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Fromm
[from]
noun
Erich 1900–80, U.S. psychoanalyst and author, born in Germany.
Fromm
/ frɒm /
noun
Erich (ˈɛrɪk). 1900–80, US psychologist and philosopher, born in Germany. His works include The Art of Loving (1956) and To Have and To Be (1976)
Example Sentences
“I’ve never been in this situation before so it’s been step-by-step, figuring out all the what-ifs,” said Carl Fromm, a 76-year-old retiree who is trying to rebuild his home with his wife, Eva.
I was reminded of Erich Fromm’s “The Art of Loving,” which I read when I was 15.
As I try to make sense of this sick yearning and poisoned nostalgia, I have been returning to the work of the highly influential social psychologist and psychoanalyst Erich Fromm.
In a 1973 essay in the New York Times about Fromm’s then-new book, “The Anatomy of Human Destructiveness,” Sara Sanborn wrote the following:
Fromm covers much of this ground again, analyzing Heinrich Himmler and Josef Stalin as case studies of the sadist driven by the need to dominate.
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