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Big Sister Is Watching You
WHITTAKER CHAMBERS
This review was originally published in the December 28th, 1957 issue of National Review.
SEVERAL years ago, Miss Ayn Rand wrote The Fountainhead. Despite a generally poor press, it is said to have sold some four hundred thousand copies. Thus, it became a wonder of the book trade of a kind that publishers dream about after taxes. So Atlas Shrugged (Random House, $6.95) had a first printing of one hundred thousand copies. It appears to be slowly climbing the best-seller lists.
The news about this book seems to me to be that any ordinarily sensible head could possibly take it seriously, and that, apparently, a good many do. Somebody has called it: "Excruciatingly awful." I find it a remarkably silly book. It is certainly a bumptious one. Its story is preposterous. It reports the final stages of a final conflict (locale: chiefly the United States, some indefinite years hence) between the harried ranks of free enterprise and the "looters." These are proponents of proscriptive taxes, government ownership, labor, etc., etc. The mischief here is that the author, dodging into fiction, nevertheless counts on your reading it as political reality. "This," she is saying in effect, "is how things really are. These are the real issues, the real sides. Only your blindness keeps you from seeing it, which, happily, I have come to rescue you from."
Since a great many of us dislike much that Miss Rand dislikes, quite as heartily as she does, many incline to take her at her word. It is the more persuasive, in some quarters, because the author deals wholly in the blackest blacks and the whitest whites. In this fiction everything, everybody, is either all good or all bad, without any of those intermediate shades which, in life, complicate reality and perplex the eye that seeks to probe it truly. This kind of simplifying pattern, of course, gives charm to most primitive storytelling. And, in fact, the somewhat ferro-concrete fairy tale the author pours here is, basically, the old one known as: The War between the Children of Light and the Children of Darkness. In modern dress, it is a class war. Both sides to it are caricatures.
The Children of Light are largely operatic caricatures. In so far as any of them suggests anything known to the business community, they resemble the occasional curmudgeon millionaire, tales about whose outrageously crude and shrewd eccentricities sometimes provide the lighter moments in board rooms. Otherwise, the Children of Light are geniuses. One of them is named (the only smile you see will be your own): Francisco Domingo Carlos Andres Sebastian d'Antonio. This electrifying youth is the world's biggest copper tycoon. Another, no less electrifying, is named: Ragnar Danesjöld. He becomes a twentieth-century pirate. All Miss Rand's chief heroes are also breathtakingly beautiful. So is her heroine (she is rather fetchingly vice president in charge of management of a transcontinental railroad). So much radiant energy might seem to serve an eugenic purpose. For, in this story, as in Mark Twain's, "all the knights marry the princess" -- though without benefit of clergy. Yet from the impromptu and surprisingly gymnastic matings of the heroine and three of the heroes, no children -- it suddenly strikes you -- ever result.
The possibility is never entertained. And, indeed, the strenuously sterile world of Atlas Shrugged is scarcely a place for children. You speculate that, in life, children probably irk the author and may make her uneasy. How could it be otherwise, when she admiringly names a banker character (by what seems to me a humorless masterstroke): Midas Mulligan? You may fool some adults, you can't fool little boys and girls with such stuff -- not for long. They may not know just what is out of line, but they stir uneasily.
The Children of Darkness are caricatures, too; and they are really oozy. But at least they are caricatures of something identifiable. Their archetypes are Left Liberals, New Dealers, Welfare Statists, One Worlders, or, at any rate, such ogreish semblances of these as may stalk the nightmares of those who think little about people as people, but tend to think a great deal in labels and effigies. (And neither Right nor Left, be it noted in passing, has a monopoly of such dreamers, though the horrors in their nightmares wear radically different masks and labels.)
In Atlas Shrugged, all this debased inhuman riffraff is lumped as "looters." This is a fairly inspired epithet. It enables the author to skewer on one invective word everything and everybody that she fears and hates. This spares her the plaguy business of performing one service that her fiction might have performed, namely: that of examining in human depth how so feeble a lot came to exist at all, let alone be powerful enough to be worth hating and fearing. Instead, she bundles them into one undifferentiated damnation.
"Looters" loot because they believe in Robin Hood, and have got a lot of other people believing in him, too. Robin Hood is the author's image of absolute evil -- robbing the strong (and hence good) to give to the weak (and hence no good). All "looters" are base, envious, twisted, malignant minds, motivated wholly by greed for power, combined with the lust of the weak to tear down the strong, out of a deep-seated hatred of life and secret longing for destruction and death. There happens to be a tiny (repeat: tiny) seed of truth in this. The full clinical diagnosis can be read in the pages of Friedrich Nietzsche. (Here I must break in with an aside. Miss Rand acknowledges a grudging debt to one, and only one, earlier philosopher: Aristotle. I submit that she is indebted, and much more heavily, to Nietzsche. Just as her operatic businessmen are, in fact, Nietzschean supermen, so her ulcerous Leftists are Nietzsche's "last men," both deformed in a way to sicken the fastidious recluse of Sils Maria. And much else comes, consciously or not, from the same source.) Happily, in Atlas Shrugged (though not in life), all the Children of Darkness are utterly incompetent.
So the Children of Light win handily by declaring a general strike of brains, of which they have a monopoly, letting the world go, literally, to smash. In the end, they troop out of their Rocky Mountain hideaway to repossess the ruins. It is then, in the book's last line, that a character traces in the air, "over the desolate earth," the Sign of the Dollar, in lieu of the Sign of the Cross, and in token that a suitably prostrate mankind is at last ready, for its sins, to be redeemed from the related evils of religion and social reform (the "mysticism of mind" and the "mysticism of muscle").
That Dollar Sign is not merely provocative, though we sense a sophomoric intent to raise the pious hair on susceptible heads. More importantly, it is meant to seal the fact that mankind is ready to submit abjectly to an elite of technocrats, and their accessories, in a New Order, enlightened and instructed by Miss Rand's ideas that the good life is one which "has resolved personal worth into exchange value," "has left no other nexus between man and man than naked self-interest, than callous "cash-payment." The author is explicit, in fact deafening, about these prerequisites. Lest you should be in any doubt after 1168 pages, she assures you with a final stamp of the foot in a postscript: "And I mean it." But the words quoted above are those of Karl Marx. He, too, admired "naked self-interest" (in its time and place), and for much the same reasons as Miss Rand: because, he believed, it cleared away the cobwebs of religion and led to prodigies of industrial and cognate accomplishment.
The overlap is not as incongruous as it looks. Atlas Shrugged can be called a novel only by devaluing the term. It is a massive tract for the times. Its story merely serves Miss Rand to get the customers inside the tent, and as a soapbox for delivering her Message. The Message is the thing. It is, in sum, a forthright philosophic materialism. Upperclassmen might incline to sniff and say that the author has, with vast effort, contrived a simple materialist system, one, intellectually, at about the stage of the oxcart, though without mastering the principle of the wheel. Like any consistent materialism, this one begins by rejecting God, religion, original sin, etc., etc. (This book's aggressive atheism and rather unbuttoned "higher morality," which chiefly outrage some readers, are, in fact, secondary ripples, and result inevitably from its underpinning premises.) Thus, Randian Man, like Marxian Man, is made the center of a godless world.
