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Previous comments...
Many fiction writers would never attempt to live the same kind of lifestyle, depicted in their own books. A portion of the writer's personality is infused, of course, but we must remember to separate fantasy from reality.
From what I understand of Ayn Rand's adultery, she still loved her husband, but simply took on another lover. Maybe there is much more to that story than what I've read,
For an excellent presentation on how Ayn Rand lived see Michael Paxton's documentary film Ayn Rand: A Sense of Life and the companion book.
https://estore.aynrand.org/p/292/ayn-...
At the end of Atlas Shrugged she wrote:
"My personal life is a postscript to my novels; it consists of the sentence: 'And I mean it.' I have always lived by the philosophy I present in my books—and it has worked for me, as it works for my characters. The concretes differ, the abstractions are the same."
You will find several mentions of connections in different respects between her life and specific characters scattered through her writing and speaking, such as the character Dominique in The Fountainhead as Ayn Rand "in a bad mood", but the Paxton film and companion book is the most biographically comprehensive source directly on this subject.
Thanks for the clear-cut response and explanation.
I have a question. My copy of the documentary (2-disc DVD set, which I bought a few years ago) does not have any books in it. Is the book you mention a separate publication? A quick search did not find a book with that title. Can you help me, please?
All the best to you.
Sincerely,
Maritimus
Dagny looked for Galt her whole life, consciously, and several passages discuss her despair that she will never find him. I think that was actually Rand's despair. Dagny's lovers were the closest to that ideal as she could find at that time, but she continued to yearn for "him". Having found him, she looked no further.
That can do a number on your emotional processes.
Other than that I think that Ayn loved both men and found a different type of solace in each one.
Then I heard about how this effects sleep patterns which she was well known to stay up until all hours.
It is just a theory but it might solve a few mysteries.
Edit:sp
On the other hand, I have known drug addicts who had overly active sex drives...
Hmmm...
Well, I can't say I wasn't expecting the usual feminist brigade there to downvote anything they don't like.
I'm a bit disappointed, though, that political correctness has such an influence on this particular forum...
Rand made many mistakes in her writings, and she was internally inconsistent at times. For example, Rand’s more explicit sex scenes seem to be rape fantasy oriented, including the initiation of the use of force. The theme is clear in both “The Fountainhead” and “Atlas.”
Wikipedia says ( http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rape_fan... ): “Studies have found rape fantasy is a common sexual fantasy among both men and women. The fantasy may involve the fantasist as either the one being forced into sex or as the perpetrator. Some studies have found that women tend to fantasize about being forced or coerced into sexual activity more commonly than men.”
Maybe Rand portrayed her rape fantasy in her writing and acted out her animal desire for sexual variety with Branden and others not yet known or whose identities were suppressed to keep the idol from having clay feet. I suppose it depends upon the fantasy of the participants.
True freedom (personal and economic) requires morality and recognition of inalienable rights endowed by our Creator.
Had she this faith, it would have only served to strengthen her already stellar work and her marriage.
If you could understand that the word "faith" simply means: "To see patterns and extrapolate from those given patterns" then you would already realize that Ayn had great "faith".
If you read the gospels and highlight the places where Jesus remarked about a certain person's "faith" you will see that each person has an innate ability to see patterns to come to conclusions...or deductively and inductively reason.
She had great reverence for reason, logic, the absolute nature of things (i.e.- A is A), but she failed to understand that reason for those absolutes is God.
Again, I'm a Rand/Atlas devotee, but she was entirely wrong in her atheism.
You have expressed contradictions, too many to count. You do not belong here.
I wish you fair travels away.
You know, I am amazed to find, in this place, so many people with so limited abilities to distinguish the principles and sort out the logical consequences of those principles.
Makes me sad, somehow.
Stay well, dear K.