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The Vindication of Ayn Rand
The Autonomist ^ | 03/11/05 | Cass Hewitt

Posted on 03/11/2005 6:17:42 PM PST by Hank Kerchief

The Vindication of Ayn Rand

A review of James S. Valliant’s The Passion of Ayn Rand’s Critics: The Case Against the Brandens

by Cass Hewitt

Who would have thought that within the seemingly sedate and cerebral world of philosophy would be found a history to rival any Hollywood drama for intrigue, passion, seduction, lies, betrayal, black evil, and the ultimate triumph of the good—and which is also a fascinating detective story.

Among those who rose to heights of fame in the last half of the twentieth century none was as charismatic as the author-philosopher Ayn Rand. Her electrifying, radical novels depicting her fully integrated philosophy, which she named Objectivism, broke on popular consciousness like a storm and caught the enthusiasm of a generation seeking truth and values in the aridity of postmodernism. She was a sought after speaker, her public lectures filled to standing room only. She was interviewed on Prime Time television and for high circulation magazines.

She taught a philosophy of individualism in the face of rising collectivism; an ethic of adherence to reality and honesty; of objective truth against the subjectivist antirealism of the Counter Enlightenment philosophies and presented the world with a blue-print for day to day living.

On the coat tails of her fame were two young students who sought her out, convinced her their passion for her ideas was genuine and became associated with her professionally, intellectually, and ultimately personally. They were Nathaniel Branden, now a noted “self-esteem” psychology guru, and his then wife, Barbara Branden.

Not only did Branden, 25 years Rand’s junior, become her favored student, he was so professionally close to her that he gave Objectivist lectures with her, edited and wrote for the “Objectivist Newsletter”, and formed a teaching venue, the Nathaniel Branden Institute, to teach details of her philosophy to the army of readers of her novels hungry for more. Rand dedicated her magnum opus, Atlas Shrugged to him (along with her husband), and named Branden her intellectual heir.

Then suddenly, in 1968, Rand issued a statement which repudiated both the Brandens, totally divorcing them from herself and her philosophy. In “To whom it may Concern,” [The Objectivist, May 1968] Rand gave her explanation for the break detailing Brandens departure from practice of the philosophy.

However, in 1989, 7 years after Rand’s death, Nathaniel Branden published his book Judgment Day, a supposedly detailed biography of his famous philosopher-mentor. In it he painted a picture of a woman very different from that recognized by her army of admirers —a dark, “repressed“, angry woman who tortured and pilloried anyone who remotely disagreed with her, with no patience for any views not exactly her own, with an almost pathological arrogance and dictatorial tyranny.

Barbara Branden published her own “warts and all” version of her reminiscences earlier, in 1986. The Passion of Ayn Rand (later made into a movie) presented a similar picture of Rand. Both categorically stated that the reason for the break between Rand and the Brandens was because Nathaniel and Rand had been involved in an extra-marital sexual relationship while still married for a period of 14 years and that Nathaniel’s refusal to continue the affair had reduced a tyrannical Rand to hysterics.

Rand is presented as a seriously psychologically disturbed individual whose very philosophy was not only flawed but dangerous. Both books and their authors have become accepted as the last and most reliable “word” on Ayn Rand, and most works describing Rand today mainly trace back to these two as sources.

However, in 2002 a prosecuting lawyer, James Valliant, published on the Internet the results of his examination of these two books. Studied with the critical eye of a dispassionate investigative mind he saw serious errors: major contradictions both within each book and between both. Apparent to him was that a major act of deliberate deception had been perpetrated by these two well known, highly respected adherents of Rand’s philosophy.

For a considerable time before the final split the Brandens had drifted away from Rand’s philosophy but it was much worse. They lied to her about themselves, the state of their marriage, their multiple sexual affairs, and Nathaniel Branden’s secret four year love affair with another woman while he was supposedly carrying on a sexual liaison with Rand herself . Worst of all, was the reason for the deception. The lies enabled them to use her name to promote their own early publications and the considerable income they were deriving from the “spin-offs“. Nathaniel Branden admits that he frequently “paced the floor” trying to work out how not to wreck the “life he had built up for himself” as Objectivism’s authorized representative. At his wife’s urging that he admit his secret affair to Rand he responded “not until after she writes the forward for my book."

