Skeptic Ginger
Nasty Woman
- Joined
- Feb 14, 2005
- Messages
- 96,955
I don't know what this means. I answer posts, many in a row sometimes, but usually each of my posts starts with the quote of the person I am replying to.This post is for Skeptic Ginger.
...I've frequently not read your posts because you often cover your own post, meaning you post again and again without anyone replying to your (or anyone elses) last post. It's not against the rules nor wrong, but it has made me less likely to read your posts. It's a preference on my part and it is my problem not yours.
Geese, don't feel bad. Who can possibly read everyone's posts or entire threads when they are very long. I certainly don't.I felt bad and made an effort to read all your posts on page 5 of this thread about Ayn Rand.
One doesn't 'judge' a philosopher of many centuries ago based on standards of today. Sometimes ancient people got it right. Look at Newton and Da Vinci.This is silly. Do you wish to undermine Plato for the same reason. Which philosophers are Sceptic Ginger informed of the biology of the brain appoved? You must have the names of some sharp philosophers or are all philosophers brain biology misinformed?
When it comes to Plato, Socrates, Aristotle and the other great philosophers, they had many great insights. But does it translate exactly to today, idea by idea? I think not. The great mathematicians (wasn't Plato also in this category?) OTOH, had more concrete data to deal with. Not too many math theories I'm aware of turned out to be false. The great astronomers had to build on each others' foundations. Medical science didn't really start in earnest until the mid 1800s. So if you expect Plato's insights would have been the same if he had the advantage of today's neurobiology, I think that might be what is silly.
I don't get your problem here. Why isn't it possible I know what I'm talking about? People see things from different viewpoints. I think quite often more than one person in a debate is correct, but what appears to be disagreement is often because the parties are not exactly talking about the same things.You evidently are speculating from such an informed place. It must not suck to be you.
I totally agree that being wise and successful does not require one cheat steal and deceive. My point was that everyone who is successful has not accomplished that success based on their innate abilities unless you include being good at cheating people on your list of successful traits."Stealing, cheating, & deceiving" is not the same "as the strong winning and the weak losing." It's not that I ever needed to discern the difference but I would prefer to lose to a stronger individual than one who steals, cheats and deceives. I don't cotton to that stealing, cheating and deceiving thing.
In the 1900s, there was not information available about modern neurobiology. Rand lived through the Russian revolution. Sure, that's a lot, but it also slants ones view, just as my Dad's view was slanted by the "Red Menace" and mine was slanted by the Vietnam War. We have the advantage today of incredible access to massive amounts of information in addition to our experiences. Some people recognize how their experiences shape their world view and can consider broader experiences when assessing the world they live in. Others believe their personal experiences are sufficient to draw broader conclusions than the experiences actually warrant.I don't see her view as narrower than anyone elses. In fact she knows about Russia, Hollywood and writing. She has seen a lot. You're wrong that she has a narrow view.
I understand my Dad's view of Russian and Chinese communism and his belief we needed to stop the "domino effect". But he was wrong. It was and is the corruption in Russia and China that prevent their populations from emerging as free societies. While I think capitalism is a preferable model, and there are many reasons for that, I also think corrupt capitalism can be just as bad as corrupt communism. We need a mix of economies, not the pure laissez faire in Rand's imaginary world.
From the biography of Ayn Rand by Anne Heller, "Ayn Rand and the World She Made", which I just finished reading. Rand had relatives in Russia that gave her money to come here. And she lived with cousins in New York when she got here who not only supported her financially, they gave her money to go to Hollywood which Rand used until she got a job there. According to Heller, Rand never paid these relatives back for their generosity nor credited them with helping her.I'm calling BS on this. Where did you get this information?
That doesn't mean Rand never helped anyone or gave anything to other people. She did. But not necessarily to those people who helped Rand get to America or become established here.
That biography did have a point of view. I plan to read another biography next but I've not decided which one would offer the best balance to the one I just read. As for Rand's own words, I've listened to the interview with Phil Donahue and I plan to hear the Wallace interview next.
If I write a book, this is not the topic I would choose to address first.IAre you going to write a book "Atlas is alive and well?"