Do I qualify to be an Objectivist

Posted by rlewellen 10 years, 4 months ago to Philosophy
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I joined this site because I shared a thought process with Ayn Rand. long before I read Atlas Shrugged I was quite aware of the lack of logic that was raining down in our society. Logically I wondered how do people come to such opposing views of the world around them? The conclusion is there are people that use their emotions as their guide more than logic.. Do all people have the ability to look at every subject without emotion? No. What is the purpose of our emotional side? I suppose it aids in the survival of our species because without it we would drifting through life alone focused only on our own survival. Our spouses would only serve to satisfy a momentary purpose. Our children would be a drain on our resources. Our parents would eventually become useless to us so we could leave them if they were injured or ill.
I believe in God and if I debate you on this matter I will point to many emotional as well as logical reasons. Does this mean I am not an Objecitivist? I was an Objectivist long before I knew anything about Atlas Shrugged I was looking at the world and evaluating it based on logical conclusions for a long time. Was I supposed to take the Oath before I slapped down my $4.00 a month? I wouldn’t because I have a child that may depends on me for the rest of his/her life or mine. Everyone does not reach the same conclusion about every topic discussed on this site are they supposed to? Do they have to reach all of the same conclusions as Ayn Rand?
God. I paid my $4.00. to engage in Objective debate not subjective debate. Two people can reach very different conclusions on the same


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  • Posted by xthinker88 10 years, 3 months ago in reply to this comment.
    I think he is clearly arguing though that it is possible for reason and emotion to conflict. And that the right answer is not to always reject emotion in favor of reason.
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  • Posted by xthinker88 10 years, 3 months ago in reply to this comment.
    He goes on to talk about repression.

    "A clash between mind and emotions is a clash between two assessments, one of which is conscious, the other might not be. It is not invariably the case that the conscious assessment is superior to the subconscious one; that needs to be checked out. The point is not that we follow the voice of emotion or feeling blindly, it means only that we don't dismiss our feelings and emotions so quickly; we try to understand what they may be telling us; we don't simply repress, rather we try to resolve the conflict between reason and feeling. We strive for harmony, for integration. We don't simply slash away the pieces of ourselves that don't fit our notion of the good or the right or the rational."
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  • Posted by xthinker88 10 years, 3 months ago in reply to this comment.
    My thought is that it would seem that it ought to be but that I do not believe that it is for several reasons. Obviously I could be wrong. This is a fascinating topic though that I wish I had more time to study and explore. But clearly some people that want to live do not have a fear of falling. And in fact, their lack of this fear might even make them less likely to fall.

    Here is a quote from NB in the Benefits and Hazards article. I think that he agrees that emotions proceed from value judgments but I need to go back to his books to see what he says about it. I'm not convinced that he means exactly the same thing by that statement that AR did.

    "Now let's turn to another very important issue in the Randian philosophy: the relationship between reason and emotion. Emotions, Rand said again and again, are not tools of cognition. True enough, they are not. Emotions, she said, proceed from value judgments, conscious or subconscious, which they do in the sense that I wrote about in The Psychology of Self-Esteem and The Disowned Self. Emotions always reflect assessments of one kind or another, as others besides Rand and myself have pointed out."
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  • Posted by xthinker88 10 years, 3 months ago in reply to this comment.
    I'm not an expert in that field either but I've had discussions about this with psychologists and have read about it and would respectfully disagree.

    While one could have emotional responses concerning the value premises one has accepted and/or chosen, many emotional responses are not even fully about the event that triggered them but are magnified by and contain emotional content from earlier life events. It seems to me that this is clearly demonstrated in phobias. While a rational person values their life and not falling from a height, the fear of falling is present in people to various degrees (in the case of a phobia to an extreme and debilitating degree) and in some people seemingly not at all. This emotional response does not seem to correlate very well or at all to the value premise of not dying in a fall.

    I think there are probably even far better examples. In meditation for example, people often find that all sorts of emotional responses begin to come up even though there is no triggering event - merely because the mind is relaxed.
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  • Posted by dbhalling 10 years, 3 months ago in reply to this comment.
    I am not an expert on psychology, but to say the least I am skeptical. Most people I know have emotional responses that are a result of one of their value premises. However, many people have contradictory value premises, so that can make it difficult to discern.
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  • Posted by 10 years, 3 months ago in reply to this comment.
    I have been down that road of examining my own thnking many times. I don't have all the right answers it's taken me 4 years longer. That's why we're here.
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  • Posted by xthinker88 10 years, 3 months ago in reply to this comment.
    Ok. I was just confused. My pride is not hurt easily in these conversations though as I've increasingly realized that I'm not a one-stop shop for "all the right answers". It's only taken me 47 years. :)
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  • Posted by xthinker88 10 years, 3 months ago in reply to this comment.
    You believe what is true? the above quote?

    My pride isn't hurt. The actual psychologist in the Collective has said repeatedly that AR did not understand psychology or know much about it. And he has stated that that is a potential flaw in the way her thinking is presented.

    You had emotions way before you were even capable of having a "value premise" or a premise of any sort.
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  • Posted by xthinker88 10 years, 3 months ago in reply to this comment.
    The original Objectivists even called themselves the "Collective". It may have started in humor but the accounts I've read suggest (ok - they outright make the case - I'm being weaselly with "suggest") that the core group became very Collectivist in style if not in content.
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  • Posted by 10 years, 3 months ago in reply to this comment.
    A very smart person once told me that most arguments start because someone's pride is hurt. I believe it's true, that doesn't mean that your pride is unimportant, though not always rational.
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  • Posted by xthinker88 10 years, 3 months ago in reply to this comment.
    I've always wondered why Ayrn Rand so vehemently reacted to the philosophy, politics, and economics of the Communism of her youth but accepted its theology.
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  • Posted by xthinker88 10 years, 3 months ago in reply to this comment.
    I don't know where I am with the "God" question. That said, clearly there is room for general benevolence. NB talked about that in his hazards and benefits article. He argued that AR accepted that idea but never really let it get to the forefront in her books.

