The psychologist Erich Fromm wrote:

Today, when man seems to have reached the beginning of a new,
richer, happier human era, his existence and that of the
generations to follow is more threatened than ever.  How is
this possible?

In building the new industrial machine, men became so
absorbed in the new task that it became the paramount goal of
his life.  His energies, which once were devoted to the
search for God and salvation, were now directed toward the
domination of nature and ever-increasing material comfort.
He ceased to use production as a means for a better life, but
hypostatized it instead to an end in itself, an end to which
life was subordinated.  In the process of an ever-increasing
size of social agglomerations, man himself became a part of
the machine, rather than its master.  He experienced himself
as a commodity, as an investment; his aim became to be a
success, that is, to sell himself as profitably as possible
on the market.  His value as a person lies in his salability,
not in his human qualities of love, reason or in his artistic
capacities.  Happiness becomes identical with consumption of
newer and better commodities, the drinking in of music,
screen plays, fun, sex, liquor and cigarettes.  Not having a
sense of self except the one which conformity with the
majority can give, he is insecure, anxious, depending on
approval.  He is alienated from himself, worships the product
of his own hands, the leaders of his own making, as if they
were above him, rather than made by him.  He is in a sense
back where he was before the great human evolution began in
the second millennium B.C.

See http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/newsscancom/ to
get Erich Fromm's The Sane Society.  (all revenue
from this book recommendations goes to Literacy Action's adult
literacy programs.)

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