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Previous comments... You are currently on page 3.
Stability in government policy was part of the constitutional system to prevent emotional short terms swings. It could not guarantee a future free society without regard to the ideas that spread within the culture over time. That is why Franklin called it "a republic, if you can keep it."
Contrary to Edmund Burke and the conservatives, appeals to tradition, including the Constitution, are not the intellectual basis of a nation and not a substitute for philosophy.
You are advocating political reforms without regard to the intellectual foundations necessary for a culture to attain them (as was already described throughout the novel before the ending). That is your contradiction. You promote a higher threshold for legislation knowing full well that the support of individual rights required for that does not now exist, yet said nothing about the requirements for it, which you now degrade as nothing but "marketing". That is thoroughly anti-intellectual.
Your assertion that I am contradicting myself is false, unfounded, and gratuitously insulting. A proper philosophy is not "accomplished" by "marketing"; it is spread as correct ideas always are through understanding of the content, which I consistently advocate and you characteristically undermine as if it were irrelevant and impossible.
Atlas Shrugged was not written to promote escapism in an impossible survivalist utopia.
Everyone's actions depend on his ideas. The course of a nation and a cultural depend on the ideas people accept, not a pre-determination of doom. You are not just ridiculing the plot in Atlas Shrugged, you are rejecting the entire theme, Ayn Rand's philosophy, and the possibility of philosophy and human success.
And thanks for going to effort of making posts like this.
amental change in philosophy; the Catholics and the Protestants both believe in the same mystic-altruist philosophy, and Original Sin. But I think that why he broke with his former Church is because he found that it had added a lot of things to Christianity that were not in the Bible; he wanted to "reform" it, but found that impossible. I hold no brief for the Christian religion, but I was just making a sort of analogy between trying to reform something (for instance, the public school system), that cannot be reformed, accepting the fact, and leaving to start something new.
Otherwise they have no one to blame but themselves.
name = fltech password = Brenner
slides #2, 33, 114, 171, and 172
AS movie photos are used with permission.
Atlas Shrugged was romantic fiction with the theme as the role of the mind in man's life and in society, not a prescription for collapsing a country to take over without regard for philosophical ideas.
You are ridiculing Atlas Shrugged with malevolent projections of what would happen as a sequel to the collapse at the end of the plot in Atlas Shrugged that are irrelevant and miss the point of both the novel and everything Ayn Rand explained about what is required to reform this culture. Ayn Rand did not share such a deep-seated malevolent cynicism over the nature of man preventing a happy ending to the novel. Neither are the millions of inspired fans who are are not ridiculing it.
Check your premises.
The plot in the novel did not deal with "preparing a society for Objectivism" and the purpose of the Valley was not to preserve what what was worth preserving until anyone else was "ready for Objectivism". The strike served the sole literary purpose of illustrating the role of the mind in human life and society by showing through the fictional device of a strike, with artificially highly accelerated action, what happens when the mind is withdrawn. The artificial fictional acceleration of time allowed return to the outside world much sooner than had been expected, but that world had not been made "ready for Objectivism", which was never an issue in the novel, only the collapse of the looters in power.
Ayn Rand wrote the scenes in the Valley in order to show how the best people interact with each other, in essentialized form of romantic fiction, without the distraction of the events in the outside world. It was not a prescription for a utopian survivalist society or a utopian future country, and not a call for a "strike" to bring down the country. She subsequently explained at length what is required in non-fiction for reform of this society through the spread of the proper philosophical ideas.
Yet we see a whole cadre of those focused on doom ignoring the intellectual requirements as they pursue a floating abstraction in search of a survivalist utopia. This has been pursued by a very small fringe group off and on for over 50 years, including such impractical schemes as starting a new country on a floating reef in the ocean, all of which she denounced in her lifetime.
In order to make the point of her theme of the role of the mind Ayn Rand's romantic fiction was intentionally not "realistic" She was very realistic in explaining what must be done in this world.
It is you that is the one who is contradicting yourself. You will never accomplish your philosophy as the basis for reform unless you successfully market it. Granted, that is an extremely tall order, one that I don't think is possible, but you have absolutely no hope for ever having a society based on Objectivism without at least a lot of marketing.
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