Can someone explain Ayn Rand to me?!

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I meant at least they are not like hyperventilating when doing it, no stress= must be doing some good?

47847, Wednesday, 5 April 2006 20:58 (eighteen years ago) link

yeah, i'm actually surprised by those results

Tracey Hand (tracerhand), Wednesday, 5 April 2006 20:59 (eighteen years ago) link

I think the study was about whether other people praying for you helps you recover.

31g (31g), Wednesday, 5 April 2006 21:02 (eighteen years ago) link

ya, totally right. that rand institute is fighting for market share of the skepticism business? kudos!

6587956, Wednesday, 5 April 2006 21:09 (eighteen years ago) link

Science is a method of gaining knowledge by systematically studying things that actually exist and have real effects.

It's actually testing hypotheses and seeing what happens, if you knew beforehand what the "real effects" were you wouldn't need to do any studies to see if they were real or not. If you're a God vs Science type and you're on the side of science it seems like it would be more useful to have an empirical test proving prayer doesn't work than to just say "we don't need to test it, it's obvious". It's using two things to prove each other, saying that prayer is useless because there is no proof and that there's no point getting proof because prayer's useless. It might be obvious, but it's worth testing non-obvious things too.

Cressida Breem (neruokruokruokne?), Wednesday, 5 April 2006 21:25 (eighteen years ago) link

OTM.

Tracey Hand (tracerhand), Wednesday, 5 April 2006 21:29 (eighteen years ago) link

also, even if it were real how exactly do you disprove prayer?

latebloomer: someone's been drinking my youth! (latebloomer), Wednesday, 5 April 2006 21:53 (eighteen years ago) link

I was just going to post a thread like this after seeing the "ayn rand school for tots" on the simpsons.
I wiki's her but she sseemed not that bad - just a philosopher, and you know how THEY are

Mr Jones (Mr Jones), Thursday, 6 April 2006 09:24 (eighteen years ago) link

Objectivism seems so pointless becuase all the points it makes seem so obvious. "There is an objective reality" - well, duh

http://media.urbandictionary.com/image/large/orly-37424.jpg

Mr Jones (Mr Jones), Thursday, 6 April 2006 09:38 (eighteen years ago) link

A Streetcar Named Marge is a classic.

mike h OTM about personal v. political.

AaronK (AaronK), Thursday, 6 April 2006 12:22 (eighteen years ago) link

Let us not forget:

"Yes, at first I was happy to be learning how to read. It seemed exciting and magical, but then I read this: Atlas Shrugged, by Ayn Rand. I read every last word of this garbage, and because of this piece of shit, I am never reading again." - Officer Barbrady

Mädchen (Madchen), Thursday, 6 April 2006 12:24 (eighteen years ago) link

From Harper's Index:

Number of Playboy centerfold models since 1959 whose bios claimed their favorite book was by Ayn Rand: 12 [Gretchen Edgen, The Playmate Book, General Publishing Group (Santa Monica, Calif.)]

TRG (TRG), Thursday, 6 April 2006 12:40 (eighteen years ago) link

I wiki's her but she sseemed not that bad - just a philosopher, and you know how THEY are

More like "philosopher." I mean, you can claim that anyone who comes up with ideas about the material world and personal interactions is a philosopher, but western philosophy was already reasonably stratified by the 20th century. To most people actually studying philosophy, Rand is pretty much treading over territory that's already been well-covered and refuted. It'd be like calling someone a "mathematician" after they refused to study established work then came up with pi being about 3.2 after thinking about it.

mike h. (mike h.), Thursday, 6 April 2006 13:31 (eighteen years ago) link

"There is an objective reality" - well, duh

You would think "well, duh," and yet you can probably get some philosophers still to disagree about this.

phil d. (Phil D.), Thursday, 6 April 2006 14:06 (eighteen years ago) link

rabies is also a great personal philosophy for the honest working guys: it's all about not giving up your dreams and not letting yourself be unhappy by people in your way by moving them aside throug bitings.

63737@, Thursday, 6 April 2006 14:28 (eighteen years ago) link

HILTER was a philosopher, too

Fight the Real Enemy -- Tasti D-Lite (ex machina), Thursday, 6 April 2006 14:37 (eighteen years ago) link

he was also a sensitive man -- woulda liked the smiths and the cure and emo if he were still alive, blah blah blah.

