Objectivism is not objective. Don't let the name fool you. And if you really want to understand, read wider than just Rand.
Why get a job when I can get the state to tax John Galt and redistribute his wealth to me?Get a job and stop your whining.![]()
Why get a job when I can get the state to tax John Galt and redistribute his wealth to me?![]()
I like nerdy girls with glasses.You can go the easy route -- however Rand makes it clear you will only have second class sex partners (Galt's wife) if you are lazy. (You don't want a second class sex partner, do you)
I've been reading about Objectivism today. Poor old Rand seems to get a lot of slagging off, and I can't really see why. The few Rand adherents i have met strike me as intelligent, decent folks with a useful perspective. In fact I have a lot of time for objectivity. Does RandFan stil lost here? He is a thoroughly sensible and very intelligent kind of guy, with a coherent philosophical position as far as I can tell? Anyway time to read the thread... but I must say the vehement abuse hurled at Rand may one day force me to actually read her properly, just to understand!
cj x
I like nerdy girls with glasses.
I have no idea what the overall philosophy of JREFers is or if such a thing even exists. But even if every last one of us agreed with Rand, that would be completely irrelevant to the truth of her assertions or the value of her ideas. If JREFers were all or mostly all Randians, why would'nt that say something uncomplimentary about the quality of JREFer thought, rather something complimentary about Rand's thought? And even if Rand mimicked some of the philosophical conclusions that JREFers value from other sources, why is it hypocritical to oppose Rand's pathetic caricatures of those conclusions?
What Rand is is a caricature of actual philosophy. She takes the arguments of Kant, Nietzsche, Aristotle and even Plato, whom she despises, and totemizes them.
Reason was the royal rule of the soul for Plato, but Plato paid due notice to honour-seeking, spiritdeness, passion, eros, etc. and to the people who were driven by those things at the expense of reason. Who were those people? At the level of archetype, it's Achilles. At the level of civil society, they were Gorgias, Thrasymachus, Callicles, Alcibiades, etc. - the wealthy, driven, successful, high-achievers of Athens; the men whose passion and ambition drove them to lead armies, to make speeches, to satisfy their appetites to the full extent of their skill. Men who would not be bound by the needs of lesser Athenians. Men to whom justice is the advantage of the stronger. John Galt, in other words, and all men like him who are driven, not by reason, but by ambition, honour, and eros. Men who Plato wanted to contain, to manage, and to orient towards civic virtue.
In opposing the philosophy of the Athenian Galts, Plato, through Socrates, stated their arguments in the strongest form he could and then made his case against them. This is showing your work in philosophy. What does Rand do? Simply assert with clumsy and juvenile prose that Achilles, not Socrates, was the rational one. She doesn't do philosophy. She totemizes reason in an absurd and contradictory caricature.
Kant also priveleged reason, but he, like Plato and unlike Rand, showed his work and made his arguments. Without getting into the details, he argued for a categorical imperative that applied to humanity, where each person was an end rather than a mere means. This imposes a duty on everyone to treat everyone else as ends in themselves. It is a communitarian duty. What does Rand do with this? Totemize the categorical imperative into a duty of the individual to himself over the community, without even making an attempt to address, much less refute Kant. Not philosophy.
And, of course, Nietzsche elevated the individual will over the herd. He too wanted to re-inject Achilles into fully Platonized, Christianized western civilization. But to get into the ways in which Rand totemizes and trivializes Nietzsche would take far longer than I have the patience for here. I've already thought about Ayn Rand too much today. Same goes for her treatment of Enlightenment rationalists like Locke and Adam Smith.
Rand was not a philosopher. She was an intellectually impoverished, second-rate novelist. Not because she took the ideas of philosophers and tried to re-cast them in the form that she preferred, but because she did so by assertion and without showing her work, and without justifying the illogic and absurdity of her conclusions. She was a sophist.
I've been reading Ayn Rand: Boner Buster and I must say the photo spreads are intensely softening.
This odd little woman is attempting to give a moral sanction to greed and self interest, and to pull it off she must at times indulge in purest Orwellian newspeak of the “freedom is slavery” sort. What interests me most about her is not the absurdity of her “philosophy,” but the size of her audience .... She has a great attraction for simple people who are puzzled by organized society, who object to paying taxes, who dislike the “welfare” state, who feel guilt at the thought of the suffering of others but who would like to harden their hearts. For them, she has an enticing prescription: altruism is the root of all evil, self-interest is the only good, and if you’re dumb or incompetent that’s your lookout.
Uh, no--try again. I was not arguing the merits of her philosophy. I was pointing out that people tend to agree with many tenets of objectivism in the abstract, yet when they are associated with Rand people vehemently argue against them and usually resort to criticizing her writing style.
