Objectivism is attractive to me given the current state of the world. It is empowering to internalize some of her concepts like: "money being a manifestation of ones best efforts", "action without thought is mindlessness, and thought without action is hypocritical", "celebration is for those who have earned it", etc.. Objectivism has empowered my individuality. It has helped me organize my thoughts and default to reason whenever I feel overwhelmed or exhausted.
This is me explaining a bit of what I have gained from objectivism not as a defense of it but as a statement about why I have appreciated my first foray into philosophy. I understand many of you may think of objectivism as blasphemy so please give me the next logical step in my philosophical journey. I would greatly appreciate thoughtful recommendations on texts to begin reading. — OscarTheGrouch
I find this quote meaningful. It makes a lot of sense to me.read like platitudes from a self-help book, rather than serious philosophical concepts.
I find the state of the world is closer to the opposite of what is prescribed by Objectivism rather than reflective of it.I do suppose that Objectivism can sound attractive because in some ways it is reflective of the state of the world, and I mean that in a very dire sense.
:smirk:A wise man once said, and keeps saying:
Ayn Rand is to philosophy what L. Ron Hubbard is to religion. — Ciceronianus
Freddy Zarathustra e.g. resentment, slave morality, decadence ...Who talked about the ins and outs of victim blaming before her? — frank
Not at all.Am I wrong to try and understand her philosophy? — OscarTheGrouch
If and when, Oscar, you learn to recognize the difference between what Plato et al calls "philosophy" and "sophistry", then you will be able to judge for Ayn Rand's writings for yourself.Is there no wisdom within it?
The approach of coddling state — OscarTheGrouch
She is useless and expensive, and she is consequentially valuable as evidence of pecuniary strength. It results that at this cultural stage women take thought to alter their persons , so as to conform more nearly the requirements of the instructed taste of the time; and under the guidance of of the canon of pecuniary decency, the men find the resulting artificiality induced pathological features attractive. So, for instance, the constricted waist which has had so wide and persistent a vogue in the communities of the Western culture, and so also the deformed foot of the Chinese. Both of these are mutilations of unquestioned repulsiveness to the untrained sense. — Theory of the Leisure Class, Thorsten Veblen
but I can accept what I’ve heard about it not being very good based on some of the stuff she has Roark say in The Fountainhead; but I enjoyed the literary account she gives of her beliefs in that book a lot and I think she gets people right. — AJJ
I think the rape scene is perverse a — AJJ
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