'Man for Himself: An Inquiry into the Psychology of Ethics' by Erich Fromm
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First published in 1949, Man for Himself is Erich Fromm’s attempt to rescue ethics from both religion and pure relativism.
Fromm’s answer is what he calls humanistic ethics. Rather than seeing morality as obedience to authority, he argues that ethical life emerges from understanding what allows human beings to flourish. Freedom, love, responsibility, and productive activity are not moral commands but expressions of psychological health.
Drawing on psychoanalysis, philosophy, and social theory, Fromm critiques the modern condition in which people believe themselves free while quietly submitting to social pressure, markets, and authority. In that sense the book reads less like mid-century philosophy and more like a diagnosis of modern alienation.
Where many moral systems ask what people should do, Fromm asks a subtler question: what kind of person is a human being capable of becoming?
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