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25 Years Ago: The Objectivist Reformation

Posted by WDonway 9 years, 3 months ago to Philosophy
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How David Kelley won me to "Open Objectivism" 25 years ago

My own happiness and values, the work I did and the people I loved, gave meaning to my life. But if you should ask whether or not I had any significance in the world, in its destiny, I would say that I had the intellectual honesty, at age 17, to see the greatness of "Atlas Shrugged"--and that 25 years ago, in New York City, I attended a meeting called by my friend, David Kelley, to announce his dramatic public break from an Objectivism taken by Leonard Peikoff down a road toward closed, doctrinaire conformity, retreat from debate and challenge, and tests of loyalty. I already had agreed to serve as a trustee of the new "Institute of Objectivist Studies," and I did so for some 20 years, but that evening in a hotel on Lexington Avenue, the audience excited and inspired in a way I rarely have seen, I heard not a rousing campaign speech for a new "party," but what surely was one of the most rigorously philosophical, uncompromisingly intellectual presentations of fundamental issues that ever blessed a movement's "schism."

To listen to David's speech again, after 25 years, brings a smile. What speaker, for what new "party" or movement, ever won cheer after cheer from his audience with discussion of Intrinsicism and Subjectivism versus Objectivism in epistemology? What speaker ever quietly told his restive, excited listeners, in a Manhattan hotel meeting room: What we are meeting about, tonight, is a disagreement about the nature of objectivity?

Forgive me for injecting this : It was glorious from the start! The audience that packed the room was made up of refugees, exiles, from the the philosophy and movement that they had risked so much, faced so much ostracism to support--refugees who had been told that they had failed the loyalty test. And to them, David Kelley said: I, too, was tempted to walk away and leave Objectivism to its terminal dogmatic slumbers--but the ideas are too important to me, and to the world, and I cared for too many people who had invested too much in the vision of Ayn Rand.

As I listen, again, to his almost hour-long exposition of the conflict defined by Leonard Peikoff's "ex-communication" of him, and David's systematic response, I realize--as perhaps I did not realize, then, in the excitement of the occasion--that that evening David defined "open Objectivism" in terms and exacting standards are those of today's Atlas Society. To do so, he ranged over the history of philosophy and its great movements--Platonism and Aristotelianism--that shaped the evolution of 2000 years of Western civilization. He defined what made a philosophy specific and complete, so that we understood that if Objectivism was to become more than the "ideas of Ayn Rand," become one of the few philosophical movements that have carried their thrust and impact through centuries of restatement--Objectivism must become not "the ideas of Ayn Rand" but certain essentials that define what makes Objectivism original, what it contributes that is new to the world of ideas--a philosophy that joins the main currents of thought, identifiable in many guises, for centuries to come.

David's exposition of those innovative essentials amounted to an intellectual tribute to Ayn Rand, highlighting her originality and importance, and, in doing so, what interrelated system of ideas defines "who is an Objectivist"--but leaves a world of interpretations and applications to be tested and accepted or rejected by Objectivist thinkers.

Looming over the audience that evening was the sense that we were meeting, now, without so many who once were our friends and colleagues, and perhaps never again would be, and the question: What could have so separated us from them, who seemed to share every idea?

What had infected Objectivism for so long, David said, what had tainted the fellowship of wonder and delight at Ayn Rand's ideas--the discovery all of us cherished as the most important moment of our lives--was a kind "tribalism." That, of course, is another of Ayn Rand's brilliant explanatory concepts. Most of us felt that Objectivism defined our direction in life, what was true, but for some Ayn Rand herself had become their standard and ideal. To them, she came to represent what we must believe.

I admit that I smiled at this, too. I had felt it. I received the very first issue of the "Objectivist Newsletter," and every issue thereafter, through the "Objectivist" and the "Ayn Rand Letter." But the most surprising part of following Ayn Rand's ideas, month by month, was that she endlessly surprised us. We thought that we understood her ideas, her principles and her system, and that, now, it was clear how we must judge issues that arose. Except that, again and again, she surprised us. On accepting federal college scholarships (sure, it's your money or the money of your parents), on competing governments (what happens when you and I fight and your government comes to save you and mine comes to save mine?), and a woman as president of the United States. Every issue had some surprise for those who knew her philosophy but had forgotten that above all we must look at reality.

