Two book recommendations
I highly recommend the following book
1. Brave New World Revisited (Kindle Version)
2.Understanding Objectivism: A Guide to Understanding Ayn Rand's Philosophy (Kindle Edition)
I don't have print copies so I don't know if they are available or not.
1. Brave New World Revisited (Kindle Version)
2.Understanding Objectivism: A Guide to Understanding Ayn Rand's Philosophy (Kindle Edition)
I don't have print copies so I don't know if they are available or not.
I have an edition on my bookshelf. :) BNW is Staple food for thought.
SHAMELESS PLUG ALERT: a book along the same vein, is my work Shadows Live Under Seashells. (thanks again Mike).
A very long time ago. Only remember bits a pieces
I'd also like to add Kurt Vonnegut's Harrison Bergeron: It is the year 2081. Because of Amendments 211, 212, and 213 to the Constitution, every American is fully equal, meaning that no one is stupider, uglier, weaker, or slower than anyone else. The Handicapper General and a team of agents ensure that the laws of equality are enforced.
"... the fact is, since you're in a very small intellectual minority, if you're an Objectivist, you're going to quickly conclude that people in general are rotten and that life is miserable." (page 351) His answer may not be satisfying, as he offers no pollyanna reply. By a string of examples, he suggests that a reasonable person, an Objectivist, must navigate a dreary swamp of depressing nonsense. The best you can hope for is good friends - a good spouse - and the knowledge that the purpose of Objectivism is to make you happier.
Page 170, the Q&A for Lecture 5: About Peikoff's list of 20 key items, arranged hierarchically, a student asks: "If metaphysics comes first in the branches of philosophy, then why do the first ten items go back and forth between metaphysics and epistemology?" (The list is presented and discussed on pp. 150-166.) Peikoff says: "Because metaphysics does not come first. Metaphysics and epistemology are simultaneous -- what exists and how we know it are the foundation that starts together. ... The two are completely intertwined."
On that basis, the three fundamental axioms of Objectivism are (page 166 and again page 224):
- Existence. (Existence exists)
- Consciousness. (Consciousness as the faculty of perceiving existence.)
- Identity. (A is A, with corollaries "The Primacy of Existence" and "Free will and volitional consciousness." pp 166-167)
It was a surprise to me after all these years. I always thought that the Three Axioms of Objectivism were metaphysical: A is A (identity), Either-Or (the excluded middle), Non-Contradiction (Aristotle's statement of the law of identity). He also says later that these three cannot be arranged in a hierarchy of their own. The desire for a single root axiom - A is A - is an example of the fallacy of monism applied to Objectivism. (Page 224)
She and Ayn Rand were contemporaries. This book echoes Ayn Rand's thoughts in many instances. I highly recommend it.