At that point, in any materialism, the main possibilities open up to Man. 1) His tragic fate becomes, without God, more tragic and much lonelier. In general, the tragedy deepens according to the degree of pessimism or stoicism with which he conducts his "hopeless encounter between human questioning and the silent universe." Or, 2) Man's fate ceases to be tragic at all. Tragedy is bypassed by the pursuit of happiness. Tragedy is henceforth pointless. Henceforth man's fate, without God, is up to him, and to him alone. His happiness, in strict materialist terms, lies with his own workaday hands and ingenious brain. His happiness becomes, in Miss Rand's words, "the moral purpose of his life." Here occurs a little rub whose effects are just as observable in a free enterprise system, which is in practice materialist (whatever else it claims or supposes itself to be), as they would be under an atheist Socialism, if one were ever to deliver that material abundance that all promise. The rub is that the pursuit of happiness, as an end in itself, tends automatically, and widely, to be replaced by the pursuit of pleasure with a consequent general softening of the fibers of will, intelligence, spirit. No doubt, Miss Rand has brooded upon that little rub. Hence, in part, I presume, her insistence on "man as a heroic being" "with productive achievement as his noblest activity." For, if Man's "heroism" (some will prefer to say: "human dignity") no longer derives from God, or is not a function of that godless integrity which was a root of Nietzsche's anguish, then Man becomes merely the most consuming of animals, with glut as the condition of his happiness and its replenishment his foremost activity. So Randian Man, at least in his ruling caste, has to be held "heroic" in order not to be beastly. And this, of course, suits the author's economics and the politics that must arise from them.
For politics, of course, arise, though the author of Atlas Shrugged stares stonily past them, as if this book were not what, in fact, it is, essentially -- a political book. And here begins mischief. Systems of philosophic materialism, so long as they merely circle outside this world's atmosphere, matter little to most of us. The trouble is that they keep coming down to earth. It is when a system of materialist ideas presumes to give positive answers to real problems of our real life that mischief starts. In an age like ours, in which a highly complex technological society is everywhere in a high state of instability, such answers, however philosophic, translate quickly into political realities. And in the degree to which problems of complexity and instability are most bewildering to masses of men, a temptation sets in to let some species of Big Brother solve and supervise them.
One Big Brother is, of course, a socializing elite (as we know, several cut-rate brands are on the shelves). Miss Rand, as the enemy of any socializing force, calls in a Big Brother of her own contriving to do battle with the other. In the name of free enterprise, therefore, she plumps for a technocratic elite (I find no more inclusive word than technocratic to bracket the industrial-financial-engineering caste she seems to have in mind). When she calls "productive achievement" man's "noblest activity," she means, almost exclusively, technological achievement, supervised by such a managerial political bureau. She might object that she means much, much more; and we can freely entertain her objections. But, in sum, that is just what she means. For that is what, in reality, it works out to. And in reality, too, by contrast with fiction, this can only head into a dictatorship, however benign, living and acting beyond good and evil, a law unto itself (as Miss Rand believes it should be), and feeling any restraint on itself as, in practice, criminal, and, in morals, vicious -- as Miss Rand clearly feels it to be. Of course, Miss Rand nowhere calls for a dictatorship. I take her to be calling for an aristocracy of talents. We cannot labor here why, in the modern world, the pre-conditions for aristocracy, an organic growth, no longer exist, so that impulse toward aristocracy always emerges now in the form of dictatorship.
Nor has the author, apparently, brooded on the degree to which, in a wicked world, a materialism of the Right and a materialism of the Left, first surprisingly resemble, then, in action, tend to blend each with each, because, while differing at the top in avowed purpose, and possibly in conflict there, at bottom they are much the same thing. The embarrassing similarities between Hitler's National Socialism and Stalin's brand of Communism are familiar. For the world, as seen in materialist view from the Right, scarcely differs from the same world seen in materialist view from the Left. The question becomes chiefly: who is to run that world in whose interests, or perhaps, at best, who can run it more efficiently?
Something of this implication is fixed in the book's dictatorial tone, which is much its most striking feature. Out of a lifetime of reading, I can recall no other book in which a tone of overriding arrogance was so implacably sustained. Its shrillness is without reprieve. Its dogmatism is without appeal. In addition, the mind, which finds this tone natural to it, shares other characteristics of its type. 1) It consistently mistakes raw force for strength, and the rawer the force, the more reverent the posture of the mind before it. 2) It supposes itself to be the bringer of a final revelation. Therefore, resistance to the Message cannot be tolerated because disagreement can never be merely honest, prudent, or just humanly fallible. Dissent from revelation so final (because, the author would say, so reasonable) can only be willfully wicked. There are ways of dealing with such wickedness, and, in fact right reason itself enjoins them. From almost any page of Atlas Shrugged, a voice can be heard, from painful necessity, commanding: "To a gas chamber -- go!" The same inflexibly self-righteous stance results, too (in the total absence of any saving humor), in odd extravagances of inflection and gesture -- that Dollar Sign, for example. At first, we try to tell ourselves that these are just lapses, that this mind has, somehow, mislaid the discriminating knack that most of us pray will warn us in time of the difference between what is effective and firm, and what is wildly grotesque and excessive. Soon we suspect something worse. We suspect that this mind finds, precisely in extravagance, some exalting merit; feels a surging release of power and passion precisely in smashing up the house. A tornado might feel this way, or Carrie Nation.
We struggle to be just. For we cannot help feel at least a sympathetic pain before the sheer labor, discipline, and patient craftsmanship that went to making this mountain of words. But the words keep shouting us down. In the end that tone dominates. But it should be its own antidote, warning us that anything it shouts is best taken with the usual reservations with which we might sip a patent medicine. Some may like the flavor. In any case, the brew is probably without lasting ill effects. But it is not a cure for anything. Nor would we, ordinarily, place much confidence in the diagnosis of a doctor who supposes that the Hippocratic Oath is a kind of curse.
I found it! Thanks.
That's nice a former Communist dissing someone who was unabashedly against Communism her whole life...and printed in the "conservative" National Review. Oh well.
Enter Stage Right - A Journal of Modern Conservatism
Sometimes I guess it takes being from the other side to recognize what of your enemy is already your own. (Or, was your own, back when Chambers was a communist.)
Rand was against a lot of things. Man as God, however, was a fundamental similarity between her and the communists. In the end, wittingly or unwittingly, those united thus converge.
For example, at present it would seem totalitarians have split in half with our own capitalist elite the Perfect Man the eugenicists are birthing for them.
That's nice a former Communist dissing someone who was unabashedly against Communism her whole life...and printed in the "conservative" National Review. Oh well.
Some who speak words that sound like ours are not of us at all. If the animating philosophy is alien, then similarities of exposition are misleading and dangerous.
I had read of this review in Sam Tanenhaus' biography of Whitaker Chambers; thanks for posting it!
Bookmarked for later reading in full.
You might like this as well ... WINESS by Whittaker Chambers (an excerpt from his introduction to his autobiography).