David Kelley's "campaign" for his new "party" was a philosophical exposition, logical step by step, giving fair recognition to attacks on him, answering them. It was an evening when we became exponents of a philosophy of reason. The price we paid was to relinquish the sense of superiority and security we had cherished as paid-up Objectivists. We no longer belonged to the tribe. For some, as W.H. Auden wrote--no, let me say, only, for myself--"We wandered lost upon the mountains of our choice. Freedom was so wild."

But, by the end of that historical evening, that had changed, for me. I knew with far greater exactitude what I believed, what was "Objectivism," and why it represented a great philosophical revolution. And I knew that in years to come I would be discovering, identifying and defining, what Objectivism implied in every area that concerned me.

I could accept, I think, that I was an "open Objectivist," but that is not the way I put it, not in my own mind. For so long, I had learned my Objectivism with others, some who became officers and directors of the Ayn Rand Institute, and that I never have seen again, and they had challenged me, again and again, if I knew "what Ayn Rand said."

Now, although Ayn Rand, her ideas, and her novels were whatever was left, in me, of "worship"--of reverence for truth and the good--I was on my own. Now, it was real: my mind, my responsibility, and my relationship--unmediated--to reality. Did David Kelley "give" that to me that evening in New York City?

No, that would not be true. David did for me, that evening, what John Galt did. Do you remember? In Atlas Shrugged? Someone asked Galt how he had brought them out on strike the great heroes of capitalism? Do you recall how he replied?

"I told them that they were right."


All Comments

  • Posted by WilliamCharlesCross 8 years, 11 months ago
    Coming to this discussion long after it has ceased to generate comments, took me back to my "personal moment" regarding the authority of Ayn Rand as a person vrs the overall validity of her ideas. That was the letter she wrote to her subscribers regarding the split with Branden.

    I can look back and feel a little pride that my initial, gut reaction was: NO WAY was I going to stop reading Branden. He had already presented his extended essay on Psychological Visibility in the monthly co-publication with Rand, and it had impressed me with it's original insights, and it's application of introspection tempered with reason. Rand presented no rational reasons to follow her dictates. To me it sounded like a smear job that Elsworth Toohey might have written.

    Lucky for me. While Branden's first book was a nicely reasoned development of a rational approach to psychology, it was the second major book, The Disowned Self, that was the breakthrough in making the process of psychotherapy "real" in a way that no other book, in my experience, ever has. It helped me when help was really needed, and I've always felt a personal debt to him that equaled my feelings for Rand's overwhelming influence in my thinking. I still have my 48 record set of "Conversations," issued monthly in the early 70s. All of this was before the record finally began to be set straight in his and Barbara's books about their personal life and times involved with Rand the individual, and the real reasons behind the split. By then I was assuredly what Rand often denigrated as a "self-styled Objectivist," who had my own life to figure out.
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  • Posted by Robbie53024 9 years, 3 months ago in reply to this comment.
    AR reveled in the cultism that she fomented. How else do you explain the original "collective?" And what about her relationship with Nathaniel Branden? She was not above being treated like a cult hero.
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  • Posted by khalling 9 years, 3 months ago in reply to this comment.
    I am not familiar with the group. I assumed you brought it up in this post as having something to do with the Kelley split. I tried to find something about the group in a google search. also came up blank.
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  • Posted by khalling 9 years, 3 months ago in reply to this comment.
    Well she never mentioned Locke and he clearly influenced her thinking. As to your last statement, Objectivism is not a popularity contest, so what is your point?
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  • Posted by PURB 9 years, 3 months ago in reply to this comment.
    Rand "had some original and important ideas"?

    As opposed to her unoriginal and unimportant ideas?

    My advice is to formulate your ideas more accurately--and don't use demonstrative adjectives (like "some") without realizing how your audience might interpret or misinterpret your intended meaning.

    For instance, I have some original recipes which are likely new to you--perhaps 3 or 4. No more than 6, I suspect.
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  • Posted by PURB 9 years, 3 months ago in reply to this comment.
    morning wigs
    Your unswerving admiration for Rand may be admirable. May I ask you a question?

    How "in fact, in reality, on earth" do you KNOW that he (David Kelley) that "had it not been for Ayn Rand existing in the first place to present the philosophy of objectivism for him to study he would never have developed it himself"?

    I don't suggest that Kelley would have figured out Objectivism on his own. But frankly, IDK.

    What on earth do YOU know that I don't -- and how do you KNOW it?