    I would argue that when the "Gulch gang" jumped on aircraft and risked their lives to rescue John Galt, they were doing so because they valued him as a friend and for his contribution. I don't think there is anything incompatible in that idea and objectivism but I think it is given scant attention in AR's works. Your example seems to be of a similar kind. If I were walking down the street, and a man was raping a woman that I did not know, and I could stop it - I would. I think even at risk to myself. Is that altruism? I don't think so. I would rather help her at risk to myself than to live in a society where a rapist got away with his crime right in front of me.

    AR I think touches this in her Philosophy: Who Needs It? speech which was to the 1974 graduating class at West Point. She honors them and says that they are not sacrificing. They are potentially risking their lives for the values they hold dear.

    Ironiically, on the religious question, CS Lewis argued vehemently that Christianity, at its heart was not about altruism. That the ultimate motive was to gain the ultimate prize for oneself. And it was that prize that made all others pale in comparison. Of course, one has to believe in that prize first but he actually went so far as to argue that Kant created the idea of altruism and self-sacrifice (that the ONLY moral action is one in which you do not personally benefit) and that it was actually contrary to Christian teaching.
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  • Posted by xthinker88 10 years, 3 months ago in reply to this comment.
    "An emotion is an automatic response, an automatic effect of man’s value premises. An effect, not a cause."

    That is just not true. Ayn Rand unfortunately did not know a lot about psychology. Emotions may or may not have anything whatever at all to do with your value premises. Because of this, it is very easy to have a clash between your emotions and your reason.
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  • Posted by $ WillH 10 years, 3 months ago in reply to this comment.
    No, I did not take your comment wrongly; I just did not see it when you made it. It must have arrived on one of those Email strings the board sends. LOL

    I think it depends on how someone adopts Objectivism in their lives. I think some see it as the end all philosophy, basically the truth of the entire universe. Others take pieces and parts of it and compose their own hybrid philosophy, combining it with their own religious beliefs.

    I find that the world is so full of altruism and the belief in the virtue of need that these two sects of Objectivists waste time and energy when they argue with each other. Debate is fine, and even good, but Objectivists and Religious Objectivists have far more pressing enemies than each other imo.
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  • Posted by Robbie53024 10 years, 3 months ago in reply to this comment.
    I so don't want to go back to the threads that I participated in in the Gulch during AS2. If you really are interested, I'm sure that you can go back and read them from that time.
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  • Posted by Robbie53024 10 years, 3 months ago in reply to this comment.
    Perhaps you didn't take my sarcasm as intended. I think you presented a very good argument, and was merely chiding other "purists" that insist that to be faithful, one must be atheist.
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  • Posted by m082844 10 years, 3 months ago in reply to this comment.
    I admire you for putting yourself out there. To answer your original post, it depends on what concept you mean by objectivist.

    If what you mean by objectivist is someone who agrees with most of the philosophy, then sure.

    If you mean someone that agrees and adheres to that philosophy's fundamentals consistently, then no. Christians believe and require faith (believing without observation) which contradicts a major fundamental in objectivist philosophy -- reason (belief based on observation among other things) as man's only absolute.

    Or if none of those concepts fit what you're trying to say, feel free to define what you mean when you use the term objectivist.

    For a good series of books on Objectivism's complete answer to the question of the super natural I recommend:
    1. Introduction to objectivist epistemology (as a foundation)
    2. Atheism: a case against god (as an application of #1 to the question of god's existence)
    3. First few chapters of OPAR (as a rough outlined sketch of essentials)
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  • Posted by Rozar 10 years, 3 months ago in reply to this comment.
    I think about so many things in a day, I often wish I had more time. I would benefit greatly from being able to talk to someone who thinks like me. I could also apply my thoughts to actions easier, instead of bickering about why, I could start working with someone on the how.

    Of course I didn't really mean any of that when I first made my statement. I only meant that after 23 years I haven't met anyone who thinks like me, so if I discovered them I would be pretty dam interested in how they wound up like me.

    I mean really, if you met a clone of yourself you wouldn't be interested in it?
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  • Posted by khalling 10 years, 4 months ago in reply to this comment.
    yes, those things are true. However, the philosophy of Objectivism is logically consistent throughout. You may choose to reject some or all of the philosophy but it has axioms, corollaries, logical ends. The parts of Objectivism you appreciate come from philosophical foundations. To ignore those foundations is to ignore the logical conclusions you appreciate.
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  • Posted by khalling 10 years, 4 months ago in reply to this comment.
    point to a specific comment or post on this site, please r. that's the best way to start.
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  • Posted by khalling 10 years, 4 months ago in reply to this comment.
    I appreciate your points. Respectfully, we will disagree on this. While we argue concepts and issues, we also appreciate what we agree on. We are posting in this site for a reason and we share many of those reasons.
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  • Posted by 10 years, 4 months ago in reply to this comment.
    Both the religion and the philosophy have a foundation of principles they use as a guide, Judgement of others is rejected in Christianity, so it is not collectivist. If you choose to call yourself a Christian and don't try to follow those principles that is on you, You follow Objectivism because it gives you the type of information you seek to survive,to get along with others, resolve disputes, improve your life, to make the world a better place that is the goal of both.
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