Ayn Rand's Genius Philosophy: How Tough Love Can Empower You

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Is life a heroic journey? Is it true  that to be truly heroic you have to   be selfish? Is it true that to make a dent in  the universe, you have to believe in yourself,   nobody else, listen to your own gut,  nobody else’s? Great heroes do not listen   to others. They make their own mistakes  and triumphs. And that makes them heroic. Ayn Rand wanted individuals to put themselves  before others, arguing that selfishness was a good   motivator for us to be creative and productive.  She rejected altruism, religion, and collectivism.   For her the only value we have in this world  is what you can offer to others. If you have   nothing to offer except your moral virtue,  you have nothing to exchange with others.  Her philosophy is a combination of  Aristotelian teleological purpose   and Adam Smith's value exchange. For  instance when a man and woman meet,   they look for values to extract from the other.  Without any values, no relationship works,   just like a market transaction only happens  when both parties get a value out of it.   There’s no altruism, it’s pure self-interest. So today, I will tell you all about Ayn Rand,   her life, her writing, fiction and nonfiction, and  finally what philosophical secrets we can learn   from her. So get yourself some coffee and let’s  talk rationality, selfishness and creativity. Life Ayn Rand was born in Russia in 1905   as Alisa Zinovyevna Rosenbaum into a wealthy  Jewish family. Her father ran a pharmacy in   Saint-Petersburg but it was confiscated after the  Bolshevik October Revolution of 1917. Tavarish,   we don’t believe in private property. Now I  know why Rand was fiercely against socialism.   The family fled to Crimea for a period of time  but Rand herself returned to Saint-Petersburg,   which was now named Petrograd. Aged  16, she enrolled at the University   of Petrograd to study history. By  the time she graduated in 1924,   the city was changed to Leningrad after the death  of Vladimir Lenin in the same year. Perhaps that   gave Rand the idea of changing her professional  name to Ayn Rand. If a city can change its name,   why not her. This name-change also coincided  with her desire to leave the country.  In 1926, when she was 21, she moved to the United  States to become a screenwriter. She moved to   Hollywood, where else? She did some acting as  an extra and wrote some screenplays. But nothing   was really working and her visa was running  out. So in 1929, she married Frank O’Connor,   another extra and two years later she became an  American citizen and never returned to Russia.   Despite living in America most of her life, she  spoke in a very distinct thick Russian accent.   O’Connor quit acting and became a rancher to  financially support Rand in her writing career,   but later on he became an artist himself. In  1932, she sold her first screenplay, Red Pawn,   a spy thriller set on a prison island in Russia  about a woman who is trying to free her husband   from prison. But it was never produced. She  got the money so who cares. Two years later   her court-room drama Night of January 16th  was staged in Hollywood and then on Broadway.  Ayn Rand’s first novel, We the Living, set in  post-revolution Russia, came out in 1936 telling   the story of a rebellious young woman fighting in  two fronts, against her family as well as the new   Soviet state. She continued her attack against  Soviet totalitarianism with her next novella,   Anthem in 1938, a dystopian novel about a future  dark age. It’s somewhat similar to the 1921 novel,   We by Yevgeny Zamyatin, which according to  many inspired both Huxley’s Brave New World   and Orwell’s 1984. So her first few stories were  all about the danger of totalitarianism. It was   as though she had escaped from a nightmare in  Russia but the trauma was still fresh for her. In 1943, Rand published, The Fountainhead,  which made her very successful and famous.   The novel is about a resolute architect  who fights against established conventions,   collectivism and stagnation. Rand depicts  individualism being superior to collectivism,   rebellion superior to conformity and  innovation superior to conventionality.   With her new fame and financial success,  Rand was able to move to New York in 1951   where she gathered like-minded people in her  apartment to develop her philosophical ideas   as well as her literary style. As a result of  working closely with these intelligent people,   she wrote her most famous novel, Atlas  Shrugged, which came out in 1957.  In Atlas Shrugged, Rand introduces us to her core  philosophy of Objectivism. It tells the story   of a dystopian future in which the welfare state  has cushioned the people so much that creativity   and productivity are no longer valued and even  have stagnated in the United States. As a result   all the creative minds have taken refuge in a  secret valley—not to be confused with the Silicon   valley—where they have set up their own state  based on a free market economy that incentivises   productivity and creativity. The novel’s main  premise is based on the idea known as 80/20,   in which 20% of a country’s population  creates 80% of wealth or innovation. This   is considered to be true within a company and  country. So by leaving the country, the creative   minds have brain drained the economy so to speak,  a common issue today in the developing world,   where the brightest young people move to the first  world for better job opportunities. The novel is a   critique of the welfare state for making people  less hard workers. But critics on the left have   criticised the novel for promoting selfishness and  some even blamed the book for the Banking Crisis   of 2008, in which bankers gambled on other  people’s money for their own selfish gains.  