To: tpaine
What is your objection to Rands ideas on using its pursuit as a rational moral basis for attaining/keeping a life of liberty? For one thing, "happiness" is a subjective thing -- hardly the basis for a supposedly objective philosophy based on the claim that "Reality exists as an objective absolute facts are facts, independent of mans feelings, wishes, hopes or fears."
Rand and her disciples make grand claims to being the "only logical philosophy." If "happiness" is the highest moral goal, then either this statement is invalid, or the "highest moral goal" is not what Rand says it is.
At any rate, the combination of the two claims forms a contradiction -- not what one expects of a truly logical philosophy.
100 posted on
05/01/2003 12:30:03 PM PDT by
r9etb
To: r9etb
Life, liberty, and the pursuit of "happiness" are seen by many to be self evident truths, -- among the highest, foremost goals of man..
What is your objection to Rands ideas on using its pursuit as a rational moral basis for attaining/keeping a life of liberty?
82 -tpaine-
If "happiness" is the highest moral goal, then either this statement is invalid, or the "highest moral goal" is not what Rand says it is.
-r9-
You reject life, liberty, and the pursuit of "happiness" as self evident truths?
Do you really mean that, or are you just attempting to ridicule Rand, while shooting yourself in the foot?
207 posted on
05/01/2003 2:25:27 PM PDT by
tpaine
(Really, I'm trying to be a 'decent human being', but me flesh is weak.)
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