As the author states, “the persistent dishonesty of the Brandens about their own part in Rand’s life makes it impossible to rely on them as historians of events for which they are the only witnesses.” He amply demonstrates, taking their own words from their critiques of Rand, to substantiate his conclusion that “they will recollect, suppress, revise, exaggerate and omit whenever convenient… [where] necessary they will pull out of their magical hats a very “private” conversation that one of them “once” had with Rand to prove what all the rest of the evidence denies.”

Their criticisms of Rand are personal and “psychological,” perfect examples of the psychologizing Rand denounced, attempting to demonstrate that Rand did not live up to her own philosophy. Barbara Branden makes total about face contradictions within a few pages; draws conclusions from nearly non-existent evidence such as a single old family photo and uses such alien to Objectivism concepts as “feminine instincts” and “subjective preferences” without the bother of defining these terms.

In her The Passion of Ayn Rand, Ms. Branden draws personal psychological conclusions without any evidence. Examples such as “Her Fathers’ seeming indifference ..{had} ..to be a source of anguish.. as an adult, she always spoke as if [they] were simple facts of reality, of no emotional significance.. one can only conclude that a process of self-protective emotional repression [was deep rooted]…” and further “In all my conversations with Ayn Rand about her years in Russia she never once mentioned to me [any] encounter ..with anti-Semitism. It is all but impossible that there were not such encounters.. One can only assume that ... the pain was blocked from her memory … perhaps because the memory would have carried with it an unacceptable feeling of humiliation” Assumptions, which Valliant says, prove nothing.

It is interesting to note that Ms. Branden was an ardent supporter of Rand until immediately after the break, when such wild accusations and psychologizing rationalizations cut from whole cloth began. Indeed, Ms. Branden can be read at public Internet forums doing the very same thing to this day.

Nathaniel Branden is even more revealing. His own words not only carry the same blatant unreal contradictions as Ms. Brandens’ but he also reveals a twisted mentality capable of totally unethical acts which he then tries to portray as his victim’s faults. For example, he accuses Rand of being authoritarian and “causing us to repress our true selves” and offers as evidence his own lying sycophancy, agreeing with Rand on issues he was later to claim he had always disagreed; praising Rand's insight in topics such as psychology in which field, he says, she had little experience. Considering that it was Rand's endorsement of him he was seeking, his behavior constitutes, as Valliant says, “spiritual embezzlement.”

The complete lack of value in anything either of the Branden’s have to say about Ayn Rand is summed up with pithy succinctness by the author: “We have seen [they] will distort and exaggerate the evidence, and that they have repeatedly suppressed vital evidence and [employ] creativity in recollecting it. Both exhibit internal confusions and numerous self contradictions. The only consistencies are the passionate biases that emanate from their personal experiences. These factors all combine to render their biographical efforts useless to the serious historian.”

James Valliant has done more than demonstrate the complete invalidity—including a viscous character assassination—of both the Brandens books. Using the clear logic and language of an experienced prosecuting lawyer, with only essential editing, he has presented and interpreted Rand’s own private notes, made while she was acting as psychological counselor for Nathaniel Branden. These show her mind in action as she analyses the language of, and finally understands the bitter truth about, the man she had once loved.

Mr. Valliant not only demonstrates this is a tragic story of assault on innocence by a viciously duplicitous person, it is also an amazing detective story, and the detective is none other than Ayn Rand herself.

Over the four years of emotionally painful psychological counseling Rand gave Branden for his supposed sexual dysfunction, we see a brilliant mind carefully dissecting the truths she unearthed. By applying her own philosophy to Branden’s methods of thinking although still unaware of the worst of his deceptions, we see Rand slowly reaching her horrifying conclusion.

The picture of Rand which shines out through her notes is of a woman of amazing depths of compassion; who would not judge or condemn if she could not understand why a person thought and felt as they did; who would give all her time and energy to try to understand and help someone she believed was suffering and in need of guidance.