Bump for Whittaker Chambers. I haven't read his book - Witness - but recall it from a list of top Christian books of the 20th century. Rand comes across as something of a 'secular cultist,' too similar to L. Ron Hubbard for my comfort ;-)
I recommend it highly (as do several on that thread). In any case, his introduction is magnificent. The linked thread is stuff I highlighted therein as a senior in high school. =) Best regards.
Couldn't you find something a little more recent?
My sense of Time has always been a little squishy.
(One reason I moved to the bottom of the river ... )
Some twit has been holding a grudge for 44 years. Pathetic.
Bump for Whittaker Chambers. I haven't read his book - Witness
Do read this book! This is the story of a man who gives up Communism for Christianity.
He an his wife had decided not to have any children since the twentieth century was destined to be the bloodiest century in history, and since it would distract them from their cause. Thier cause was the communist overthrow of the United States of America.
He came home one night to hear his wife tell him that she was pregnant. He instructed her to call the Communist doctor so-and-so who would perform the [then-illegal] abortion. She said, "How could I do that to this child?" Upon hearing those words he said his world changed.
He said that the thought of a child and hope for the future is what melted away all the Marxist theories he had been working for. He and his wife kept the baby and he embarked on a spiritual journey that caused him to break with the Communist Party and "leave the winning side for the losing side." Fortunately for all of us, on this point he was wrong.
Talk to me in 2043............1957...scary!
Actually, Rand died years ago.
Wow! You are, my Dear, an intellectual glutton! It seems, that by finding words which mean what they say and say it with eloquent simplicity, you only increase your appetite for more. It is, undoubtedly, pleasant to encounter the Truth spoken well, reinforcing our views, even our faith and reason. Nevertheless, St. Jerome, the lover of books, warned us that even good and saintly books are temptation in the sense that they take time away from praise, thanksgiving and good works and replace it with flattery...
So break the monotony of reading with song and good wine...
Maybe Belloc's "Heroic poem in praise of wine" is in order here?
It is, in sum, a forthright philosophic materialism.
I've noticed a great similarity between Marx and Rand: both start from the premise that man is a purely productive being. As well, both advocate a semi-anarchist paradise, though Marx detours through totalitarianism first. I wonder if they are running in the same, narrow, economic materialist circle, but merely in opposite directions?
Man becomes merely the most consuming of animals, with glut as the condition of his happiness and its replenishment his foremost activity.
Only one Rand fan I've met in person has actually taken her Libertarian credo to heart. The rest use her "hands off me!" to justify their consumptive, libertine mode of existence, while advocating the most putrid form of campus Liberal-Statism. Perhaps they fit the "who are you to tell me what to do?" of Rand into their "nonjudgementalist" personalities, which have not yet recognized that wonderful principle of non-contradiction.
Regardless, I look at Rand as the great straw woman of Libertarianism, and dwelling on her may only discredit both sides of the ongoing debate.
W. F. Buckley wrote a scathing obituary on Rand for NR. It was on their website last I checked, but they seem to be down at the moment.
To exalt, enthrone, establish and defend,(more)
To welcome home mankind's mysterious friend
Wine, true begetter of all arts that be;
Wine, privilege of the completely free;
Wine the recorder; wine the sagely strong;
Wine, bright avenger of sly-dealing wrong,
Awake, Ausonian Muse, and sing the vineyard song!
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"Atlas Shrugged" is an allegory. It was never meant to be a "literary" novel set in a realistic world, but is instead a work of philosophy told through fiction. Chambers was entitled to his opinion, but his reaction to the book sounds more like the criticisms liberals always aim at Rand.
And who needs kids anyway? Whiny little buggers are always breaking something...
<);^)~
Only one Rand fan I've met in person has actually taken her Libertarian credo to heart.
There are two of us! I expect OWK will have something to say to you, too.
Libertine behavior is abhorrent to me, and Rand's work in no way justifies it. College students, however, who already operate in a libertine mode, no doubt use any philosophical justification they can find for their behavior, including Rand.
<);^)~
My thoughts exactly.
forthright philosophic materialism
I can hear the questions already. What is materialism? What is philosophical materialism? What is forthright philosophical materialism. What is not-so-forthright philosphical materialism? (<--I know the answer to that one)
1957? 1789? 525 BC? Good grief. What is history? What is popular historicism?
Thanks sleuth. We are the product of our past--unless we are animals.
Thanks, Aquinas! I needed mirth and beauty...
Confitebor Tibi in cithara Deus, Deus meus:
Quare tristis es anima mea, et quare conturbas me?
Spera in Deo: Quoniam adhuc confitebor illi
Salutare vultus mei, et Deus meus.
An intellectual glutton? More like glutton for punishment these days. Chambers will always be a favorite but my current foray into Rand is for grounding purposes.
So break the monotony of reading with song and good wine...
Don't worry ... I'm actually in serious drift already. If I'm restless this week it's just because I can't bring my sewing machine to work and am worried I won't be done in time for the Societe's bal masque.
(P.S. Don't worry. As a rule the dog gets me to cross the street pretty regularly -- in the course of an evening, even -- to break the monotony with music, dancing or drinks with friends ... =)
But Chambers isn't a liberal. Go read the snippet from "Witness".
Among the books I picked up to bulk my posts on the libertarian threads was "The Voice of Reason". In it is an essay by Rand on Humanae Vitae. I haven't finished it yet because it's so difficult to read.
Painful, really.
Now it's not that she's hurting my feelings because I'm a good Catholic girl or anything. I can hang with ill thought. It's the fact that it's cloaked in some guise of Freedom or Individual Rights that I find peculiarly malevolent.
It is helping me make concrete, however, the manner in which capitalism is converging with totalitarianism. Although it's right there for all to see, it's still been a puzzle to me. Rand is providing the ideological stepping stone which explains the thinking of individual men who make the personal decisions to sell the rope on which we'll all hang.
Thanks, Aquinas! I needed mirth and beauty...
If only you could SEE what my "real life" looks like. My porch already is decorated. The house will be transformed by Sunday (as will I for Mardi Gras Day ... if all goes as planned). =)
And of our friends ... I was told to go find this. =)
Objectivism is filled with the pitfalls Chambers so ably outlines and many more. Rand was a grim know-it-all who knew far less than she pretended. After flirting with her ideas for a few years, I found myself agreeing with her critics. She suffered from a strange obsession which should not be confused with genuine philosophical insight.
I wrote the following note to Leonard Peikoff, head of the Rand Institute, the other day. It points up the kind of moral blindness and sophistry that pervades Objectivism:
The sophistry contained in the following sentence written by Leonard Peikoff does more damage to the credibility of the philosophy of Objectivism than anything in recent memory:
"If we are to accept the equation of the potential with the actual and call the embryo an “unborn child,” we could, with equal logic, call any adult an “undead corpse” and bury him alive or vivisect him for the instruction of medical students."
The logic of this statement leaves this reader dumbfounded and wondering where to begin in explicating the multiple absurdities inherent in it. It finally makes far more sense to simply turn away and ignore both the writer who could make such an inane assertion and the "philosophy" he rode in on.
You and I may disagree on many things Askel5, but Mardi Gras ain't one of 'em. Happy Mardi Gras and laissez les bon temps roulette!