The novel made Ayn Rand into a philosopher  and soon she founded The Objectivist,   a philosophical newsletter. She also became a  lecturer at the Nathaniel Branden Institute,   headed by man of the same name who also supposedly  had a sexual affair with Rand. Ironically, Rand,   as a teacher, was extremely strict with  her students and demanded uncompromising   conformity from them, which went against her own  philosophy of non-conformity. Criticising her or   disagreeing with her made her extremely angry. In  some way that’s the story of every organisation,   institution, revolutionary state or individual  who gains power and authority. In Animal Farm,   George Orwell allegorises how before the  revolution, the Russian Bolsheviks promised   freedom from Tsar’s tyranny but after  taking over, they became Tsar themselves.   Of course, Ayn Rand’s flipping anger is not  comparable to revolutionary atrocities, but it   just shows that human nature is always undefeated.  No matter how much you believe in total freedom,   when you have to run an organisation, institution,  or state, or even manage a classroom, you really   want a bit of tyranny to control others. This  is me talking as a YouTuber who wants all   the comments to say how much they love me, not  criticise me. So I can relate to Ayn Rand about   non-agreeable people out there. Of course  I am joking. I welcome valid criticisms. Outside writing, she was also politically  active with the US Republican Party. Her fierce   anti-communism and in favour of free market  capitalism made her a darling of the right   and conservatism. Later in life, she supported  the right to abortion, opposed the Vietnam War,   and supported Israel’s war against what she termed  as Arab savages. She had many unpopular opinions   including being against homosexuality, as well  as justifying European colonialism saying that   if the table was turned, the colonised  would have done the same thing. She was   fiercely against the welfare state, calling  those on welfare as lazy. But later in life,   she allowed herself to get social security as  well as medicare. She died in 1982, aged 77. Today she is known as a great novelist as  well as a philosopher who still divides   opinions. Her style of romantic realism  promoted individualistic heroes who went   against the grain, opposed conformity,  conventional morality or even duty,   in the same vein as Nietzsche’s ubermensch.  In other words, Rand wants a world in which   heroes push boundaries in order to create  new things. She wanted progress through   the heroic deeds of individuals, not  the collective. For her collectivism   stifled creativity while individualism  promoted hard work and productivity.  Her style of writing also promotes competition  among men, as her female characters are always   entangled with two or more men, suggesting  that a woman’s ultimate goal is to see which   male character wins and then she chooses him  as her mate. This closely resembles nature,   in which male animals compete physically  in order to mate with the female.  She was influenced by writers such as Victor  Hugo, calling him the greatest novelist in   the world, Fyodor Dostoevsky, and the German  romantic poet Friedrich Schiller. For her,   romanticism as a movement best captured  the heroic mentality of humans, the daring,   courageous act of going against the grain, and  challenging the conventional wisdom of a group.   Romanticism started in the 18th century in Europe  as a direct response to the scientific revolution   and the age of reason that promoted a more  one-sided rationality at the expense of natural   passion. For Rand, romanticism allowed humans  to dare. Or the free will to do heroic deeds.  Since she spent a few formative years in  Hollywood, her style of writing is also   more plot-driven, in which the camera pans from a  wide-angle to a focused, close-up shot. For Rand,   storytelling was the best medium to express  philosophical ideas, because literature   emphasises context and concrete scenarios that can  help philosophical ideas to be more grounded in   objective reality and concrete human interactions,  not some abstract scenarios. She considered   literature to be the best medium of expressing  philosophical concepts as it provides context   for such concepts. Literature is a perfect stage  on which philosophers can discuss their ideas.  She received criticisms from both religious  people for her atheism as well as philosophical   establishment for her philosophical egoism. I  personally think the emphasis on rationality as   the only truth goes against the romanticist’s  emphasis on human passion. I think we are   more driven through passion than reason.  Reason might give us a clear picture of   reality but it hardly ever motivates us  to do things that might be unreasonable,   or deeply heroic and innovative. She  championed productivity and creativity,   but without passion, neither of those can  be achieved. So reason alone is not enough.  While she claimed that her greatest philosophical  influence was Aristotle, it doesn’t take a genius   to see a lot more similarity with Nietzsche.  Her idea of an individual going against a whole   society is very much a Nietzschean ubermensch.  Also Nietzsche embodied the Romanticist movement   in philosophy. What’s different about Rand and  Nietzsche is that Rand only allows rationality   while Nietzsche’s entire philosophy is a  critique of rationality. Nietzsche wanted   humans to return to its passionate past that  allowed artistic flourishing. Nietzsche saw   too much rationality stifling creativity, in  the same way that religious morality stifled   expression. At the heart of rational philosophy  is conformity that everyone is the same and   everyone is rational. Anyone different therefore  should align himself or herself with others. Ayn Rand’s books have sold more than 37 million.  Not surprisingly, her popularity has remained   limited to the US, because her philosophy of  making it all by yourself through hard work   and grit, a very individualistic philosophy, is  the cornerstone of the American dream. So people   could resonate with her writing. After her arrival  in the US, she was part of the Hollywood world,   and later became a TV celebrity, which helped her  to become a house-hold name. Some of her novels,   including The Fountainhead and Anthem are  taught in American schools as well as in the UK. Now I will discuss her novels, The  Fountainhead and Atlas Shrugged. Novels  The Fountainhead  Published in 1943, The Fountain Head   was Ayn Rand’s first major success. More than 6  millions sold and translated into 20 languages. It   tells the story of an intelligent young architect  named Howard Roark who’s somewhat similar to   someone like Steve Jobs who goes against the grain  and established conventions in order to innovate.   