On Being Human
By (Author) Erich Fromm
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Continuum International Publishing Group Ltd.
1st December 1997
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Philosophy
128
Paperback
180
248g
Any attempt to identify the thread that runs through the late Erich Fromm's writings will soon uncover an unequivocally humanistic world view. From the 1930s on, this was Fromm's guiding principle. It signified Fromm's break with the Frankfurt School: Marcuse, Adorno and Horkheimer. This posthumous volume includes writings from one of Fromm's most fertile periods--the 1960s. These writings concentrate on humanistic science, socialism, religion, and psychoanalysis. They are from lectures, works written for specific occasions, and manuscripts intended as books. Of particular interest is an extended essay on two very different thinkers: Meister Eckhart and Karl Marx.
"This splendid volume is a welcome addition to Fromm's published legacy. Instructive foreword by the editor; bibliography; index."--Choice
"Fromm's large, keen mind and attractive, likable voice strive for heart as he asks himself the hardest questions of his day."--Kirkus Reviews
Born in Frankfurt-am-Main, Erich Fromm (1900-1980) studied sociology and psychoanalysis. In 1933, he emigrated as a member of the Frankfurt School of social thinkers to the United States, moved to Mexico in 1950, and spent his twilight years between 1974 and 1980 in Switzerland. His books Fear of Freedom (1941) and The Art of Loving (1956) made him famous. Other well-known books are Marx's Concept of Man, Beyond the Chains of Illusion, and The Essential Fromm.