Well there you go, Cajun ... the really important things end up taking precedence and bringing us together after all is said and done. Got some cups. Will go back down to see if I can get to my poor bike which someone undoubtedly is standing on ... =(
Dear VOTFR ... I must confess I continued to spread the lies today. You're quite right ... I've only begun reading her. (I'll admit I have no plans to trudge through her prose.) We'll see whether or not my initial reactions hold up under your and OWK's and Jolly Rodgers' scrutiny or not. What I find most abhorrent about Rand is the way she cloaks the selfsame premises of our worst enemies in a language and with a spirit that suggests she is a bona fide champion of the individual and his rights to life, liberty and pursuit of happiness as he pleases. I don't think anything could be farther from the truth. She may sound like one but the damage she does is so exquisitely painless that it's nearly impossible to find the scar for proper debriding.I'm getting the impression that she is an ideaological stepping stone necessary for capitalism to converge with totalitarianism.
It's not as if the evidence does not abound. Particularly since Communism "failed", their same tyrants have enjoyed the benefits of "capitalism" just as our corporate scene has experienced an explosion of the Merger & Acquisition mentality, "downsizing" of labor forces, the suffocation of regulation and increasingly artificiality of human relations due to the ADA, environmental legislation, feminist legislation, gay legislation and other egalitarian-versions of ensuring equality.
Now, I'll agree with you that its the liberals and Democrats who'll get (and deserve) most of the blame for perpetrating by DEMAND the conversion of our once free society to a completely controlled one.
However, I don't think you're going to be able to blame them for selling the rope on which we'll all actually hang, however. Those sorts of deals are not done in paper bags at Buddhist Temples. They are the product of long-time acquaintance, luncheons, dinners, neatly typed invoices, pipeline, shipping and the intimacies among the top of other huge transnational commercial concerns.
It's my guess that Rand's philosophies make perfect sense to these sorts of men (or certainly their aides de camp). There's a glory in the perfection of naked self-interest that has got to be such a total turn on that they forget about bankers incinerated in their homes, men who leap out of the windows of their offices or who just disappear.
Do me a favor ... go read this post Missy Kelly Strips E.J. Dionne Naked. If you have anything negative to say about Miss Kelly, just don't bother responding. (SHE and Roger Schultz and others are what folks REALLY mean by "the good old days" and it will upset me if you slam her.)
I trust I won't offend if I just observe that your personal philosophy of existence undoubtedly precludes your reading Rand and noticing the same things that I or Whittaker Chambers might both notice immediately. It's solely a difference in sensibility and I'm hopeful I'll defend to your satisfaction any "lies" you think I'm telling.
Regardless, I still don't think you will in her philosophy anything that serves as a brake to what is the melding of our economy and communism's tyranny. They share the same fundamental flaw. They cannot help but converge. I know it sounds fantastic (COMMIES AND FREE MARKETS???) but go ask President Bush. He'll tell you it's the thing to do if we want to "handle" this relationship with a China that "is not seeking hegemony".
Bwaaahahahah, indeed.
To classify the unique emotion of romantic love as a form of friendship is to obliterate it: the two emotional categories are mutually exclusive.
What with the preoccupation with self and esteem and all, I don't doubt she's a little skew on the subject of love. I myself think it should be a prerequisite for anyone presuming to hold forth on the purpose, meaning, and truth human life ... your own and that of every other human being.
She understands power, she understands freedom from duties or obligations, she understands the self-esteem of desiring and being desirable, she find the Apollo 11 liftoff ("a tired white cigarette" on a day where "the sun was rolling up and straight at our faces, like a white ball wrapped in dirty cotton") liftoff a "concretized abstraction of man's greatness"
She continues by demonstrating that the men, women and private concerns of the Space Program were not forced or coerced and contrasts it with the "evils" of the first transcontinental railroad which, like the space program, was brought into being EARLIER than the private economy might have launched it by government subsidies."What we had seen, in naked essentials -- but in reality, not in a work of art -- was the concretized abstraction of man's greatness.The meaning of the sight lay in the fact that when those dark red wings of fire flared open, one knew that one was not looking at a normal occurrence, but at a cataclysm which, if unleashed by nature, would have wiped man out of existence -- and one knew also that this cataclysm was planned, unleased and controlled by man, that this unimaginable power was ruled by his power and, obediently serving his purpose, was making way for a slender rising craft. One knew that this spectacle was not the product of inanimate nature, like some aurora borealis, or, of chance, or of luck [AS IS MAN, IF HE DID INDEED JUST EVOLVE ...], that it was unmistakably human --- with "human" for once, meaning grandeur -- that a purpose and a long, sustained, disciplined effort had gone to achieve this series of moments, and that man was succeeding, succeeding, succeeding. For once, if only for seven minutes, the worst among those who saw it had to feel -- not "How small is man by the side of the Grand Canyon!" -- but "How great is man and how safe is nature when he conquers it!"
That we had seen a demonstration of man at his best, no one could doubt -- ... we had seen an achievement of man in his capacity as a rational being -- an achievement of reason, of logic, of mathematics, of total dedication to the absolutism of reality. How many people would connect these two facts, I do not know.
The next four days were a period torn out of the world usual context, like a breathing spell with a sweep of clean air piercing mankind's lethargic suffocation. For theiry years or longer, the newspapers had featured nothign but disasters, catastrophes, betrayals, the shrinking stature of men, the sordid mess oif a collapsing civilization; their voice had become a long, sustained whine, the megaphone of failure, like the sound of an oriental bazaar where leprous beggars, of spirit or matter, compete for attention by displaying their sores. Now, for once, the newspapers were announcing a human achievement, were reporting on a human triumph, were reminding us that man still exists and functions as man.
[Contradicting my allusion to art on the prefacing page] ... Those four days conveyed the sense that we were watching a magnificent work of art -- a play dramatizing a single theme: the efficacy of man's mind ... translated for us by commentators who, for once, by contagion, lost their usual manner of snide equivocation and spoke with compelling clarity. The most confirmed evader could not escape the fact that these sounds announced events taking place far beyond the earth's atmosphere -- that while he moaned about his loneliness and "alienation" and fear of entering an unknown cocktail party, three men were floating in a fragile capsule in the unknown darkness and loneliness of space, with earth and moon suspended like little tennis balls behind and ahead of them, and with their lives suspended on the microscopic threads connecting numbers on their computer panels in consequence of the invisible connections made well in advance by man's brain -- that the more effortless their performance appeared, the more it proclaimed the magnitude of the effort expended to project it and achieve it -- that no feelings, wishes, urges, instincts or lucky "conditioning," either in these three men or in all those behind them, from highest thinker to lowliest laborer who touched a bolt of that spacecraft, could have achieved this incomparable feat -- that we were watching the embodied concretization of a single faculty of man: his rationality.
There was an aura of triumph about the entire mission of Apollo 11, from the perfect launch to the climax. An assurance of success was growing in the wake of the rocket through the four days of its moon-bound flight. No, not because success is guaranteed -- it is never guaranteed to man -- but because a progression of evidence was displaying the precondition of success: these men know what they are doing.
