B.F. Skinner, in his novel Walden Two, presents many arguments about how he
foresees a positive change in the world through manipulation of behavior on the personal
level. Sigmund Freud, in his works, specifically Civilization and Its Discontents, presents
his view of human nature and what is innately problematic about it. Both Freud and
Skinner agree that human behavior is the result of outside factors that severely hinder the
concept of free will. Skinner believes that humans, in the correct environment, can live
happily, while Freud understands that humans are destined to live in "some degree of
anguish or discontent."
Skinner uses the ideal setting of Walden Two to illustrate his ideas of how human
behavior should be "formed." Much of Skinner's argument on how to eliminate what he
knows as problematic rests on his prescription of dismissing the notion of individual
freedom. Skinner does not only say that the concept of individual freedom is a farce. He
takes it a step further and states that the search for it is where society has gone wrong. He
wants no part in the quest for individual freedom. If we give up this illusion, says Skinner,
we can condition everyone to act in acceptable ways.
Skinner has a specific prescription for creating this utopian society. He declares
that all that is necessary is to change the conditions which surround man. "Give me the
specifications, and I'll give you the man" is his simple yet remarkable message. He claims
that by controlling what a person's environment is, it is possible to craft a man to behave in
any way. Skinner wants to use this notion to create a world without pain and suffering.
In Walden Two, he systematically describes what conditions are necessary to create a
world of happiness.
Skinner proposes that to create his perfect society, one needs only to come up with
the characteristics of what man should be. Since he can then create any man, he will fill
the world with these perfectly-conditioned people and all will be perfect. Although many
of his insights are problematic at the root level, some of what Skinner proposes is material
which should not just be totally dismissed.
Freud has a much different concept of human existence. He, too, says that people
are "formed" out of experiences and pre-existent conditions. However, Freud believes
that the biggest factor in shaping human behavior is much more personal and internal.
Since everyone experiences things differently, he claims, it is impossible to shape everyone
so that some utopian society will form, as in Skinner's case.
Freud recognizes on one level that there is an innate conflict between the individual
and society. So even at the first level, there is a conflict which will hinder happiness.
Freud states that the norms of society are much too rigorous for the common person
because they are in conflict with the inner desires of the psyche. Keep in mind, this has
nothing to do with each individual's "roots," but it states that, upon entering the world,
each human is doomed to conflict with societal standards.
From day one also, each individual feels pressure from every social direction. His
parents influence him by their rearing methods and their requirements of him. As he
begins to develop, his mind does as well, and any negative experience manifests some
degree of conflict between the three parts of the mind.
Basically, Freud has such a harsh view of reality because he believes there are so
many ways in which the mind is attacked: social, parental, self-inflicted. One might have
no problem dealing with the pressure from society, yet may, for example, feel guilty about
one thing or another. Freud would say that this would create some sort of conflict in the
mind, one which is inevitable and through no amount of conditioning is prohibitable.
Also, since the three parts of the mind (id, ego, and superego) are constantly
tearing at one another. The ego has to balance the desires of the id with the standards of
the superego while accepting the outside reality. If any problem occurs and the balance is
thrown off, suffering will result. "So neurosis results from the frustration of basic
instincts, either because of external obstacles or because of internal mental imbalance"
(Stevenson 77.)
Both Freud and Skinner find problems with the current social situation. Freud says
that, for the most part, we cannot change the inner mechanisms of the mind, while Skinner
says that any type of conditioning is possible. Maybe through both of these theories, we
can learn to form some sort of resolution.
Concise Bibliography
I. Civilization and Its Discontents, Sigmund Freud.
II. The Communist Manifesto, Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels.
III. Walden Two, B.F. Skinner.
IV. Seven Theories of Human Nature, Leslie Stevenson.
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