    "Two questions are involved are involved in every conclusion, conviction, decision, choice or claim: What do I know? --and How do I know it?" (Ayn Rand, ITOE, 1967).

    So, how do you know it?
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  • Posted by PURB 9 years, 3 months ago in reply to this comment.
    Has anyone any familiarity with IFRS? I'd like to own a pamphlet from the night I heard Rand speak on "Censorship: Local and Express".
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  • Posted by PURB 9 years, 3 months ago in reply to this comment.
    Thanks khalling for your question and observation.

    I do, however, question the "similarity" of your question to my posting. Plato contributed originality--whatever its worth, whatever you think of it--to Socrates. IFRS handed out pamphlets to a line outside the FHF, Boston, to an audience assembled by Rand. IFRS did not contribute originality to Rand's ideas (within my memory; I was 16) but were in substantive agreement with her.
    IFRS was not Plato to Rand's Socrates.
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  • Posted by Herb7734 9 years, 3 months ago in reply to this comment.
    It was always a weird situation to me. Somehow, Rand was so powerful and admired, maybe even worshipped that Barbara was able to cast a blind eye to the affair and continue to love A.R., blaming it all on Branden. Everyone in the "collective" seemed to know what was going on and yet, they were so honored to be an "insider" that it was never mentioned.
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  • Posted by Herb7734 9 years, 3 months ago in reply to this comment.
    For a gay guy, he sure married lots of women or had sex with them. He liked being admired, however, and was usually the smartest guy in the room.
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  • Posted by 9 years, 3 months ago in reply to this comment.
    To say that I "lectured" you is to suggest that my comments had a certain bullying quality. My intention was to reply to the issues you raised.
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  • Posted by 9 years, 3 months ago in reply to this comment.
    I agree. So does David Kelley. Never in any possible context did David Kelley suggest that he might be other than a teacher of Objectivism. The only point he made in his talk, which you really must hear, is that Objectivism, like Platonism or Aristotelianism, could be enlarged and applied--and that Objectivism inevitably would be if it became an enduring historic force. Certain specific premises that identify Objectivism as a specific and different philosophy would remain the core called "Objectivism." Meanwhile, of course, any responsible philosopher would insist that there are the ideas of Ayn Rand--hers, immutable, a historic record--and there is "Objectivism" defined as the integrated set of new principles that identify Objectivism as a new and distinct phillosophy.
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  • Posted by wiggys 9 years, 3 months ago in reply to this comment.
    thank you for lecturing me on Ayn Rand. She was the single most important philosopher we have seen. Kelley is an also ran.
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  • Posted by 9 years, 3 months ago in reply to this comment.
    Arguably, although Ayn Rand had some original and important ideas, her real significance was educating and exciting a new generation about the power of the Western intellectual tradition: Aristotle, Thomas Aquinas, John Locke and the Enlightenment, Thomas Jefferson and the "Founding Fathers," Ludwig von Mises and Austrian economics, Victor Hugo and the great Romanticists, and occasionally a contemporary innovator such as Betty Friedan. What she did above all was take the best and most consistent of each of these, integrate those ideas, supply what was missing (e.g., in the argument for egoism, the argument for rights, the justification of Romanticism by the theory of sense of life) and present them in novels that made those ideas alive and thrillingly important and "relevant" to the young intellectual. It is almost humorous when you consider that in her novels, in order to appeal to the fire of youth, its natural rebelliousness against the establishment, she made big businessmen into REBELS against the establishment! How is that for a Romantic magic trick? The one debt that perhaps she suppressed was to the contemporary Catholic philosophers expanding the thinking of Thomas Aquinas. Isabel Patterson, a brilliant intellectual and Ayn Rand's mentor, was a Catholic intellectual and introduced Ayn Rand to the modern Thomists, from whom she got some of her epistemology, such as the theory of concepts. The only thing in the Thomist system that she left out was the Unmoved Mover, or "God," probably for fear of tainting her philosophy. She did acknowledge Aquinas in general with high praise, saying that she acknowledged a debt to "one and a half philosophers": Aristotle and "half" of Thomas Aquinas. More than half; all she left out was what Aquinas saw as the one ineluctable premise of his epistemology: the unmoved mover. It is worth noting that Objectivism was selective in its borrowings. David Hume is presented as the climax of irrationality (his theory of causality--event to event--versus that of the Thomists (identity causes action); but every one of his arguments against God is accepted and advanced against the Thomists--who supplied much of the Objectivist epistemology. Oh, what a tangled web we weave...
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  • Posted by 9 years, 3 months ago in reply to this comment.
