The inclination to aggression is an original,
self-subsisting instinctual disposition in man, and I return to my view that it
constitutes the greatest impediment to civilization. At one point in the course
of this enquiry I was led to the idea that civilization was a special process
which mankind undergoes, and I am still under the influence of that idea. I may
now add that civilization is a process in the service of Eros, whose purpose is
to combine single human individuals, and after that families, then races,
peoples and nations, into one great unity, the unity of mankind. Why this has
to happen, we do not know; the work of Eros is precisely this.
My intention [is] to represent the sense of guilt as the
most important problem in the development of civilization and to show that the
price we pay for our advance in civilization is a loss of happiness through the
heightening of the sense of guilt.
That the education of young people at the present day
conceals from them the part which sexuality will play in their lives is not the
only reproach which we are obliged to make against it. Its other sin is that it
does not prepare them for the aggressiveness of which they are destined to
become the objects. In sending the young out into life with such a false
psychological orientation, education is behaving as though one were to equip
people starting on a Polar expedition with summer clothing and maps of the
Italian Lakes. In this it becomes evident that a certain misuse is being made
of ethical demands. The strictness of those demands would not do so much harm if education were to say: “This is
how men ought to be, in order to be happy and to make others happy; but you
have to reckon on their not being like that.” Instead of this the young are made
to believe that everyone else fulfills those ethical demands - that is, that
everyone else is virtuous. It is on this that the demand is based that the
young, too, shall become virtuous.
Sigmund Freud, Civilization
and its Discontents (1930)
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