... Neil Armstrong took his first immortal first step. At this lasat, I felt one instant of unhappy fear, wondering what he would say, because he had it in his power to destroy the meaning and the glory of that moment, as the astronauts of Apollo 8 had done in their time. He did not. He made no reference to God; he did not undercut the rationality of his achievement by paying tribute to the forces of its opposite; he spoke of man. "That's one small step for a man, one giant leap for mankind."
... "Why did I feel that joyous sense of confidence while watching the mission? In all of its giant course, two aspects pertaining to the inhuman were radiantly absent: the causeless and the purposeless. Every part of the mission was an embodied asnwer to 'Why?' and 'What for?' -- like the steps of a life-course chosen by the sort of mind I worship. The mission was a moral code enacted in space.
Now, coming back to earth (as it is at present), I want to answer briefly some questions that will arise in this context. Is it proper for the government to engage in space projects? No, it is not -- except insofar as space projects involve military aspects, in which case, and to that extent, it is not merely proeprty but mandatory. Scientific research, however, is not the proper province of government.
But this is a political issue; it pertains to the money behind the lunar mission or to the method of obtaining that money, and to the project's administration; it does not affect the nature of the mission as such, it does not alter the fact that this was a superlative technological achievement ...
She's got all the answers (as many as you might need for any one question which her own philosophies might pose) but I'm not sure she understands what it is to be human. Perhaps I'll find out differently. For all I know she and her husband were romantic into their 80's as well. Childless, I suspect, but certainly full of self-esteem and desire.
I do take some satisfaction in knowing that -- in principle -- she too would be against federal funding for the harvesting of human embryos. Although somehow I doubt that she'd overcome her Apollo-envy to actually defend those but embryonic forms of Almighty Man.
Hey, thanks Beckett. I didn't expect to look up and have my thoughts on Rand and the NIH confirmed instantaneously.
What a piece of ... ahem, er ... luck.
Thanks again for the poem and the caveat.
"He and his wife kept the baby and he embarked on a spiritual journey that caused him to break with the Communist Party and "leave the winning side for the losing side." Fortunately for all of us, on this point he was wrong."
You obviously dont get out much. Take a look around you...
(Roscoe ... you've ruined a lot of the biographical surprise for me but I forgive you. Any woman who tells tales of climax -- replete with the opening of dark red wings and rising rising rising of Man's Great Machine -- but begins same with images of a "dead white cigarette" probably has some issues. That's just the dramatist in me speaking, of course. =)
OWK ... I think Roscoe might have been answering a question you posed to me back on the other thread:
I dropped that in here for my own filing purposes but if you bounce back to #28 (to which this post replies) Beckett has another REALLY good example.It's not just the strident defense for human control over human life (in the face, of course, of the "no controls!" philosophy), it's a complete cheapening of genuine human bonds and enjoyment of man's social nature as well as the adulteration of human minds and souls with a relativist philosophy that removes all concern for others as it deadens the conscience by which we first recognized our common humanity.For example?
(You'll just ignore anything in between, I trust ... =)
From its modest origin in the early 1950s, Rand's following grew rapidly. By the mid-1960s, over 20,000 copies of The Objectivist were selling each month, and people in more than 80 cities were gathering around tape recorders to listen raptly to Nathaniel Branden Institute lectures.
But all was not going well. Unbeknownst to everyone but their spouses, Rand and Branden had been having an affair since the mid-1950s, and by now Branden wanted out. This led to a bizarre chain of events, culminating with Rand calling Branden to her apartment, where she slapped him around and cursed him ("If you have an ounce of morality left in you, an ounce of psychological health, you'll be impotent for the next 20 years! And if you achieve any potency, you'll know its a sign of still worse moral degradation."). In the next issue of The Objectivist, she repudiated Branden "totally, permanently" because of a "disturbing change" in "his intellectual attitude," to wit, "a tendency toward non-intellectual concerns." She also charged him with poor management of their jointly owned publishing effort and detailed some of the events that had led to their split. She did not mention he had jilted her.
The American Enterprise - A. Greenspan--Cultist?
R.W. Bradford published a number of articles by Murray Rothbard exposing what life among the Randites was like. In one chilling article, Rothbard described the humiliation heretical members were subjected to in the cult's frequently held trials.
Rothbard refused to appear for trial after Rand learned that his wife was a Christian. As I recall, Rand was so poisoned by her irrational hatred of Christianity that she wanted Rothbard to get divorced.
Rand was a grim know-it-all who knew far less than she pretended.
She once threatened to sue Murray Rothbard for "stealing" her ideas, listing a number of specific examples of her original thoughts. According to Rothbard, he was able in the course of a single afternoon's library research to find earlier sources for all of the listed ideas that she claimed as her own. Some of the ideas had even been originally put forward by Catholic theologians.
Some of the ideas had even been originally put forward by Catholic theologians.
Heavens forfend!! (Only hopelessly lame ideologues don't ... =)
Thanks for the additional background. I don't doubt I'll hear some contrasting opinions. Take it all with a grain of salt, I suppose ... like hearing Whittaker Chambers called a liar.
And yet, as the 1990s draw to a close, it is clear that this decade marked the emergence of a hitherto dormant scholarly engagement with Ayn Rand. The strongest signal of this--if not in fact its catalyst--may have been an interview with someone who had no history at all in the Objectivist movement: Camille Paglia.
In 1995, the author of Sexual Personae--then at the start of her career as the media's favorite politically incorrect feminist and academic gadfly--told the libertarian magazine Reason, "I never read Ayn Rand until people started comparing me to her.... And I was struck. I could see what the parallels are."
Looking into Rand's work with the rapt fascination she ordinarily reserves for Egyptian goddesses and TV studio monitors, Paglia thought, "Oh my God, that sounds like a passage from Sexual Personae." The affinity was scarcely one any reason-worshiping Randian would acknowledge: "She was influenced by many of the same works that I was. She was reading Romantic thinkers and Nietzsche and so on."
Lingua franca -- September 1999
At least one dozen Playboy centerfold models have named The Fountainhead or Atlas Shrugged as their favorite book. And Camille Paglia has proclaimed Rand an intellectual prototype of her own bad self--than which no higher praise can be imagined, from that source
Meanwhile, adherents of Objectivism (as Rand called her worldview) have an active interest group within the American Philosophical Association. Another enterprise, the Ayn Rand Institute (ARI), has announced that its "important function" is "to move Objectivism into today's universities." So far, ARI has spent more than $5 million on educational programs advancing Objectivism. That includes approximately $250,000 in scholarships to high school students who win a contest for essays on Rand's novels. ARI- sanctioned and supported Objectivist clubs exist on about a hundred university campuses around the world. And a network of think tanks and journals makes it possible for academics interested in Objectivism to find co-thinkers--and funding.
Wow ... Playboy, Paglia and a targeting of the infantry at the Ivory Towers. Thanks for the link. Must get my bike off the street before Babylon rolls. Looking forward to the rest of the read. But the progress of Randian scholarship has by no means been a straight line of ascent. The Old Guard who knew Rand looks with unconcealed horror at the new scholarship exploring the genesis and structure of objectivist theory
I believe the bloom is already off the rose between Paglia and Rand. I don't believe we'll be seeing Ayn and Camille all palsy-walsy for much longer. Paglia is a much more fearless scholar than Rand. She may find some of Rand's thinking defensible, as I do, but I'm quite sure she'll sniff out the overall fetid aroma of Objectivism eventually.
