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| Foreword | ||
| I | Some Personal Antecedents | 3 |
| II | The Common Ground | 13 |
| III | The Concept of Man and His Nature | 27 |
| IV | Human Evolution | 33 |
| V | Human Motivation | 38 |
| VI | The Sick Individual and the Sick Society | 43 |
| VII | The Concept of Mental Health | 63 |
| VIII | Individual and Social Character | 71 |
| IX | The Social Unconscious | 88 |
| X | The Fate of Both Theories | 133 |
| XI | Some Related Ideas | 149 |
| XII | Credo | 174 |
Overview
According to renowned psychoanalyst Erich Fromm, three people shaped the essential character of the twentieth century: Albert Einstein, Karl Marx, and Sigmund Freud. While the first two figures had a great physical and political impact on the world, Fromm believes that Freud had an even deeper impact, because he changed how we think about ourselves. Beyond the Chains of ...