Of course, Steve Jobs became the establishment  himself and that’s how human society works.   You break the old and create the new until you  become old and someone else comes along to break   down what you created and built something newer.  This is evolutionary biology 101 applied to social   change. So the underlying philosophy is that we’re  ultimately alone and that an ideal man’s job is   to pursue his goal of achieving something  and nobody, except himself, can help him. So you can see that Ayn Rand is writing  against socialism which was dominating   the eastern part of Europe in the 1940s  when the novel was published and national   socialism of Hitler was dominating the  central part of Europe. Only America   and some western European nations were  carrying the free-market capitalism torch.  The protagonist, Roark, roars like a lion  against those who conform and sees them   as second-handers who rely on the creativity  and productivity of someone like him. A good   analogy would be a lion that kills a prey and  a bunch of lazy scavenging hyenas eat the meat.   These lazy people include Peter Keating, a fellow  architect, Ellsworth Toohey, a socialist critic,   Gail Wynand a tabloid publisher and  most importantly Dominique Francon   his girlfriend who moves like a pendulum  between collectivism and individualism.  We are in 1922, the Jazz Age, the roaring  20s when the Great Gatsy was having lavish   parties in his New York mansion. The young  architecture student Howard Roark finds himself   expelled from university for not following  architectural conventions. He heads to New   York and gets himself a job with a famous  architect named Henry Cameron. Life is okay   but things change when one of his former  classmates, Peter Keating who wasn’t very   bright and whom he helped with his homework,  graduates with a degree and gets a job at a   more prestigious company. Peter, a mediocre  student at best, but socially cunning,   quickly moves up the career ladder and becomes a  partner. This is so unfair. Howard the real genius   is still toiling at a struggling company. But  things get worse. The company collapses when the   owner dies and to add salt to injury, Peter hires  Howard. But wait, he is soon fired by Cameron,   Peter’s partner, for refusing to design  a building in the conventional style. Things go from bad to worse. He gets odd jobs  here and there and even opens his own company   but finds no clients. At his lowest, he finds  a job at a quarry owned by Cameron, Peter’s   business partner. But wait a minute. Here Howard  meets a young female journalist, Dominque, who is   incidentally Cameron’s daughter. There is love at  first sight. But it’s not all rosy, their first   sexual experience is pretty rough and animalistic  which according to her is non-consensual. It   doesn’t end there. Later when Howard returns  to New York to work on a building project,   Dominque attacks his work in her newspaper column  but at the same time secretly comes to him for   some rough sex from time to time. While she enjoys  the rough sex in secret, in public she talks shit   about him to her colleagues. One of her newspaper  colleagues, Ellsworth Toohey a socialist,   uses his media influence to destroy Howards’s  reputation by setting him up to design a building. A rich man commissions Howard to design a temple.  We know Howard. He is not a conventional man. He   designs a nude statue of Dominque in the temple  which the socialist journalist uses to persuade   the owner to sue the architect for malpractice.  They go to court and all the journalists   testify against Howard. As expected the rebel  architect loses the case and not only that,   he also loses the woman. Now to add salt  to injury, Dominque, his sneaky link,   not only abandons him, but also marries his  fiercest rival, Peter Keating. Not only that,   she does everything to support her man and she  even cheats on him with clients in order to get   him more clients. In other words, she wants  her husband financially well-off even if it   means sleeping with other men. You gotta  be kidding me. Ayn Rand shows that women   only love you when you have something going for  yourself. A defeated man gets no sympathy from   women. This is nature 101. Male animals fight  and the winner gets to mate and the loser?  Well, our rebellious architect Howard continues  with his work in the shadow of his mediocre   classmate, Peter Keating. But here is a twist,  perhaps a bit far-fetched. But let me tell you.   Dominque while married to Keating has an affair  with her boss at the newspaper, Gail Wynand. Why?   Because he is looking for an architect and she  wants him to hire her husband for the job. But   the twist that seems unbelievable is that the  boss, Gail Wynand, fall in love with Dominque   and pays her husband Keating a huge sum of money  to divorce her, so he can marry her. Ayn Rand’s   female character is not an independent thinker.  She hops from winner to winner like a bunny. Or   a monkey from branch to branch for better man.  She marries her newspaper boss. Her new husband,   Gail Wynand is still searching for an architect.  It turns out, all his favourite buildings are   designed by one man. Who could it be? After a  quick search, we find out that it is none other   than our protagonist, the anti-establishment  Howard. Now we come full circle.  Now we enter a phase that is called the  redemption period in our hero’s journey.   Gail Wynand befriends Howard hoping to get him  design a house for him and his wife Dominque,   unaware that in the past she used the same  man for some wild, rough sex from time   to time. Not only Dominque used Howard  for some raw sex, the other architect,   Peter Keating also used the rebel man in most of  his successful design projects. In other words,   our unconventional hero is not only an animal  in bed, he is also a brilliant architect. But as things look up for him, Ayn Rand throws a  spanner in the works. While designing a building   with his former classmate, Peter Keating, Howard  makes him promise not to change his design. But   when the building is complete it looks nothing  like what he had designed. Our hero is outraged.   