Eisbär (llamasfur), Thursday, 6 April 2006 14:39 (eighteen years ago) link

part of what he write is acceptable and good to hear

344737@, Thursday, 6 April 2006 14:44 (eighteen years ago) link

DON'T MISQUOTE ANAL CUNT

Fight the Real Enemy -- Tasti D-Lite (ex machina), Thursday, 6 April 2006 14:45 (eighteen years ago) link

live your life with passion! ps get rid of unions and coops.

262364, Thursday, 6 April 2006 15:13 (eighteen years ago) link

But then where would the chickens live?

Mädchen (Madchen), Thursday, 6 April 2006 15:21 (eighteen years ago) link

http://www.smilingsalmon.com/images/Coops%20Boys.jpg
look at those coops boys affraid to be all they can be bakaw

e4r87478, Thursday, 6 April 2006 15:30 (eighteen years ago) link

Do people really think of her as a philosopher? I always thought of her as primarily a novelist, and a blatantly populist one.

Sundar (sundar), Friday, 7 April 2006 01:10 (eighteen years ago) link

There is unrest in the forest,
There is trouble with the trees....

Joe (Joe), Friday, 7 April 2006 01:27 (eighteen years ago) link

Ahh- Canadian Prog - so mapley!

It seems sometimes like philosophers try to simplify things too much. I mean "reality" is so complex, how can one theory really describe everything?
I once watched a porno that discussed the philosophy of PLato.

The professor said Plato had a vision for a perfect society but it would never work becuase rich people will always want to "bed down" hot women who are plebians.

Mr Jones (Mr Jones), Friday, 7 April 2006 02:25 (eighteen years ago) link

Ayn Rand Institute Executive Director
Irvine, CA

Why am I not surprised at ALL that this is in Irvine?

The Equator Lounge (Chris Barrus), Friday, 7 April 2006 04:53 (eighteen years ago) link

...for the maples want more sunlight,
and the oaks ignore their pleas.

Joe (Joe), Saturday, 8 April 2006 01:42 (eighteen years ago) link

x-post "There is an objective reality"

Without any explanation, this statement doesn't really mean anything. When you try and explain what it means, I think you'll find plenty of philosophical opposition however you go about doing it. As far as I can see, there's still no real consensus on epic, vague metaphysical issues like this.

Ogmor Roundtrouser (Ogmor Roundtrouser), Saturday, 8 April 2006 13:49 (eighteen years ago) link

Ayn Rand:
1. The world is simple. There is only good and evil; right and wrong; black and white.
2. She was angry because she was a Russian Jew and did want to admit it.
3. Mediocre writer. Once you accept all her ridiculous assumptions then her logic will fit.

juggz, Saturday, 8 April 2006 13:53 (eighteen years ago) link

If she were alive she's be a KORN fan.

kk downing, Saturday, 8 April 2006 15:02 (eighteen years ago) link

She'd be voting for Chris on American Idol.

Tracey Hand (tracerhand), Saturday, 8 April 2006 15:59 (eighteen years ago) link

Imagine a LaVey Satanist who votes Republican - there's your Objectivism.

Big Willy and the Twins (miloaukerman), Saturday, 8 April 2006 16:05 (eighteen years ago) link

Her real name is Ayn't.

julia roberts, Saturday, 8 April 2006 16:22 (eighteen years ago) link

Ayn Rand's political philosophy is great. Nearly perfect. Her ideas about art are fairly good, at the most basic level (although there's a lot more to enjoy in the world of art than what she was willing to consider). Unfortunately, she was politically as naiive as they come, when it came to manipulating real-world politics (and was thus inconsistent with her stated desire to maintian freedom via open elections, rather than violent rebellion -and she also didn' have a clue about what a violent rebellion actually takes to succeed). She was correct in pointing out that capitalism is the economic system that results when free trade is permitted, and that the closer one can get to this system, the better (at least pre-artilect / strong nanotech anyway). Then, she scorned and divided the early libertarian (pro-liberty) movement that sprang up around her works, because they didn't publicly advocate every little aspect of her philosophy (even the non-political portions of it, such as denouncement of religion --which would thus cause the movement to lose all political power, even if all of its candidates were privately 100% Randian "objectivists").