You are welcome.
By the way, don't waste too much time on this.
Bump.
Hey Roscoe ... I still owe you a reply on the Math thread ... it's grown since I've seen it last and will take more time than I thought! =)
bump
As stages go, I am reminded of the Scroll of Esther, we are at the stage where Achaverus the Persian King throws off his minister Haman, yet the Jews all over the empire still must fight of the planned plot against them.
The Secularists are beaten but not yet defeated.
I remember this thread.
This is in my opinion the most perceptive, profound and eloquent review of this book.
But as I said above to Askel15, it (and Libertarianism) really isn't worth spending that much time on.
Rolling back the rock of "Intellectual Property" to get the well flowing again requires pushing past the Randians.
make that 3
O.K. now you have lost me. What is the connection with the supposed evils of Intellectual Property (whatever they may be and the Randians?
Interesting article.
"Looters" loot because they believe in Robin Hood, and have got a lot of other people believing in him, too. Robin Hood is the author's image of absolute evil -- robbing the strong (and hence good) to give to the weak (and hence no good).
I never understood this view of Robin Hood. Didn't Robin Hood steal from the rich only what they first stole from the poor, through overtaxation? When Robin Hood robs the sheriff of Nottingham, he isn't like one of the "looters" that Rand so abhors, but rather an early version of Ragnar Danesjöld, one of Rand's heros. Rand's view of Robin Hood makes me doubt how well she thought out what she was going to say before she said it.
Couldn't you find something a little more recent?
At least it wasn't posted as "breaking news" =)
Look up Freeper buaya's recent posts about the history of copyrights, patents and "intellectual property" -- what you will find is that Ayn Rand's "romantic" theories of intellectual property is one of the biggest stumbling blocks to (1) following the history of copyrights and patents and (2) understanding in its full regalia exactly what taking the line that "intellectual property is just like real property" entails.
Not just because a person has become a fan of Rand, but more importantly (imho) because her tenent that "intellectual property is the root of all property" has become accepted opinion among the IP set, and her and objectivism's advocacy of IP is where many of these IP lawyers and IP think tankers draw their ammo from.
he isn't like one of the "looters" that Rand so abhors, but rather an early version of Ragnar Danesjöld
Or NASA. Agreed on her not thinking things through. As are most atheists, she's decidedly emotional and not terribly consistent.
If you don't mind, I'm using this reply to chuck in some recent invective of mine against her. Best regards.
To: Askel5Rand, after all is said, was a very good observer.
Historically, for her time, she saw things clearly that others only sniffed.
Time marches on and different drummers tap away.
103 Posted on 03/26/2001 16:55:39 PST by dunbeenhad
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To: dunbeenhadI disagree that she was a good observer and will not allow her the crutch that is being of "her time". She was way too bright for that.
I think she would have been a good observer if she had managed to retain some semblance of objectivity. Her description of the Apollo 11 moon to me evidenced a wooden appreciation of reality (and the husband beside her), a truly myopic focus on the infinite "final frontier" and a tendency to make everything she chose to see fit what she'd cobbled together in the way of theory based on her wholly selective reading of Aristotle and decidedly emotional rejection of God and the tenets of theology (particularly Christianity).
Her response to Humanae Vitae is almost painful to read for the latter reason. It's distorted and hateful, ugly and smug. But--being an encyclical on the Human Family--it's a phenomenal look inside the very core of Ms. Rand's heart of darkness and exposes her as irrational, much less unreasoning or subjective.
I think she does a great job as commentator on the basic the quid pro quo and forthright arguments which contrast the evils of socialism with the more just construct of capitalism.
But even intelligent animals bear out most of her theories and follow them to the T without all the sound and fury that accompanies the human endeavor to do likewise. Instead of concentrating on the hows and whys of our being better than animals (yet destined to run a poor second with regard to peaceful co-existence outside the demands of the foodchain), she instead reduces us to smart animals beating our chests over how big are our brains. Instead of delving into the existence of an eternal or natural moral law, she's a little quick on the trigger to cede to each man his own sovereignty over reality (within his justly obtained property lines, that is). Hardly a reasonable position given the empirical evidence -- much less 2,000 years of exceptional arguments by minds like Aquinas -- to the contrary.
So, leaving aside her rank subjectivism and obtuse rejection of anything approximating a Natural Moral Law or Intelligent Creator, she misses the mark entirely when it comes to specifically human relationships, privileges and obligations. (a/k/a THE TRULY IMPORTANT STUFF IN LIFE)
It's my suspicion that requiring her in class (assuming there are still great minds studied in schools) might expose her for the cheap trick she really is. Better she remain the splendor in the grass, discovered in secret and certain to keep an adolescent's blood pumping until such time as he find true Love.
She's the Convergence pin-up girl ... witness how many "individualists" run around in packs to pummel to the ground anyone with the temerity to disagree with her. In their minds (hooked since high school, usually) her writing glorifies Reason and Reason is the seed of her faith, Objectivism. All criticisms are therefor irrational (save the occasional self-deprecating admission that her "Art of Fiction" is a bit flatchested).
I doubt most people would be so irrational as to describe a pregnant women as "a huddles mass of infected flesh". I suspect most folks are (or wish to be) friends with their spouses. I don't think once has to actually be married or a parent to understand the altruism at the heart of all human relationships based on love, regard, mutual respect and -- particularly where family and friends are concerned -- SELFLESSNESS.
I think it's a crime that she must needs dumb these truly noble human qualities down to the almost involuntary labrat choices for the chunk of cheese rather over the electric shock.
I couldn't live in a box like that. No wonder she raged at people.
105 Posted on 03/26/2001 18:20:53 PST by Askel5
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To: Artin
Putin's Advisor Extols Ayn Rand
Hmmmm ... thanks for the tip on IP. I'm going back to some notes I made in a margin somewhere ... =)
What an egotist she was!
Can't blame her, I guess, when so many are so anxious to by into the beachfront property of her mind.
BUY into ...
The novels of Ayn Rand do reflect the lacunae in her worldview, but...
for youngsters reared in a culture that fawns over collectivist notions,explicit or implicit,it is a powerful emetic,purging the mind of the PC nonsense they have been imbued with in public schools.
Personally,I think her villains are wonderfully drawn ; I know people like that.Her heroes,however, are unrealistic and unsympathetic;I've never met people like them.
for youngsters reared in a culture that fawns over collectivist notions,explicit or implicit,it is a powerful emetic,purging the mind of the PC nonsense they have been imbued with in public schools.
And replacing it with what, exactly?
Rand was good at rearranging the ideological furniture of a material world but she never exactly struck at the head of the snake that is the militant atheism of communism.
I think the rampant abuse of drugs (legal and otherwise), television, consumerism and sex these days suggest humans have somehow confined themselves and are resorting to the headbanging and absent self-stimulation that--in most animals--might suggest inhumane treatment of one sort or another.