He takes matters into his own hand and burns  the building. He’s arrested and put on trial.   Everyone condemns the man, except his new  friend, Gail Wynand who defends him in his   newspaper at a huge cost to his business. People  cancel his newspaper and his staff go on strike.   Dave Chappelle and Netflix all over here. But  when the pressure mounts, the boss caves in   and apologises to his staff and condemns his new  friend, Howard. This 180 degree change of mind is   going to be costly, at least in the bedroom.  Women like men with a backbone. Only one man   has a backbone in this novel and that’s Howard  who is sitting pretty in jail awaiting trial.  At the trial, he defends his stance that a  man must have integrity because without it,   he’s nothing else. Much to everyone’s surprise, he  is found not guilty. Our hero is redeemed. Guess   what? Do you remember Dominque who was married to  Peter Keating then married Gail Wynand? She jumps   ship for a third time. Now Dominque and Howard are  together. Not only that, Gail Wynand understands   that a man needs a backbone so to redeem himself  he commissions Howard to build a huge skyscraper   in New York. At the end, one of the most symbolic  scenes is when Dominque climbs up the new building   to be with…you guessed it… the winner Howard. They  walk into the sunset together. Well, you cannot   walk into the sunset from the top of a skyscraper  unless you’re insane. But you get the point.  Now, I will discuss some of  the themes of Fountainhead. Ideal man So for Ayn Rand, an ideal man is someone   who goes against the grain and social conventions  in pursuit of excellence, not conformity.   A new alpha male not only has to fight others  and social conventions but also has to be a   brilliant mind. That’s what women are attracted  to. According to Rand, women generally do not   want mediocre men without a backbone, integrity  and independent thoughts. Men who flip flop and   quickly bend to the will of others are not to  be trusted. In other words, Peter Keating and   Gail Wynand chased money and social validation and  they ultimately lost as a result. If the prize for   men is to win the heart of a woman, he must have  a goal and stick to it. Peter Keating was a tree   climber who used his cunning mind to reach the  top without doing the work, always tried to please   others or never swam against the current. The  fact that Howard had to fight others, in school,   workplace and even in his romantic pursuit, meant  that he was robust and didn’t give an s to what   others thought of it. He only listened to his own  inner voice. That independent thinking combined   with a brilliant vision allowed him to change his  world based on how he saw things. So a visionary   man coupled with strong will can create a  new empire… state… building in New York.  How about an ideal woman? Well, the novel has one  major female character. Dominque who has her own   inner conflict. While she enjoys intimacy with  Howard, a man who doesn’t give an s to anyone,   but at the same time she is a practical woman who  is seeking a secure and comfortable nest so she   can lay her eggs. She wants to be with Howard  but not at all cost. For Ayn Rand, her female   character is a woman who wants to be with a strong  man who is also a winner. The fact that she jumped   between three men, showed that she mostly followed  her pragmatic head. When Keating was winning by   climbing the career ladder, she married him  but he lacked individuality and when Gail   Wynand was winning as a wealthy newspaper owner  who had come from nothing she was with him but   he lost his backbone as he only wanted power and  nothing else and finally when Howard was redeemed,   she came to him because he was neither seeking  power not social acceptance. He was a genius who   didn’t give an s to anything but ingenuity and  innovation. Only Howard had her heart and her   head. The other two men were simply means to an  end for her. So female mating strategy is to be   with someone who is capable of changing society  and is respected by others and secure enough to   have a nice nest where their kids can grow  in safety and comfort. Of course, feminists   would have a serious problem with Ayn Rand and  specially with her female character Dominque   who instead of changing the world herself as an  empowered woman, always aligned herself with the   strong men. The scene of rough sex specifically  has been as called a clear case of rape, and some   feminists called Rand as a self-hating woman. Rand  argues that Dominque had invited Howard and she   ultimately went back to him despite that difficult  scene. By the end of the novel, she chose him. Individualism vs collectivism Rand also takes a huge swipe at   socialism through the character of the  newspaper journalist Ellsworth Toohey   who uses all kinds of weapons including  deception to destroy people’s self-worth   and the sense of individual autonomy, because  he sees the world through the lens of class,   not individual. His main philosophy is  selflessness or altruism and equality,   therefore he condemns anyone promoting  selfishness or individual pursuits. Ayn Rand choice of architecture is perhaps a  symbolic swipe at socialism that ultimately we all   want to live in our own house, not in some commune  where you share a big building with lots of   people. Animals defend their caves and territories  with their lives, and humans are no different. Our   evolutionary goal is to work hard and build a  nest where our kids can grow and do the same.   We are not like ants or insect colonies that  we all work for others. Our natural tendencies   are individualistic and selfish and Rand says not  only there is nothing wrong with being selfish but   also argues that being selfish brings the best  out of us. When you work for others, you have   no motivation to do your best. We find meaning  by working for our own goals set by ourselves,   not goals set by the state or our parents. People  in the past were forced to live together but as   technology has improved, our architecture has  allowed us to be more individualistic. This aligns   with what we innately want. Kids, we want a room  of our own and when grown up, a house of our own.  