For instance, she backed Ronald Reagan --a worthless protectionist / pragmatist who was for sale to the highest bidder, and incapable of understanding basic economics. She also termed libertarians "Hippies of the Right" - a vague ad-hominem attack, among others, even though they virtually all espoused her political model (if not privately her philosophical model). She did this without bothering to think about what the results would be, if the Libertarian Party (the only consistent capitalist / pro-individual freedom choice in politics) lost one of its major bases of suport -objectivists (even the ones who dissented with varying portions of her philosophy). She gave them short shrift because the movement wasn't entirely controlled by her. One of her students, Leonard Peikoff, seemingly initially sought to widen the tent, and thus expand the ideas of individual sovereignty and autonomy to a wider (though lower common denominator) audience (much like this one, Dan Perry excluded). Upon taking over the ARI, Peikoff backpedaled in a desire to maintain Randian consistency (her legacy), and his initially more positive direction collapsed to orthodoxy.

Peikoff's book, however, still stands as one of the most accurate books ever written about political philosophy (The Ominous Parallels). Read it.

Keep in mind that most of the people on this board are just state-worshipping simpletons throwing pebbles at a target that's not bothering to defend itself. They undoubtedly vote for who mommy and daddy told them to vote for, no matter how many lives it ruins, how many innocent people go to jail, or how many people die for lack of drugs that their uncaring police-state hasn't 'approved' for us serfs yet. These are the stupid bitch college kids that never would have made it to college if it weren't for FAFSA -on the backs of everyone who works for a living. These are the dumbasses who mindlessly come out, like HG Wells' sacrificial Eloi, to vote to maintain the status-quo, without having any comprehension of what the current status-quo is ("I'm comfortable now, so I'll just vote not to change anything, or to investigate what's happening or why"). For instance, they allegedly hate Rand's attacks on altruism as a primary virtue -never refuting the fact that enforced altruism is responsible for vastly more bloodshed than any other philosophy, and that pure altruism (holding others' goals higher than your own) produces economic failure. They even incorrectly compared her views to Soviet style views, out of a mindless desire to smear her, (no doubt for any of a billion contemptible reasons, most of which revolve around misdirected jealousy) --read "We the Living" before you take their assertions at face value.

Nonetheless, the fact that ARI wishes to remain a closed system limits its evolution and effectiveness, and has allowed it to stagnate (as well as marginalized its possible political effectiveness). Thus, for all the people too ignorant of history and logic, there is no current positive example for true capitalists to point to (it's been my experience that when there is a current positive example to point to, it makes the irration about twice as likely to register to vote as a libertarian, or consider doing so with an open mind... "conservative/liberal jackass see, conservative/liberal jackass do --but not before").

For those here who want to begin studying rational philosophical thought, I recommend avoiding all areas of philosophy beyond basic Rand (For the New Intellectual, The Virtue of Selfishness, Capitalism the Unknown Ideal) and Spooner (No Treason: The Constitution of No Authority, An Essay on the Trial by Jury). For online objectiviity, you're better off at David Kelley's "Objectivist Center" http://www.objectivistcenter.org/ . You'd be infinitely better off studying science and actually doing something useful with your time though, even if you're not smart enough to have arrived at individualist objectivity on your own (Without a push from Rand or her conflicted institute).

If you're totally uneducated about economics and politics though, you can't do any better than these links:
http://www.hawaii.edu/powerkills
http://www.lysanderspooner.org
http://www.cato.org
http://www.movimientolibertario.org
http://www.lp.org
http://www.ij.org
http://www.fija.org
http://www.reviewjournal.com/columnists/suprynowicz.html
http://www.reason.com

Most of you, from the looks of things here, won't be able to understand too much of what you read --but please, invest the time for my sake, and the sake of all the poor people you care about oh so very much (the same ones whose businesses were closed for want of protection pay by your tax-financed thugs, and whose gangbanger kids were miseducated by your crappy collectivized propaganda camps that pass themselves off as 'public' schools, and all the poor people your damned drug-warriors have put behind bars or in the ground with their destructive black market-generating brutality). Then, maybe you could actually contribute a criticism that would have some sort of constructive effect instead of just spouting misplaced hatred for one of the very few philosophers who had a grasp of simple property rights. (The same dwindling property rights that allow you to live.)

The real reason most people on this chatroom are so against a true meritocracy is because they know that if they lived in one, they'd have to work smarter, not harder, and the one thing they fear most is being forced to think in order to survive.