The facts indicate the sexual affair was apparently over 4 years before the final public split, though Mr. Valiant is careful to say he is only certain it had ended by the start of 1968 and that it was Rand, not Branden, who ended the relationship because she had finally understood his subjectivism, deceits (including financial misappropriation) and mental distortions.

From the flaws in their own works and from Rand's concurrent notes of the time it is clearly apparent that in her 1968 statement of repudiation, Rand told the truth about events and the Brandens lied. Throughout all of her years with them, Rand behaved with the integrity followers of her work would have expected. And, to quote Mr. Valliant, “The Brandens were dishonest with Rand about nearly everything a person can be … largely to maintain the good thing they had going at NBI. This dishonesty lasted for years. ..[They] not only lied to Rand, they lied to their readers .. [and] then they lied about their lies. Ever since they have continued to lie in memoirs and biographies about their lies, calling Rand's 1968 statement ‘libelous’. This remarkable all-encompassing dishonesty is manifest from these biographies and all the more apparent now we have Rand's journal entries from the same period.”

Her generous nature was unable to conceive the full truth about Nathaniel Branden. It is left to Valliant to finish the story, taking it to its full and final dreadful conclusion, showing exactly what it was Nathaniel Branden had deliberately done to this innocent, brilliant, compassionate woman, and what both the Brandens, whom Rand rejected as having any association at all with her philosophy, are still doing to this day—and why.

In the end, those who have used the Branden’s lies to claim the philosophy of Objectivism “doesn’t work, because it’s author couldn’t follow the precepts,” are shown to be completely wrong. Rand used her philosophy and psycho-epistemology to discover the truth; her philosophy to guide her actions in dealing with it and finally to lift her above the heartbreak and pain it caused her.

There is something almost operatic in the telling: A great woman, a great mind, who conceived of a philosophy of love for and exalted worship of the best in the human mind, who defended with searing anger the right of all people to be free to discover happiness, being deceived by the one person she believed to be her equal, her lover and heir, who had lied to and manipulated her for his own gains while she was alive and vilified her name and distorted with calumny the image of her personality after her death.

Perhaps in nothing else is her greatness better shown, than that she was able to rise above the cataclysm and live and laugh again. She always said, “Evil is a negative.. It can do nothing unless we let it.” In her life she lived that and proved it true.



TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society; Philosophy
KEYWORDS: aynrand; barbarabranden; bookreview; culminy; natanielbranden; objectivism; vindication
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To: Hank Kerchief
a dark, “repressed“, angry woman who tortured and pilloried anyone who remotely disagreed with her

She would have done well on Free Republic.
41 posted on 03/11/2005 7:40:04 PM PST by Bear_Slayer (If you're gonna be a Knight, act like a Knight)
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To: jan in Colorado

Ping

42 posted on 03/11/2005 7:43:38 PM PST by USF (I see your Jihad and raise you a Crusade ™ © ®)
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To: Hank Kerchief
If you look up "Brandens" in Who's Who, you will find a picture of a leech. (just after Attorney and before Churchill)
43 posted on 03/11/2005 7:44:20 PM PST by fish hawk (The best thing about the "Vast Right Wing Conspiracy" is : it is Vast and it is Right Wing.)
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To: dpwiener
Excellently reasoned reply. I also have great admiration for this marvelous woman of accomplishment. Her Virtues of Selfishness most influenced my outlooks. But I did not agree with everything she wrote in her objectivists newsletter or her non-fiction books. Having read all her books except Atlas Shrugged (which I never got more than forty pages into) and a play she wrote named after a date (which I only half read), gives me I guess an extremely crippled insight into her ideas.

At any rate I agree with you that the author of this new work, appears to be locked in to an idealized image. On the other hand, its nice that somebody is presenting another view, even if I'm never able to get at the truth.

44 posted on 03/11/2005 7:47:04 PM PST by jackbob
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To: Hank Kerchief

I liked Thomas Jefferson better. Ayn Rand wrote about the life. Jefferson lived it.