The novel despite being criticised by the  left and feminists, has been extremely   successful around the world. Not only has  it inspired many architects and writers,   it has also been adapted to  films and television many times.  Atlas Shrugged Published in 1957, some 15 years after   the Fountainhead, Atlas Shrugged is Ayn Rand’s  most successful novel selling over 9 millions   and translated into 30 languages and considered  her magnum opus. Just like the Fountainhead,   it, too, pursues philosophical themes such as  individualism, rationality and capitalism but with   a dystopian setting—similar to George Orwell’s  1984—when things go south in the US as the welfare   state takes over and over-regulate things to the  point that business collapse and innovators are   stifled. But in this novel, Ayn Rand further  elaborates on her new philosophical school of   objectivism that there is nothing but objective  reality and no better tool than reason. Themes   such as religion, god, altruism, collectivism  and equality are nothing but pipe dreams.  So the novel pits two opposing forces in the US.  On the one hand we have the over-regulating state   on the verge of collapse and on the other hand we  have private businesses who see their productivity   is used to feed the less productive members of  society through the welfare state. At the heart   of the novel, we have a power couple—not some  social media one—but a real powerful couple,   Dagny Taggart, a railway executive and her  lover, Hank Rearden, a steel magnet, who are   both recruited by John Galt, an objectivist  philosopher and visionary, to abandon their   businesses to teach the US a lesson that they  are the real backbone of the American economy.  Ayn Rand introduces us to a really powerful  woman, Dagny Taggart, perhaps to compensate for   the criticism she received after the publication  of her first successful novel, The Fountainhead,   for not championing women. Dagny is a  bad-ass railway executive, competent,   rational and spirited under extreme economic  crises mostly due to tightly-regulated economy   and nationalisation of industries. Meanwhile Hank  Rearden, a steel magnet, has similar problems with   the overreach of the state in interfering with  business. But business is not his only problem,   he also has issues at home with his wife. So  Ayn Rand has set things up for Dagny and Hank,   two struggling souls to meet. They meet  when Dagny opens her new railroad. The   love is almost at first sight. They end up  in bed together. We are animals after all.   Forget about business or marriage, let’s  make the most of what we have. Copulate. They find each other’s company very enjoyable so  they go on holiday together. While on holiday,   they stumble upon a factory with a  mysterious, but ingenious machine that runs on   static electricity. It appears the scientist  who invented the machine abandoned it for some   reason and nobody knows who that person is.  The two hire an engineer to reconstruct the   machine but red tape after red tape means they  have to abandon it all. The government learns   about the sexual affair between Dagny and  Hank so they use it to blackmail him into   compliance over his business. If you have not  noticed, the government is the bad guys in this   novel. Ayn Rand’s heroes are business leaders.  This is very unconventional in literature,   because normally the good guys tend to someone  from the outside. It’s hard to make Jeff Bezos   the hero of a novel or Elon Musk, but that’s  precisely what Rand does in this novel.  Dagny, one day, meets a homeless man who tells  him about a man named John Galt. But who is he?   It turns out he is the inventor of this new  machine that runs on static electricity. Ayn   Rand makes some of the scenes a bit too  far-fetched, but let’s go with it. Dagny,   while chasing one of her employees on a plane,  crash-lands somewhere remote. But it turns out   this place is occupied by a mysterious group  of people. Who are they? Amish people? No,   these people are headed by none other  than the engineer who invented the new,   yet abandoned machine, John Galt. Why are they  here in this remote valley? It turns out John   Galt is leading a strike of the brilliant minds  and creative workers against the government and   its over-regulation. Some are business  leaders, some are artists and some are   engineers. All the creative and productive  minds that run the economy so to speak.  As expected, love is in the air. Ayn Rand’s women  fall in love with powerful, charismatic men. Dagny   is in love with John Galt, the cult leader. Maybe  cult is not the right word. The philosopher or the   visionary is perhaps a fairer term. John Galt  asks her to join them in the strike, but she is   torn between her job at the railway company and  her new love. At the end, she reluctantly leaves   the business hippies and returns to her work. But  things have gone from bad to worse. The country   has turned into a proper authoritarian state.  But wait. The philosopher John Galt leaves his   hippie camp and returns to New York in pursuit  of the lady Dagny. While in New York, he hacks   into a radio station to broadcast his communist  manifesto. Oops, I meant his objectivist manifesto   in which he tells the nation that there is no  other reality but objective reality and no force   is more powerful than rationality and no goal is  more virtuous than pursuit of our self-interest   and so on. After talking for 3 hours on the radio,  he leaves but before he reunites with his lover   Dagny or returns to his capitalist hippie camp, he  is arrested by the NYPD. The government tries to   recruit him to restore the country but he refuses.  They waterboard him a few times. Ok, but they do   torture him a bit and soon enough the whole system  crumbles and all the workers unite. I am joking.   