Philosophics 
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Work Drives Us Mad: Revisiting Fromm's Sane Society

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The text, an excerpt from an article titled "The Sane Society, Revisited: Why Work Still Drives Us Mad – Philosophics," discusses the enduring relevance of Erich Fromm's 1954 book, The Sane Society, which critiqued Capitalism as a psychic infection leading to widespread job dissatisfaction and alienation. The author argues that despite modern technological advancements, the fundamental misery of the employee remains unchanged, echoing Fromm’s diagnosis that most people are consciously dissatisfied with their jobs. Statistics cited by Fromm reveal a significant discrepancy in job satisfaction between professionals and executives versus factory workers and clerks, with the latter group showing a much higher rate of dissatisfaction, a pathology that manifests as neurosis and fatigue. Ultimately, the article suggests that society has failed to address the root causes of alienation, choosing instead superficial solutions while the problem persists, often unconsciously, among the majority of the working population.https://philosophics.blog/2025/11/04/the-sane-society-revisited-why-work-still-drives-us-mad/

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