Is a quick spread for Objectivism possible?
Tdechaine made a very interesting comment that he thought that Objectivism could spread quite quickly if the differences between it and libertarianism became widely known. dbhalling made a comment listing some prominent Objectivists and some prominent libertarians (followers of Hume's philosophy). While both made excellent points, I have doubts as to whether Objectivism could ever spread quickly. AR was quite rigid about those who espoused her philosophy. She took an "all-or-nothing" approach. The notable disputes between Rand and Nathaniel Branden, and between David Kelley and the Ayn Rand Institute suggest that a quick spread of Objectivism would be challenging. For the record, I agree with most, but not all, of Objectivism, most notably some of Rand's definitions (particularly life (as opposed to conscious human life), as discussed in a recent thread). Is a quick spread for Objectivism possible, or would such a movement splinter? Would Rand even want Objectivism to "become popular"?
I am probably going to surprise some people with this next statement, but one argument against Christianity is its splintering into so many sects.
I am probably going to surprise some people with this next statement, but one argument against Christianity is its splintering into so many sects.
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The Source of Economic Growth by Dale B. Halling.
I would recommend that you PM dbhalling for more details.
http://www.amazon.com/Dale-B.-Halling...
Leonard Peikoff's lecture courses in the 1970s on Objectivism and the way he related Objectivism to the history of Western philosophy are much better. These are still available, now for free packaged on the web or as inexpensive downloads, from ARI. This was the basis of Leonard Peikoff's more extensive book on Objectivism. They are very interesting and informative. This is the detailed non-fiction basis of any intellectual movement following Ayn Rand.
Ayn Rand's so-called "all or nothing approach" regarding her philosophy recognizes that it is an integrated, systematic approach that does not allow for contradictions with its basic principles. Understanding the content and methodology requires time and effort and has nothing to do with side shows of betrayals of personal integrity or malcontents engaging in feuds. To even ask the question, 'would Ayn Rand have wanted her philosophy to become popular?' reveals a lack of understanding of her goals and views on the necessity of changing the philosophy of a culture before it can be changed in practice, which can only be done by understanding the principles and how to apply them, one mind at a time without contradictions and misrepresentations.
The other thing is that whenever you are trying to win "converts" you are selling something, so you have to be able to identify what exactly it is you are selling and how it is better than the alternatives. You also have to have people who are willing to do the selling and identify what will motivate them to proselyte the message. And I use the word proselyte intentionally. There are only a few philosophies who use a reasoned approach to spread the word of their sects without force and in enough volume to matter: the Mormons and the Jehovah's Witnesses. There are plenty who are willing to coerce, including socialists, fascists, Islam, and others, but I would look to the Mormons and the JW's if you want to find out how to effectively proselyte, as those are two of the fastest-growing philosophical movements in the world.
The other thing you are going to have to do is engage people at least weekly in thought discussions to keep them learning and interested. If this sounds a lot like setting up a "church", it probably is because that's been effective.
PS - I agree with you about the splintering of Christianity being its own worst enemy.
Where is the rest? ;-)
The Progressive favors pragmatism, in which philosophy is held to be unnecessary. The only criterion is "stuff that works." Hence any competing philosophy that comes along can be dismissed as unworkable or impractical. Even the study of philosophy is put forth as having no relation to reality.
Islam simply prescribes death for apostates and unbelievers. Unbelievers who are permitted to live are marginalized and are never part of the power structure.
Objectivists have difficulty selling against faith and force. The battle is fought one mind at a time, while the enemy ropes in whole populations. "You are in the XYZ group. Here is how you behave, vote and think." Or in earlier times, "The King of Norway has converted to Christianity. You are now all Christians."
One mind at a time. It does work. Proof: Why do we find Rand and her ideas so hated?
With that bit of negativity out of the way. As a high school teacher I am doing everything in my power to spread Objectivism. I will say that I often feel like Sisyphus pushing against the giant rock that is the Entitlement mentality.
The problem, as I see it, is in the levels and depths of understanding among the individuals. Do not forget: the statists "hate" and "defame" Objectivists just as much as we return that favor to them.
I do not see much effort to organize Objectivist philosophy essential tenets into something that a below average IQ individual can begin to understand and adopt. In our culture, now, intellectuals are mostly denigrated.
I learned by painful experience in my entrepreneurial career that I will rarely succeed at selling something to somebody for the reasons the I think it is a good idea.
So far we have done a great job of selling Objectivism to ourselves and people already like us, but we have saturated that market. Spending more resources aiming the same sorts of activities at the same sorts of people and organizations is yielding rapidly diminishing returns, which in turn is yielding rapidly diminishing resources.
What if we were to use Objectivist concepts to create practical tools and methodologies in business improvement and personal development (two already massive and still exploding industries) that would enable people to better achieve what they currently already want - better happier more fulfilling lives and relationships and more productive, higher performing more profitable businesses and careers?
I call this "Stealth Objectivism", and I have been doing it for 15 years in my executive and enterprise coaching work. Minus the nomenclature, people remain open minded to concepts they might otherwise resist or reject (in the form of Objectivism), and in trying the tools and achieving the results they value, their thinking begins to evolve and their worldview begins to transform - without them realizing it except in retrospect.
The icing on the cake is that people and business would be actually paying us for the services and products we create (perhaps, quite lucratively)!
My talk at the Atlas Summit addresses this both directly and indirectly, as well as presents a tool such as ones of which I speak.
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