When the government collapses, those on strike  return to the city to reclaim their government.   The novel ends when the new people are in charge.  So you could read it as a capitalist fiction.  At the heart of the novel is this question,  what if instead of workers going on strike,   the business leaders, prime engineers,  the creative minds went on strike? So Ayn   Rand takes a socialist premise of workers stop  working and turns it on its head. What if their   executives and leaders went on strike? To put it  somewhat crudely, it asks what if the flock had no   leader? Where would the reindeers go without the  alpha females? Or what would happen to the pride   without the male lion? Ayn Rand argues that human  civilisation only flourished when they had robust   and competent leaders. By setting the novel on  industries, Rand wanted to remind us that when it   comes to infrastructure, it was the brilliant  innovators and inventors who moved society,   not the bureaucrats at the government. It’s  people like John Galt on the ground who invents   the new machine. The title Atlas Shrugged also  symbolises that we often take for granted and   do not notice or appreciate that it’s Atlas, the  Greek titan, who holds the earth on his back. The   only way we appreciate something is when we lose  it. It’s like, we don’t notice garbage collectors,   unless they stopped working for a few  weeks. Then we notice that the town starts   to stink.     Ethical egoism The underlying philosophy of the   novel is ethical egoism which means since we are  inherently selfish, it makes us rational about it.   Not only is selfishness not a bad thing, it should  be encouraged. When we realise our self-interest,   we do our best to work for it and once everyone is  rationally selfish, then society operates better   because we all know what other people want so  we do our best to offer value. This in turn   promotes honesty, fairness, independence and most  importantly productivity. Humans are inherently   lazy and always take the path of least resistance  so if we can get away with not doing anything,   most of us would take that path. To counter that,  Ayn Rand proposes selfishness as a virtue and   everyone is transparent about it. Now nobody can  hide behind the mask of altruism or virtue signal   for something they don’t really mean.     In contrast, according to Rand, socialism,  fascism and any form of collectivism or even   a religion-based society would inevitably lead  to some members of society being productive while   some relying on others for subsistence. This is a  common criticism directed at the welfare state by   the right and the conservatives. The novel also  refers to those in favour of higher taxes or   strong government and government bureaucrats  and those surviving on welfare as looters,   moochers and parasites. Quote: "So you think  that money is the root of all evil? ... Have   you ever asked what is the root of money? Money  is a tool of exchange, which can't exist unless   there are goods produced and men able to produce  them. ... Money is not the tool of the moochers,   who claim your product by tears, or the looters  who take it from you by force. Money is made   possible only by the men who produce.”—Ayn  Rand (Atlas Shrugged). So the novel rejects   any form of handouts by the government. Instead  it promotes that everyone should work for what   they want. In today’s world, the elite of society  is often demonised by the media and the populous   as corrupt. But the novel takes a big swipe at  the government as the main agency of corruption.    Of course,   just like her previous novel, many critics,  especially those on the left, condemned the book   for a variety of reasons. One major criticism  was for its atheism and others criticised it   for promoting selfishness. If there is one thing  you learn about Ayn Rand is that she didn’t care   about what people thought of her. She went against  the dominant way of thinking. So while the novel   has been extremely popular among the masses, to  some extent it was pushed aside by the literary   establishment. Literature tends to favour heroes  who are outsiders, powerless, and poor. Ayn Rand   didn’t give an s about that and made her heroes  top executives and big bosses and some brilliant   engineers. She had balls. Swimming with the  current is an easy thing to do but swimming   against the current is a lot harder. In fairness,  she wasn’t alone. The American anti-communist   sentiment did help her in her career so she was  not swimming totally by herself. There were big   sharks swimming by her.     Now I will discuss 7 lessons we can  learn from her life and her writing. Lessons Lesson 1: Selfishness is virtue  This is one of the most controversial  philosophical ideas Ayn Rand put forward.   She argues that humans are inherently selfish  and beating the bush only means one thing. We   hide our true intentions from others which forces  us to make excuses and bs that comes with it.   Since we’re naturally selfish, as the Darwinian  evolutionary biologist Richard Dawkins pointed out   in his book the Selfish Gene, therefore it makes  sense to not demonise it. Instead we should accept   it as reality. Ayn Rand argues that even love is  selfish. She famously said in an interview that   her love for her husband was selfish because she  got something out of the relationship. We don’t   love our partner because we are altruistic, we  love them because the other person has some values   or virtues that benefit us in some way. Published  in 1964, the Virtue of Selfishness is a collection   of philosophical essays by Ayn Rand and Nathaniel  Brandenin in which they put forward moral egoism   as a philosophical foundation of human society.  So what Ayn Rand articulated is that we all want   to be happy and have a fulfilling life. And  not just that, we are extremely selfish in   our pursuit of happiness. By making selfishness a  virtue, we become more transparent in society and   now nobody can hide behind a mask of altruism  or virtue signal anymore to deceive others of   their true selfish intentions. Rand’s ethical  egoism is centred on the idea that we should   rationally seek our happiness and self-interest,  not the collective interest of our tribe or group.   