45 posted on 03/11/2005 7:49:01 PM PST by sergeantdave (Smart growth is Marxist insects agitating for a collective hive.)
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To: RobFromGa; BradyLS; PGalt; dAnconia; Capitalism2003; Diana in Wisconsin; muir_redwoods; ...
ping the Ayn Rand list?

Good idea.

46 posted on 03/11/2005 8:20:16 PM PST by FreeKeys (Happy 100th Birthday, Miss Rand: 1905 - 2005)
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To: ShadowDancer
If you think it's pretty good so far, just wait. It gets better and better with each page.

LOL. Yup. Until the 350 page speech by John Galt. Snooze . . .

47 posted on 03/11/2005 8:20:49 PM PST by ModelBreaker
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To: Hank Kerchief

bump


48 posted on 03/11/2005 8:21:29 PM PST by beebuster2000
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To: dpwiener
One can appreciate Rand's philosophy and her intellectual genius without requiring that she be the kind of perfect human hero depicted in Atlas Shrugged.

When I was 16, they seemed like perfect human heros. On further reflection, her heros seem more like depraved, but talented narcissists.

49 posted on 03/11/2005 8:23:37 PM PST by ModelBreaker
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To: Hank Kerchief

Ayn Rand is one of my favorites and I believe she had class.


50 posted on 03/11/2005 8:33:17 PM PST by Big Horn (Rummy has done a great job.)
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To: Hank Kerchief

Bump for later.


51 posted on 03/11/2005 8:34:27 PM PST by Euro-American Scum (A poverty-stricken middle class must be a disarmed middle class)
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To: Hank Kerchief; HankReardon

You did ping Hank Reardon, didn't you?


52 posted on 03/11/2005 8:39:22 PM PST by Blood of Tyrants (G-d is not a Republican. But Satan is definitely a Democrat.)
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To: Hank Kerchief
"...a viscous character assassination..."

I imagine a character assassination taking place in molasses.

But perhaps he meant "vicious"...

53 posted on 03/11/2005 8:43:17 PM PST by Redbob
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To: Hank Kerchief; armymarinedad; ken21; West Coast Conservative; ShadowDancer; Larry Lucido; ...

It would be great to get Mel Gibson to produce and direct a remake of the movie based on Ayn Rand's novel "The Fountainhead". There is a scene where the architect Howard Roark gives a speech in his own defense at his trial. There is so much in that speech that is a direct indictment of all the leftist PC mumbo jumbo that is accepted without question in the media and by people in general today. The speech is long but it is so beautiful in its reason and logic. I think that speech alone is so powerful that I want to see the movie made just so that people get the context of and then the blast of that speech. Mel has the values and instincts that would do justice to it on film.


54 posted on 03/11/2005 9:00:48 PM PST by Wuli (The Vindication of Ayn Rand)
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To: Hank Kerchief

I've met both Brandens, and while I may not care for Nathaniel personally, he's not the monster this guy tries to make him out to be.


55 posted on 03/11/2005 9:30:21 PM PST by aynrandfreak (If 9/11 didn't change you, you're a bad human being)
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To: dpwiener

Great post. I'd heard stories about Rand berating questioners. That's not my approach to the less rational, but I'd still have loved to ask her some questions myself.


56 posted on 03/11/2005 9:34:27 PM PST by aynrandfreak (If 9/11 didn't change you, you're a bad human being)
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To: SteveMcKing
Even objectivists must operate within their own reference frame

Just because you're using a frame of reference doesn't stop you from being able to observe the objective world around as honestly as possible.

You should use all the information you have to make good choices. Why throw out certain facts?

Objectivism advocates using all of the information you have to make good choices. It just holds that emotions may not be real information. It's subjectivism that throws out facts for personal whim.

What's the difference between loyalty and favoritism, for example, if I'm going to embrace my wife, even when I KNOW she's wrong? No Objectivist can expect to fulfill the requirements of a marriage contract, where some blind loyalty need exist (and I wouldn't have it another way, nor would she)

Just because you think your wife is wrong about something doesn't mean that she still represents a supreme value to you, and so it's not worth fighting over something minor. Love shouldn't be blind loyalty, but open acknowledgement that you both provide value for each other.