Bork has quoted DeToqueville as noting (with all due prescience in his Democracy in America) the democracies move naturally toward pantheism. (This could help explain the curious phenomenon that is Gorbachev's veritable Assault of the Occult--Deep Ecology, Collective Consciousness and Feminine Soul--at his World State Forums in Gotham each year. I can't think of a better means to hasten the work the liberation theologists and "peace and justice" crowd already have done ...
To: Askel5
"We must avoid converting to martyrs the church leaders of counter-revolutionary activities. The line of action against the church is to instruct, educate, persuade, convince and -- little by little -- awaken and develop fully the political consciousness of Christians, then their participation in political activites ... Through our activities, we should undertake the idalectical struggle in the bosom of religion ... Progressively, we will replace the religious elements with the Marxist elements. Marxist Tactics Regarding Religion
Ideological Aggression, 1984, New York Circus Publications, Ltd.
["Circus", read "revolution" The Soviet Analyst]
3 Posted on 02/03/2001 13:11:54 PST by Askel5
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If deToqueville was equally correct about the atomizing effect of democracy (and, listening to folks like OWK, I think he was), we could indeed be in the process of being deconstructed to the ultimate collective that is the Noosphere ... the "cell" that is Gaia herself.
(I trust you too will forgive my continuing to shift some dead weight onto this thread. It's about time I collected my notes and finished that essay I promised Jolly Rodgers aeons ago ... =)
To: thinktwiceOh brother ...
While they may not be the militant atheists Ayn Rand was, I assure you that the spiritual among them have little or no use for the patriarchal and authoritarian Christian notion of God.
You must be completely in left field if you think they've any use for your God.
Feel free to thank Ayn Rand. I know the communists appreciate her instilling among the young an allegiance to the Capitalist State rather than family, faith or true authority. Helps move things along, you know:
"There must be continual propaganda abroad to undermine the loyalty of the citizens in general and the teenage in particular. The role of the psychopolitical operator in this is vey strong. He can, from his position as an authority on the mind, advise all manner of destructive measures. He can teach the lack of control of this child at home. He can instruct, in an optimum situation, the entirenation in how to handle children -- and instruct them so that children, given no control, given no real home, can run wildly about with no responsibility for the nation or themselves.The misalignment of the loyalty of the youth to a capitalistic nation sets the property stage for realignment of their loyalties with Communism. Creating a greed for drugs, sexual misbehavior and uncontrolled freedom, kand presenting this to them as a benefit of Communism, will with ease bring about our alignment.
Manual of Instruction of Psychological Warfare, courtesy of former communist Kenneth Goff.
$
I was (quite rightly) admonished for suggesting that Rand advocated allegiance to anyone or anything but the Self. (Makes the funding of NASA problematic but I'm sure she'd rationalize something suitable for funding those men and their rockets which so turned her on.)
To: LevI'll tentatively agree (pending a review to be sure) that her advocacy of the US over Russia is simply a matter of which system best accomodates one's self interest.
Hers is a fealty to the Self (which Self seems occupied primarily with orgasm, wealth and the occasional abandonment of principle to skewer women as Presidents or fund the space program "collectively").
She recognizes no authority beyond the same territorial, self defense and survival of the fittest prerogatives any particularly bright dumb animal quickly learns and obeys. There are no obligations (except to fulfill oneSelf) and human relations are purely self-satisfactory ... save the thrill that is being forcibly used to satisfy the lust of a partner.
If you take into consideration that Goff's manual was targeted to "Rah-Rah America" Consumers of the post-war Prosperity, you begin to see what a lightbearer (for convergence of left and right) was Rand's self-worship.
When we're just a bunch of long-pigs who are always going to choose "Happiness" and eschew obligation (increasingly that of children or family or any othey human relationship that threatens our atomistic free play on the economic, sexual and "ethical" planes) we become particularly easy to control. All you have to do slap on a label that says "Choice" or "Privacy" and your bill of goods is SOLD!
Even those not enamoured of alternative lifestyles, materialism or "humanitarian" use of human life in the labs have so bought into her siren song that they feel it's a matter of "Mutual Respect" and "Mutual Rights" to elevate all manner of subjective error to the same height as Objective Truth via compromise and dialogue. You see this all the time as libertarians use their "public morality" to defend issues their "personal morality" finds somewhat abhorrent.
Judging from sheer thread density, no one knows better than libertarians (evolutionists, atheists or communists) how to "Keeping dialoguing" ...
Certainly a forte of this woman who, in her fiction, made a habit of repeating herself ad infinitum with the suspiciously stick figure humans she used to convey Her Truths to The Rest of Us, supplanting the primordial "Is Is" with her disengenuous "(evolving) A is (evolving) A".
96 Posted on 03/26/2001 15:23:08 PST by Askel5
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Regarding egotism:
Rand discusses the term egotism directly in the foreward to the 25th anniversary edition of "The Fountainhead."
If I remember correctly, she identified more with the term egoism. Checking dictionary.com, I'd say definition 1
Just a thought,
-Dave
I guess it's more than 1 for me. (Although it's true we've probably got that defect in common ... =)
I'm flipping through, trying to find what it was I was thinking of the other day ... but I wrote more in the margins than I thought.
It's her ability to judge people I find a horror. Particularly since she's certain she's one of those Super-Elite identifying and translating for the rest of us the terms of Objective Reality.
I don't find a much in the way of "objective" about her, I guess, as far as those terms are concerned. While you might think she'd restrict herself to parameters of the "force, fraud, coercion" construct, in actuality she thinks to set forth the principles of human society.
In politics, as in every other field, the men who do not care to think are merely ballast: they accept, by default, whatever the intellectual leaders have to offer. To the extent to which men do think, they follow the man who offers the best (i.e., the most rational) idea.
Yet ...
[Pregnancy=Infection]The number of its adherents is irrelevant to the truth of the falsehood of ideas. A majority is as fallible as a minority or an individual man. A majority vote is not the epitemological validation of an idea. Voting is merely a proper political device--within a strict, constitutionally delimited sphere of action--for choosing the practice means of implementing a society's basic principles.But those principles are not determined by vote. By whom, then, are they determined? By the facts of reality--
The means arena whose ballot boxes, even under the best of circumstances, have a problem with "ballast". (That's why Certain Thinkers set in place certain powers, agencies and programs which carry on despite the freedom of the delimited Constitutional sphere).By the facts of reality--as identified by those thinkers who chose the field of political philosophy.
Because she's foreign, I'll just give My Two Cents as usual and say that the greatest political achievement of the revolution was the Declaration (its moral foundation) whose appeal for ALL men (thinkers and ballast) hearkened primarily to those universal and unchanging principles on which it was founded.This was the pattern of the greatest political achievement in history: the American Revolution.
The fixed points on which true Progress is made (and lost) from time to time.
Of Thinkers, Thinker's Followers and ... Ballast.In this connection, it is important to note the epistomological significance of a free society.
Save the space program, for starters.In a free society, the pursuit of truth is protected by the free access of any individual to any field of endeavor he may choose to enter. (A free access does not mean a guarantee of success, or of financial support
Hear Hear!! =)or of anyone's acceptance and agreement--it means the absence of forced restrictions or legal barriers.) This prevents the formation of any coercive "elite" in any profession -- it prevents the the legalized enforcement of a "monopoloy on truth" by any gang of power seekers -- it protects the free market place of ideas -- it keeps all doors open to man's inquiring mind.
