Posted on 03/16/2009 6:21:45 AM PDT by shove_it
Ayn Rand died more than a quarter of a century ago, yet her name appears regularly in discussions of our current economic turmoil. Pundits including Rush Limbaugh and Rick Santelli urge listeners to read her books, and her magnum opus, "Atlas Shrugged," is selling at a faster rate today than at any time during its 51-year history.
There's a reason. In "Atlas," Rand tells the story of the U.S. economy crumbling under the weight of crushing government interventions and regulations. Meanwhile, blaming greed and the free market, Washington responds with more controls that only deepen the crisis. Sound familiar?
The novel's eerily prophetic nature is no coincidence. "If you understand the dominant philosophy of a society," Rand wrote elsewhere in "Capitalism: The Unknown Ideal," "you can predict its course." Economic crises and runaway government power grabs don't just happen by themselves; they are the product of the philosophical ideas prevalent in a society -- particularly its dominant moral ideas.
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(Excerpt) Read more at online.wsj.com ...
Yeah, she’s wrong. She’s another victim of worldly religions that were established to deceive and enslave. These are unlike Biblical Christianity which she probably had no exposure to until she was already hardened against God.
Since Rand speaks my thoughts, but I have no standing when it comes to stating her position on children, I went back to AS for reference. After paying closer attention to John Galt’s speech (who I think was her stand-in), I believe that the birth of a child, when it is to a mother who values children, represents the product that helps her achieve happiness, selfish though that may be. This is completely consistent with her philosophy.
What if you are wrong, then what will you do?
The absence of children (or mothers) from her work mitigates contra, as they say.
And children, by the way, are not products. They are human beings with souls and free will.
But it's been around for a long, long time -- as long as evil has whispered that you can get something for nothing.
Hbr 11:1 Now faith is the substance of things hoped for, the evidence of things not seen.
Faith is substance and evidence. I’m not wrong. The question assumes there’s a possibility I am. My faith doesn’t allow for that possibility.
It's also completely idiotic.
Are you really saying that a mother has a responsibility toward her children only if she "values children?" That's clearly wrong.
Did Rand really suggest that the purpose of children is to "help her achieve happiness?" It means that my child exists solely to make me happy: his life is meaningless except in relation to my own. What, then, of Rand's statement about men being ends in themselves, etc.? The two concepts cannot both be correct; and since children obviously exist as individual human beings, the idea that they exist to make us happy contradicts reality -- and by her own standards, the claim must be rejected.
Which means, obviously, that there is a different moral imperative at work, when it comes to children.
Rand seems to treat children as somehow peripheral to her philosophy. This is unsurprising: Rand's philosophy completely breaks down when it comes to the subject of children; and I believe Rand was aware of the difficulty it posed, and dishonestly glossed over it.
Consider: Rand went so far as to relegate sex to a mere "exchange and expression of values," rather than an exchange of reproductive material that, when the two parts come into contact, actually creates children. I'm pretty sure she knew where babies came from ... and really didn't bother to address the fact in any coherent way.
Why not? Well, because the moral implications of children are antithetical to her philosophy. It is simply not possible to "be an end in ourselves" when we are also responsible for the proper upbringing of our children. We do not simply take care of them for our own good, after all: we are also responsible for preparing them to lead their own lives. We are a means to our children's ends, just as surely as we are a means to our own ends.
Agreed.... but you might have noticed that what we have idealized as "western culture" was not built on "being against" whatever, so much as it was built on the creation and propagation of a better approach to life; and those new ways were created by consideration of their own merits, rather than reflection upon what those ways were not.
One cannot win the battle by being "against socialism." To win, requires an alternative, which has to be sold on its own merits.
Let’s give it some thought and keep our statements simple. I didn’t say anything about responsiblity. If the mother doesn’t value her child, then she will be a lousy mother. Please be honest and don’t try to tell me what is right and what is wrong.
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