Individuals, she says, should live for himself  or herself, not sacrificing themselves for   other people. Altruism promises self-sacrifice,  like soldiers dying for their leaders without   considering their own life’s goals and happiness.  We can no longer hide behind some tribal or   ideological wall. But Ayn Rand argues that we  cannot be selfish without also being rational.  Lesson 2: Reason is the only solid doctrine Many people characterised Ayn Rand’s selfish   philosophy as a recipe for chaos as everyone wants  what’s best for them, therefore you cannot have a   coherent social fabric anymore. Throughout history  most societies were created around religious   doctrines, or equality, altruism, superstition  etc. But Rand rejected religions and ideologies.   So how do you organise a society when faith or  ideology or myths no longer play a role? She   offers rationality as the best foundation for a  robust society. Why? Because reason is universal,   while faith, whims, emotions etc are subjective.  Rand argues that reason alone can guide us in   life. So our perception of reality should be  based purely on reason, not biological instinct,   or emotions, intuitions or religious revelations.  You have to be rationally awake all the time. In   other words, reason is the only essential tool in  our disposal. So reason guides us to one optimal   conclusion: to pursue your own self-interest. She  argues that when you make selfishness a virtue,   everyone suddenly uses reason to further their  own interests in society. If we are rational,   we all know that chaos doesn’t benefit you in the  long run. If we think rationally, we understand   that you cannot deceive people and be successful  long-term. If we just extract value from others,   soon people stop giving us. So we have to be smart  in providing value in return. So a rational person   knows that he or she should provide value in order  to gain something from someone. Even in marriage,   both parties know the other offers something  they really want. She argues that egoism should   not be a negative thing, instead once we all  act to promote our own self-interest and our   own happiness, not the interest of others, we  are forced to be more responsible for our own   actions.    Lesson 3: Take responsibility  for your own life, nobody else’s  Ayn Rand’s philosophy of objectivism is  rooted in the harsh reality of life that   nobody is responsible for your life, but you. As  adults, we are responsible for our own well-being,   happiness and goals. When on a plane, the rule  is fasten your own seat belt first before you can   help others. It’s the old saying that nobody can  make you happy, except yourself. We make choices   in life and those choices have consequences.  Rand’s philosophy is that we cannot claim to be   victims because we are responsible for the choices  we make in life. Life is an uneven path, with ups   and downs, struggles, trials and tribulations,  therefore we should not rely on others to make   those choices for us. As responsible, rational  beings, we have to take accountability for our   choices and actions. Once we take responsibility  for our own life and happiness, we become more   creative and productive. So Rand’s moral egoism  makes us more productive as we have to provide   value in order to extract value from others.    Lesson 4: Happiness comes from  creativity and productivity  Life’s a journey is a cliche but it is true.  We all want to be happy. Often without doing   anything. Rand argues that the true happiness we  drive is through creativity and productivity. The   happiest people are also hard working and  creative people. We should drive pleasure   not by indulging ourselves but creating value to  exchange with others. Ayn Rand uses Adam Smith’s   value exchange market capitalism as the best  system that allows us to flourish by becoming   competent. Adam Smith had argued centuries before,  in which each individual is like a shop front. You   sell your products, skills, creativity and  in return you buy things you need or want.   In other words, equal values are exchanged, which  promotes more creativity and more productivity.   Under the free market, the right to private  property is protected. While under communism or   any other forms of collectivism, individuals have  little incentive to work hard and be creative,   because they have no say in how their products are  exchanged. This was depicted in her novel, Atlas   Shrugged in which the creative and productive  people go on strike that cripples the economy. So   for her, an ideal man is someone who goes against  the grain in his attempt to innovate and create,   which should make him happy in the long-run.    Lesson 5: Break boundaries.  Ayn Rand was a rebel. She   wrote about things that were not popular. She  talked about selfishness, atheism, ideal man   etc that made her very unpopular, especially  among the left. But she refused to bow to   pressure because she was fiercely against  conventional thinking. In her first novel,   The Fountainhead, she attacks conformity as a kind  of sheep mentality of following others and not   having original ideas. Her main character breaks  with conventions, norms and established order to   revolutionise architecture and ultimately wins. A  true hero is someone who pushes society to become   better. Of course, not all innovation is good.  That’s why Ayn Rand emphasised rationality to   be the foundation of society, not faith or whim.  In a rational society, the winner is someone who   comes up with the best idea and product, not the  idea that is popular or sticks to rules. So her   philosophy promoted innovation and breaking  with rules in order to move society forward.   That’s how evolution works. It throws things out  and something sticks and then it moves in that   direction. Innovation and creativity works in  the same way. Conventions, rules, boundaries,   on the other hand, limit creativity.     Lesson 6: Life’s a heroic journey. Romanticism as a movement began in   Europe in the 18th century and 19th century  against the over-emphasis on industries and   the rational science of humanism dominating social  changes. Unlike the humanists, romanticists wanted   a return to nature and free human expression.  