Lots of Love and Good Cheer,

Jake

Jake Witmer, Monday, 17 April 2006 08:12 (eighteen years ago) link

Keep in mind that most of the people on this board are just state-worshipping simpletons throwing pebbles at a target that's not bothering to defend itself. They undoubtedly vote for who mommy and daddy told them to vote for, no matter how many lives it ruins, how many innocent people go to jail, or how many people die for lack of drugs that their uncaring police-state hasn't 'approved' for us serfs yet. These are the stupid bitch college kids that never would have made it to college if it weren't for FAFSA -on the backs of everyone who works for a living.

in your ideal society, what should happen to those who fail?

or is just 'not your problem'?

what should happen to those who don't measure up in your meritocracy? those who wouldn't 'have made it to college if it weren't for FAFSA'.

i mean, i really shouldn't be encouraging you by enganging with your 'ideas' but i want to know how you and your ilk think.

basically so all lazy people should be let to rot?
what do you think the lazy should be let to do?

RJG (RJG), Monday, 17 April 2006 08:42 (eighteen years ago) link

be lazy.
im stickin' up for my brethren. slackers, leechers, moochers, 'parasites' wastes of space unite, or don't, it's entirely up to y....i wannna slee...zzzzzzzzzzz
"Thus, Objectivism contends, the fundamental right of human beings is the right to life. By this phrase Objectivism means the right to act in furtherance of one's own life — not the right to have one's life protected, or to have one's survival guaranteed, by the involuntary effort of other human beings"

i guess this is the ultimate implication that bothers me.

like, ok, this is an incredibly extreme hypothetical scnario, but say im living in a fully completely 100% Objectivist society. i'm dying of a potentially fatal but treatable lung cancer. i don't want to die, but i'm poor. i made a lot of unwise life decisions, but i'm not a horrible person, i haven't wronged others. i have no family, no nice neighbors. i can't afford treatment. there are no government 'handouts' for me or anyone. private, free treatment centers exist but are not required by law to take me in if they don't want to. and for the purpose of this argument, let's say the folks running the ones i try to admit myself into reject me for whatever reason. eventually there are no avenues left. do i deserve to die because i did not work smarter to get into a place where i could pay for my treatment?
i dunno what im saying anyway. my neck hurts!
(no doubt for any of a billion contemptible reasons, most of which revolve around misdirected jealousy)

OMG W R JUST JELOUS!

Daniel_Rf (Daniel_Rf), Monday, 17 April 2006 10:55 (eighteen years ago) link

Engaging with an Objectivist is a lot like debating Theology with a Scientologist.

Mingus Realty (noodle vague), Monday, 17 April 2006 11:15 (eighteen years ago) link

Jake,

How do we look from up on that precipice? Like ants? I'm glad that you, above all others, has the "correct" interpretation of Rand's philosophy to which she failed to live up.

For those here who want to begin studying rational philosophical thought, I recommend avoiding all areas of philosophy beyond basic Rand

How is this any different from religion? Kids, don't read any scriptural criticism or any philosophical work that predates our sacred text! It might contradict or draw attention to issues with our work.

The harsh romanticizing of personal work and economics that Rand engages in borders on single-minded ridiculousness. Is it at all possible that someone's life's work could be raising their own child, or that someone could be satisfied with putting in a mind-numbing day of mediocre work in trade for an enjoyable social life? Both of these are completely reasonable yet the exact lifestyles that would be vilified as boring. Not everyone is dumbly stumbling through life and creating a system of nepotism, inefficiency, and protectionist controls on purpose. It just kind of happens sometimes when you're trying to accomplish things while having better things to do with your free time.

mike h. (mike h.), Monday, 17 April 2006 13:16 (eighteen years ago) link

http://friendbear.com/images/strips/245-001.gif

mike h. (mike h.), Monday, 17 April 2006 13:19 (eighteen years ago) link

Whoops, I failed at that. Here's friend bear's trip to the objectivist theme park: http://friendbear.com/strip.html?s_num=245

mike h. (mike h.), Monday, 17 April 2006 13:19 (eighteen years ago) link

post your favorite ayn rand quotes or stories

+++-+-, Monday, 17 April 2006 13:25 (eighteen years ago) link

true that. I was at a coffee shop last week & some college dude is earnestly & intensely talking up his ayn rand philosophy journal. if you are in a philosophy class, don't be that guy! if you are in an economics class where nobody has studied philosophy, you can probably get away with it.

For those here who want to begin studying rational philosophical thought, I recommend avoiding all areas of philosophy beyond basic Rand

Go you! Bon courage! Keep those blinders on tight! And whatever you do, don't ever develop a sense of humor.

dar1a g (daria g), Monday, 17 April 2006 14:07 (eighteen years ago) link


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