Two apples are two different apples, and so all things are different as the space and time they occupy helps define them, in my opinion; a is NOT a - they are two different "a"'s)

Each apple shares universal qualities with all other apples (shape, taste, etc), the things that make us identify it as an apple. In that sense, they are both apples at that time, until something acts upon it to change it's nature (being eaten, rotting, etc). At the same time, each apple has a specific identity apart from the other apples. Everything that exists has a specific identity. That's what A=A is trying to explain.

57 posted on 03/11/2005 9:49:57 PM PST by aynrandfreak (If 9/11 didn't change you, you're a bad human being)
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To: FreeKeys; RobFromGa

Thanks for the ping!


58 posted on 03/11/2005 9:51:28 PM PST by aynrandfreak (If 9/11 didn't change you, you're a bad human being)
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To: Bear_Slayer

Hilarious!


59 posted on 03/11/2005 9:52:23 PM PST by aynrandfreak (If 9/11 didn't change you, you're a bad human being)
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To: Hank Kerchief
They lied to her about themselves, the state of their marriage, their multiple sexual affairs, and Nathaniel Branden’s secret four year love affair with another woman while he was supposedly carrying on a sexual liaison with Rand herself.

Yeah, now dare they lie about their sexual affairs when Ayn and Nathanial had a compact to lie about their own extra-marital liason? That's where the lies started, and it was Ayn Rand who initiated the affair and urged they keep it secret -- as opposed to the honest route of informing their respective spouses and seeking divorces. There is no great moral gulf between co-conspirators in this kind of moral deception. They are all guilty. The main difference, as I see it, is that Nathanial Branden finally realized he couldn't in conscience continue to act as spokesman for Objectivism (or any coherent philosophy for that matter) when he was morally compromised. So he took a bold step to 'come clean'. I don't criticize Rand much for initiating the affair. It was how she handled the dishonesty aspect that reveals her flaws. Throwing a fit and slapping someone in the face just for telling the truth is not consistent with a healthy, rational approach.

Her generous nature was unable to conceive the full truth about Nathaniel Branden.

In other words, her subjective considerations disabled her rational mind from perceiving the truth about a man she had closely associated with, professionally and romantically, for many years. She declared him the spokesman for her own philosophy. How could she know he would dare to disagree with her one day and reject her as the prophet and perfect embodiment of the saving philosophy she offerd to humankind? Aw, one almost feels sorry for the frail thing. But let's get real. If she could dish it out to others, why should she be immune from honest criticism of glaring character defects? By the way, both Nathanial and Barbara's books have more nice things to say about Ayn Rand than negative, the latter's bio has a palpable air of admiration, even reverence for Rand, despite the hurt Barbara suffered. Nathanial's book shows admiration for aspects of her work and personality, and when he criticizes her, it is in a sort of uncomprehending manner, as if 'how could someone who so eloquently defends the rational and ethical act so contrary?' But his criticism is also tempered by his frankly acknowledged culpability.
How does this amount to 'viscous (sp) character assassination'?

In contrast, Rand never admits and ethical missteps, just as she never found need to revise or refine her philosophy. Born perfect???

She was, in the broadest analysis, a cult leader, who rose to prominence less on the brilliance of her writings than on the passion with which she advocated and defended them. Passion coupled with acerbic, uncompromising intellectual clarity - that is her great contribution to philosophy and our culture. But at at least one critical point in her life, passion overcame reason. Adultry is a sin, whether you think in Christian terms (as I do) or Aristotelian terms, as Rand did. Because deceiving the ones you love and associate with means living a contradiction, betraying people's trust. Still, I wouldn't say that she ruined her life by any means, or put her in a moral leper category. No idealist can live up to his philosophy unless he or she happens to be called Christ, imo. Everyone falls short of the mark. But to elevate Rand to 'goddess' status, free of any taint of the dreaded 'irrational' or 'subjective' is pure hero(ine) worship. And I find that pretty irrational.

60 posted on 03/11/2005 10:25:46 PM PST by ARepublicanForAllReasons (Don't worry. My suit is triple-flameproof)
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