    No one means that David Kelley "reformed" Objectivism in the sense of its ideas. If, again, you listen to what he said, you will see that he "reformed" a kind of cultism that had grown up around Ayn Rand and that she, certainly, would not have wished and that went against the whole spirit of her philosophy. David Kelley has not suggested any revision of any idea Ayn Rand put forward. He did write a book arguing for an eighth Objectivist virtue, benevolence, which met all the criteria Ayn Rand set for virtues and was implied by the virtues she did identify. The book presenting the case for adding the virtue of benevolence is available; it does not mean, in any sense, altruism or even kindness; it states that an openness to others, and an assumption that they are of value--until proved otherwise--is a fundamental aspect of rationality in dealing with people and a principle of high importance in pursuing ones rational happiness. That is the kind of possible development of Objectivism that he meant. And if that threatens a constant tinkering with Objectivism, then realize it is the only change that David Kelley advocated in 25 years and he thought it momentous enough to warrant an entire book in evidence and justification..
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  • Posted by wiggys 9 years, 3 months ago in reply to this comment.
    What you are missing is the fact that Ayn Rand concretized those whose ideas preceded her. she recognized their importance and did not take the credit herself for everything she said because she always recognized where the information came from. However, she is gone 25 years now and her ideas have gained a larger foot hold than before she died. also, the Ayn Rand institute has grown substantially over the years because her ideas have been proving to be so valuable. as for Kelley versus Peikoff, I am quite sure that Pweikoff has a substantially larger audience or following than Kelley.
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  • Posted by khalling 9 years, 3 months ago in reply to this comment.
    she claimed much more...but that was the sticking point...maybe betrayal? but she clearly was willing to betray Barbara.and even dangle carrots to appease her, which was not reasonable to Barbara's own talents and initiative
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  • Posted by khalling 9 years, 3 months ago in reply to this comment.
    well, all i know is he had important friends who he spent much time with. I don't know why we cannot speculate on this. I think he was gay. sue me
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  • Posted by Herb7734 9 years, 3 months ago in reply to this comment.
    In my area, Lee Shulman, also a shrink, organized the first of what he called the Ayn Rand Society. Shulman and his wife became close friends with Branden and right after Branden moved from NY to California, they soon followed him. Since I knew the Shulmans on a social basis, I got to know Branden on a little closer level. He truly worshipped her, but when she found out he was having an affair while still married to Barbara, she blew her top, not seeming to realize she was doing exactly the same thing.
    "Lord what fools these mortals be." Puck in Midsummers Night Dream.
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  • Posted by edweaver 9 years, 3 months ago in reply to this comment.
    True but we would not have gotten a constitution had he and other not compromised on that subject. I was the way of the time. I believe I heard he was good to his slaves. True or false I don't know. Was not there. Again not condoning. :)
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  • Posted by Herb7734 9 years, 3 months ago in reply to this comment.
    That's a good point. The Detroit area Objectivists couldn't believe the break-up between her and Branden had anything to do with sex. Of course it must be some deep, meaningful philosophic difference. And, the opinion was on her side making Branden out to be a villain. He was her equal in every way except in the writing department. When the truth came out it was a blow. It was as if a son was having sex with his mother. Then there was Frank. Living in the shadow of Rand must have been like paddling a canoe in a hurricane.
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  • Posted by term2 9 years, 3 months ago in reply to this comment.
    You are right about that. BUT, this dude claimed to be one of the founding fathers !!! Probably holds him to a higher standard I would think. I can understand that in that period, sending your slaves out into the world could actually put them in considerable danger, so maybe he was at least somewhat good to them and protected them within his plantation.
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  • Posted by khalling 9 years, 3 months ago in reply to this comment.
    this is a sticking point with me as well. The government sanctioned institution I can see she might ignore. The personal pledges she made with Frank and he to her we do not know, and those would be the important pledges and not our business
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  • Posted by edweaver 9 years, 3 months ago in reply to this comment.
    I am not condoning owning slaves because I find the idea repulsive, but I suspect his dislike for slavery and owning slaves is very similar to people who despise government programs and yet take full advantage of them. If it is legal and you don't take advantage of it, you're put at a disadvantage. It is an intentional part of the system of dependency and how many people do you know that turn down government subsidies or grant? :)
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