Who "decides"? In politics, in ethics, in art, in science, in philosophy -- in the the entire realm of human knowledge -- it is reality that sets the terms, through the work of those men who are able to identify its terms and translate them into objective principles.
Just for the hell of it ... the open from the very next essay:
In certain passages of Atlas Shrugged, I touched briefly on issues which I wanted to discuss theoretically at a later date and at greater length.
(Atlas Shrugged and "at greater length" in the same sentence. Granted, I never go through it but surely those who did would recognize the humor ... even if she could not.)
One such passage is the scene in which Hank Rearden, struggling to understand his wife's behavior, wonder whether the motive of her constant, spiteful sarcasm is
"not a desire to make him suffer, but a confession of her own pain, a defense fo rth epride of an unloved wife, a secret plea -- so that the subtle, the hinted, the evaisve in her manner, the thing begging to be understood was not the open malice, but the hidden love."Struggling to be just, he gives her the benefit of the doubt and suppresses the warning of his own mind.
"He felt a dim anger, like a voice he tried to choke, a voice crying in revulsion: Why should I deal with her rotten, twisted lying? -- why should I accept torture for the sake of pity? -- why is it I who should have to take the hopeless burden of trying to spare a feeling she won't admit, a feeling I can't know or understand or try to guess? --- if she loves me, why doesn't the damn coward say so and let us both face it in the open?"Rearden was the innocent victim of a widespread game that has many variants and ramifications, none of them innocent, a game that could be called a racket. It consists, in essence of substituting psychology for philosophy.
Today, many people use psychology as a new form of mysticism: as a substitute for reason, cognition and objectivity, as an escape from the responsibility of moral judgment ...
Yes ... Yes ... YES???
both in the role of the judge and the judged.
Damn, she lost me again.
(Although ... proofing, believe it or not, what I just typed, I see that was my sticking point all along.)
Did you see this? I couldn't read the whole thing because I was afraid it would give the end away, but I'll come back to it.
Ale isn't hi-falutin' like wine, but I think Houseman makes an interesting case:
"Why, if 'tis dancing you would be
There's brisker pipes than poetry.
Say, for what were hop-yards meant,
Or why was Burton built on Trent?
Oh, many a peer of England brews
Livelier liquor than the Muse
And malt does more than Milton can
To justify God's ways to man.
Ale, man, ale's the stuff to drink
For fellows whom it hurts to think:
Look into the pewter pot
To see the world as the world's not.
And faith, 'tis pleasant till 'tis past:
The mischief it that 'twill not last.
Oh, I have been to Ludlow Fair
And left my necktie God knows where,
And carried halfway home, or near,
Pints and quarts of Ludlow beer:
Then the world seemed none so bad,
And I myself a sterling lad;
And down in lovely muck I've lain,
Happy till I woke again.
Then I saw the morning sky:
Heigho, the tale was all a lie;
The world, it was the old world yet,
I was I, my things were wet,
And nothing now remained to do
But begin the game anew."
...
Now the faith is old and the Devil bold
Exceedingly bold indeed.
And the masses of doubt that are floating about
Would smother a mortal creed.
But we that sit in a sturdy youth
And still can drink strong ale
Let us put it away to infallible truth
That always shall prevail.
And thank the Lord
For the temporal sword
And howling heretics too.
And all good things
Our Christendom brings
But especially barley brew!
With my row-ti-tow
Ti-oodly-ow
Especially barley brew!
Benedicamus Domino!
Tough act to sell in a "depends on your meaning of Is" sort of world but I suspect they'll never kill all the sons of Brutus.
(Not while believers queue for the State's "faith-based partnerships", anyway, and cheer the informing of consciences that is quoting the Scripture of your 'favorite philosopher' while opining on the hopeful and critically fundable nature of ESCR.)
64 Posted on 11/27/2001 20:10:52 PST by Askel5
Faith will prevent that. Look at the Russian experience. It would be preferable to avoid such trauma though.
Wonderful review. I read 'Fountainhead' in the 60's and haven't had the urge to pick it up since. This intrigues me some, but I suspect I will actually only read it again if I get paid to. Much better to re-read Dickens, Melville or Faulkner.
Chambers was a bright and interesting fellow, though not immune to the classic liberal soft headedness. How Nixon ever got the nerve to get over with that pumpkin business is pretty wild, but Nixon seems to have known Americans quite well. Frank Lloyd Wright was wild about Ayn, and I just saw a program on one of his homes that was built in an unsound manner. Oh well, so much for great self motivated standards.
This is another example too. In the old railroad Baron days, the barons actually never hesitated to shrug on a number of occasions, and the 'looters,' when faced with necessity, overcame them on every occassion. In fact, if anything, the real documented looters were actually the barons.
Right now, if Bill Gates just took his ball out of play and went home, the software world would probably blossom like crazy in a very short time. Don't expect to see him shrug any time soon.
65 Posted on 11/28/2001 14:40:28 PST by Elihu Burritt
How Nixon ever got the nerve to get over with that pumpkin business is pretty wild, but Nixon seems to have known Americans quite well
What do you mean?
66 Posted on 11/28/2001 15:23:00 PST by Askel5
From my outdated yearbook:
In the 80th Congress, Nixon was naturally assigned to the House Un-American Activities Committee, and he was soon leading a crusade for tough new 'anti-subversive' legislation. His Nixon bill - introduced as the Mundt-Nixon bill - was so repressive that even Nixon's fellow Republican Thomas Dewey condemned it as an attempt 'to beat down ideas with clubs.'
Though Congress refused to pass this legistation, the well-publicized debate helped to establish Nixon - still in his freshman term - as the nation's leading red-baiter. He solidified his leadership with the celebrated Hiss case.
When a former communist (and probable psychotic) named Whittaker Chambers appeared before the Un-American Committee to accuse former State Department official Alger Hiss of communist involvment, Nixon was at first the only one to believe the charge. In the months that followed, he pursued the case with such energy, persistence, and clever manipulation of the evidence and the press that Hiss was publicly discredited and Nixon's name became a household word. (Eventually, enough evidence was gathered to send Hiss to prison, though the facts of his case continue to be the subject of heated controversy.
ENTER THE PUMPKIN!
Pumpkin Patch Day in Maryland: Leading 2 men from the House Un-American Actitivies Committee into his pumpkin field, Whittaker Chambers produced the film evidence, concealed inside a pumpkin, which documented a communist conspiracy in Washington. Chambers later swore that his 'rather romantic communist' friend, Alger Hiss, had given him the State Dept documents which were photograprhed on the film. Hiss denied it under oath and claimed he had been framed. The jury believed Chambers and sent Hiss to prison for perjury, indirectly labeling him a spy for the Soviet Union. The man who forced the confrontation between Hiss and Chambers leading to the perjury charge: Richard M ('once you have them by the b*lls their hearts and minds will follow') Nixon.
67 Posted on 11/28/2001 19:04:30 PST by Elihu Burritt
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