Posts Tagged ‘ Ayn Rand ’

Atlas Drugged — The Addictive Essence of Ayn Rand’s Juvenile Philosophy

April 22, 2011
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Atlas Drugged — The Addictive Essence of Ayn Rand’s Juvenile Philosophy

By Mike Gray A recent film, derived from a novel, has excited comment, some laudatory, some highly critical: Rand is something of a cultural phenomenon — the author of potboilers who became an ethical and political philosopher, a libertarian heroine. But Rand’s distinctive mix of expressive egotism, free love and free-market metallurgy does not hold up very well on the screen. . . . . None of the characters express a hint of sympathetic human emotion — which is precisely the point. Rand’s novels are vehicles for a system of thought known as Objectivism. Rand developed this philosophy at the length of Tolstoy, with the intellectual pretensions of Hegel, but it can be summarized on a napkin. Reason is everything. Religion is a fraud. Selfishness is a virtue. Altruism is a crime against human excellence. Self-sacrifice is weakness. Weakness is contemptible. “The Objectivist ethics, in essence,” said Rand, “hold that man exists for his own sake, that the pursuit of his own happiness is his highest moral purpose, that he must not sacrifice himself to others, nor sacrifice others to himself.” If Objectivism seems familiar, it is because most people know it under another name: adolescence.

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Review: Atlas Shines

April 13, 2011
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“This isn’t a movie, it’s a newsreel,” commented my Atlas Shrugged, Part I viewing companion – an old Mackinac Center colleague. Spot on. The film’s source material is more than a half-century old and its author, Ayn Rand, is often characterized as a Cassandra predicting dystopian outcomes for New Deal policies, ever-expanding government intervention in the marketplace, and rent-seeking corporations. In 2011, those predictions have bore fruit: a $14 trillion deficit; a government shutdown; regulatory bureaucrats run amuck; bailouts of banks and automotive companies; and corporate donors such as Google’s Eric Schmidt and General Electric’s Jeff Immelt receiving most-favored status at the presidential table. Our current situation is dire, and Rand – ever the scold even 29 years after her demise – speaks from her grave: “I told you so.” Full disclosure: I was never a fan of the 1,200-page doorstop Rand dared call a “novel.” Sorry, Randroids, it’s the lit major in me. The tome suffers from poorly drawn characters, plodding plotting, and stilted, didactic dialogue that could’ve been supplied by any given window washer at the end of the exit ramp. It may be one of the 20th century’s best-loved books, but while it succeeds as a novel

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‘This Perfect Day’ — A Libertarian Novel

December 3, 2010
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‘This Perfect Day’  — A Libertarian Novel

by Mike Gray On the MisesDaily blog, Jeff Riggenbach discusses an anti-utopian novel by Ira Levin: “It’s evident from even the most cursory glance at Levin’s third novel that he was exposed in one way or another to Rand’s ideas about politics. It’s evident also that he had a rare insight into the kinds of obstacles any libertarian movement based on such ideas would have to overcome if it were to enjoy any substantial success.” Riggenbach cites a 1998 article by Ralph Raico: “The action begins in the year 141 of the Unification, the establishment of global government, which finally led to consolidating all the world’s super-computers into one colossal apparatus lodged deep below the Swiss Alps. Uni-Comp classifies and tracks all the “Members” (of the human Family), decides on their work, residence, and consumption goods, whether they will marry and if so whether they will reproduce, and everything else.” But This Perfect Day is about more than just the triumph of the machines; in many ways it anticipates the all-too-human push for universal “health care,” which of necessity entails the curtailment of individual freedoms: There is no warfare in the world of the

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Climate Scientist to Colleagues: Don’t Dismiss Climategate

February 6, 2010
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Climate Scientist to Colleagues: Don’t Dismiss Climategate

The 13th Annual Energy & Environment Conference, held in Phoenix Feb. 1-3, isn’t the sort of place where global warming “deniers” are exactly welcome. In fact, by my observations, the skeptical caucus at the event consisted entirely of: James M. Taylor, a senior fellow for environment policy at The Heartland Institute; Keith Lockitch, a fellow of the Ayn Rand Center for Individual Rights; and me. All the other attendees spent their time discussing how the U.S. government — or, even better, a “global government” — needs to compel us all to live “greener” lives through schemes like cap-and-trade. Environmentalists are a bossy and power-hungry lot. Lockitch gave a presentation arguing free-market economies are better positioned than socialist societies to deal with any severe weather events caused by climate change — and was called a “denier” and compared to a shill for “Big Tobacco” for his trouble. Taylor got off a little easier, receiving only scoffs and curious-to-annoyed glances for asking inconvenient questions. But that’s not to say we were the only people to question the assumptions of the attendees who believe the “science is settled” on global warming. Perhaps the greatest challenge came from one of their own — renowned climate scientist William Sprigg — who urged

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Bill Buckley as Novelist

December 31, 2009
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Bill Buckley as Novelist

A giant of polemics, William F. Buckley Jr. "coulda been a contender" as a novelist too. Robert Dean Lurie examines Buckley's mixed literary legacy.

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"Culture is the expression of the guiding philosophy of the day."—Murray Rothbard

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