromm wouldnt have thought of or couldnt have thought of?