While universal humanism through industrialisation   and urbanisation focused on conformity,  predictability, and safety, the romantics   were more focused on creativity, honour, courage  and bravery. Ayn Rand agreed with the romantics as   an artistic movement that pushed boundaries.  Published in 1969, The Romantic Manifesto is   a collection of philosophical essays in which Ayn  Rand argues that a piece of art is inherently tied   to the values and characteristics of the artist  who created it and the viewer who views it. In   other words, both the artist and the viewer adds  a piece of their own value in the piece of art.   So art cannot be objective. The artist creates it  based on his own values and the audience enjoys   it based on their values. At the base of her  argument, Rand asserts that one cannot create   art without infusing a given work with one's own  value judgments and personal philosophy. Even if   the artist attempts to withhold moral overtones,  the work becomes tinged with a deterministic or   naturalistic message. The next logical step  of Rand's argument is that the audience of   any particular work cannot help but come away  with some sense of a philosophical message,   colored by his or her own personal values,  ingrained into their psyche by whatever degree of   emotional impact the work holds for them. In the  book she also defends romanticism in art as a raw   and natural approach to creativity. As a result,  she argues that life is meant to be a heroic   journey. She says, quote: ”The concept of man as a  heroic being, with his own happiness as the moral   purpose of his life, with productive achievement  as his noblest activity, and reason as his only   absolute.”—Ayn Rand (Atlas Shrugged).    Lesson 7: Passion really motivates us.  While Rand only saw reason as absolute,   human history has shown us that that’s not alway  the case. Humans are more driven by passion more   than reason. If you explain life crudely, we  are here to survive and have babies. Sure,   it’s rational to pass on your genes to the next  generation and that’s why the urge to have sex is   extremely strong in us. While Ayn Rand articulates  that when it comes to organising society and how   an individual navigates society, reason is our  best weapon. When reason goes out of the window,   problems occur. However, human passion which often  goes against rationality is one of the biggest   motivators of human behaviour. We fall in love,  not because we are rational. We sometimes choose   mates not because we use reason and logic. We fall  in love which means we give up control to passion,   urges and emotions. Our emotions and whims come  and go while reason is solid. That’s why we fall   out of love. That’s why emotions override  certain decisions today but tomorrow when   we sober up a bit, we realise how foolish we  acted. Philosophers like Arthur Schopenhauer   and Friedrich Nietzsche argue that human passion  is not only as important as rationality but also   we cannot do without it. We’re driven by the  blind passion, be it Schopenhauer’s will to   life or Nietzsche’s will to power or Albert  Camus’s will to happiness. This is one of the   major disagreements she had with Nietzsche.  Nietzsche’s critique of western philosophy   was centred on reason being given the primacy  at the cost of reducing passion to something   evil. Ayn Rand sees passion, emotions, whims  as unreliable tools for social interactions,   therefore she says reason alone is the primary  mode of social interactions. However, modernity,   which favours reason above else, has resulted in  nihilism, the tendency towards meaninglessness   on the one hand and pleasure-seeking  self-indulgence on the other, which Rand   was vehemently against. To truly motivate someone  to be creative and productive, human passion,   which is not rational, plays a huge role.  For instance if you want to recruit soldiers,   paying them money can be a motivator, but nothing  can replace the idea of making it a noble cause,   or fighting for good against evil, or  the idea  of sacrifice, all of which are not strictly   rational. The most successful empires have not  used reason to unite, but religions, myths,   stories, and good-evil division to unite  people and recruit soldiers to defend it.  One can admire Ayn Rand’s honesty in admitting  that we are ultimately selfish creatures and   there’s no point in denying that. Today a lot of  ruthless people hide behind the mask of altruism   to virtue signal to certain moral outages  in society, but in reality they are nothing   but selfish people benefiting from their fake  selflessness. Ayn Rand exposes us all saying that   let’s not pretend we really care about others when  all we care is about ourselves. But the problem is   that nothing is really black and white in society.  Humans are great at learning and adapting to new   situations. Even if we are put in heaven, we might  find ways to get out of it. Oh, hang on a minute,   we have already done that according to the Bible.  So Ayn Rand says, the sooner we accept that we   are selfish animals, the easier it is for us to  unmask ourselves and be less hypocritical about   things. We must accept reality and use reason  to organise everything in society. Some argue   that we are heading towards a fully rational  society, in which we become more like robots,   which the extreme of rationality of 2+2=4.  This was precisely what Dostoevsky was warning   us against 150 years ago. To understand  Dostoevsky’s philosophy, watch this video. Thank you for watching.
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Channel: Fiction Beast
Views: 27,147
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Keywords: fiction beast, read the world, world literature, fiction, literature, think, thought, lecture, education, reading, novel, novelists, the school of life, philosophy, psychology, study, course work, Dostoevsky, Proust, ayn rand
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Length: 54min 30sec (3270 seconds)
Published: Sun Mar 19 2023
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