I could care less about defending Rand herself or her voluminous novels, but any writer above a minimum quality deserves a fair and rational discussion concerning their ideas irrespective of the way they are presented. After all, I could call Critique of Pure Reason **** and leave it at that.
Of course. What kind of argument is "it's worthless"? Whoop-de-do. We all hold ourselves to a higher standard here to at least lay out a coherent argument. Do you agree?
Well said, and I agree. Someone said on this thread or another one that it is a philosophy for the management class, which I agree with as well. Way too focused on commercial success and industrial-age definitions of productivity.
I agree that it is idealistic to think that people will help each other out of the goodness of their hearts, but IMO, no ethical framework has resolved this. It is not self-evident to me that people should be forced to be magnanimous to others, if that is what you are getting at.
Do not agree. Anarchy is the default state of nature so any modifications to that must essentially be justified by some kind of ethical framework. Thus, any ethical framework will always have rich language concerning the individual since that is the building block. All frameworks that lead to communism will still have strong flavors of individuality, but not other way around. It is asymmetric, and that is why they are not the same. I am interested in hearing your thoughts if you disagree with this analysis.
But I do agree that both sides can be over idealistic, but that can be said for any party really.
Ayn Rand might be a bit deeper thinker than you give her credit for. Just look at your post. Five paragraphs and every one starts with "I." "I,I,I,I," give us a break. (I think I missed one).
The world doesn't turn because because you woke up this morning --you commie. You are on the dole aren't you?
Now, Senex.
I can't tell if you're trolling, drunk, or being serious here, but if you're actually being serious, then you're an idiot. I was asked for my opinion on Ayn Rand so I gave my opinion.[/QUOTE
I''ve posted here a long time and I'm not a troll. Drunk/serious is a variation on a theme. You called me an idiot. That I won't leave.
So to be clear here, are you claiming Rand's idea of total absolute laissez faire really would work if only all the real interference in the markets stopped? That's just not supported by the historical evidence. It's a fantasy....
So, all in all, people who want to peg Greenspan as an objectivist like to point to derivative deregulation, but if you look at the pudding, there is more than enough proof that he meddled in the economy much more than a true laissez-faire proponent would and should.
She is a fascinating phenomena. And much of the criticism is indeed critical of positions she didn't really hold.I've been reading about Objectivism today. Poor old Rand seems to get a lot of slagging off, and I can't really see why. The few Rand adherents i have met strike me as intelligent, decent folks with a useful perspective. In fact I have a lot of time for objectivity. Does RandFan stil lost here? He is a thoroughly sensible and very intelligent kind of guy, with a coherent philosophical position as far as I can tell? Anyway time to read the thread... but I must say the vehement abuse hurled at Rand may one day force me to actually read her properly, just to understand!
cj x
As a professional philosopher who's been an Objectivist for 48 years, I suggest we talk about the actual content of the philosophy. So far, the discussion has not considered what Objectivism holds.
Which tenets of Objectivism do antagonists want to oppose:
1. Existence exists, reality is real. There is no supernatural realm.
2. A thing is what it is; A is A. The law of causality is the law of identity applied to action: a thing can only do that which its identity gives it the potential to do.
3. Man is conscious. The primary cognitive contact with reality is via sensory perception. Reason is the faculty that identifies and integrates the material provided by the senses. The first and basic act of reason is concept-formation. A "concept" is "a mental integration of two or more units possessing the same distinguishing characteristic(s) with their particular measurements omitted." (Rand, Introduction to Objectivist Epistemology, p. 13.)
4. The use of reason is volitional. The senses function automatically, but the process of concept-formation and thought is a matter of choice. The choice to think or not to think is man's basic free will.
5. Reason is man's only means of gaining conceptual knowledge and his only proper guide to action. Logic, "the art of non-contradictory identification," is the method of reasoning. Objectivity is the self-conscious, deliberate employment of logic.
6. The basis of values is the fact that living organisms have to act in order to survive. "It is only the concept of 'Life' that makes the concept of 'Value' possible." (Rand, Atlas Shrugged, p. 1013) One's life is one's ultimate value. Man's life qua man is the standard of moral evaluation. Rationality is man's basic virtue.
Those basics should be enough for now. You can find passages from Rand's writings on 400 topics in my book The Ayn Rand Lexicon: Objectivism from A to Z. It can be searched for free online (Google aynrandlexicon).
OK, I'll bite. The problem with reason is, garbage in garbage out. Reason relies on accurate perception of the reality you speak of. One of Rand's problems, IMO, is her perception of reality was distorted by her experience in Russia.