PERSON
Erich Fromm
The psychoanalytic humanist who asked why ordinary people
surrender their freedom willingly—and whose diagnosis of the psychological mechanisms of escape, the
social character they produce, and the distinction between
having and being have become the most precise tools available for understanding what the AI moment is doing to the self.
Erich Fromm published
Escape from Freedom in 1941, a year that seemed to demand the urgent question: not why dictators seize power, but why ordinary people hand their freedom over willingly. His answer—that freedom produces an anxiety the modern self has not been equipped to bear, and that the mechanisms of escape from that anxiety are predictable, socially shaped, and more dangerous when invisible—has not aged. It has merely found a new arena in the
[YOU] on AI moment, where the most sophisticated cage ever constructed is made not of bars but of creative flow, and where the flight from freedom looks indistinguishable from its fullest
expression. Fromm’s work spans psychology, philosophy, sociology, and ethics—
The Art of Loving (1956),
The Sane Society (1955),
To Have or To Be? (1976)—but a single thread runs through all of it: the difference between freedom from