The Curse of Ayn Rand's Heir

(theatlantic.com)

118 points | by Michelangelo11 17 hours ago

20 comments

  • gcp123 16 hours ago
    The tragic irony of Objectivism is perfectly captured in Peikoff's life story. A man who dedicated himself to a philosophy of radical independence ended up defining his entire existence through dependency. First on Rand, now apparently on his caregiver-turned-wife.

    I met Peikoff at an ARI event in 2009. He was surprisingly warm in person, but you could see the weight of being "the heir" in how defensively he responded to even mild questions about Rand's work. Now reading about the fracture with his daughter over the estate, it's like watching Atlas Shrugged's plot play out in real life: the bitter disputes over Rand's intellectual property mirroring the novel's battles over physical resources.

    What's most disturbing isn't the personal drama but what this reveals about how Objectivism operates in practice. For a philosophy obsessed with reason and independence, its institutional guardians seem remarkably focused on excommunication, loyalty tests, and controlling access to primary sources. The gap between preaching individualism while demanding conformity has always been the movement's central contradiction.

    • hinkley 16 hours ago
      Something life and then later therapy has taught me is that intellect can paper over a lot of shortcomings, but it’s just paper. At the end of the day situations that involve humans always involve feelings. And you stunt your growth (personal or organizational) if you try to pretend it isn’t the case.

      The problem with intellectualizing is that it’s very good at employing itself to avoid all other options. If you get too old pretending otherwise, the road back is full of brambles and many would rather double down than accept it.

      Once you understand this it’s easy to see the hollowness in what Rand offers, if it wasn’t already patently obvious to you before.

      • BosunoB 14 hours ago
        I fell into Rand in high school and it took me a few years to climb out.

        The problem with believing in the primacy of reason is that it's incredibly distortionary. In reality, we all think and reason with respect to our ego and our emotions, and so if you believe that you are engaging in pure reason, it can lead you to pave over the ways in which your emotions are affecting your line of thought.

        In this way it can quickly become a very dogmatic, self-reinforcing way of thinking. The ironic thing is that becoming a better thinker is not done by studying logic, but instead by learning to recognize and respect your own emotional responses.

        • BoiledCabbage 12 hours ago
          > The ironic thing is that becoming a better thinker is not done by studying logic, but instead by learning to recognize and respect your own emotional responses.

          This is the single thing that in my opinion both the young and also the naive miss. But people who are wise usually seem to understand.

          Not everyone learns it with age, but it usually takes some amount of life experience for people to learn it.

        • wintermutestwin 13 hours ago
          Great post! I think it all comes down to self awareness. The more you are aware of your conscious and unconscious biases, you are the more empowered to mitigate the resultant rational failures.
        • autoexec 14 hours ago
          Most of our choices aren't thought out and logical. Our emotions and lizard brain drive most of our actions, but some of us are very good at quickly coming up with justifications and rationalizations for what we've just done that are plausible enough that we end up feeling in control.
        • sevensor 13 hours ago
          Yeah, “think for yourself, and if you disagree with me that means you’re doing it wrong” is a heck of a way to run a school of philosophy. It’s no wonder she hates Plato, he’s constantly challenging people in their settled beliefs.
          • dr_dshiv 10 hours ago
            Why did she (explicitly) hate Plato so much?
            • Avicebron 10 hours ago
              > The "extreme realists" or Platonists, . . . hold that abstractions exist as real entities or archetypes in another dimension of reality and that the concretes we perceive are merely their imperfect reflections, but the concretes evoke the abstractions in our mind. (According to Plato, they do so by evoking the memory of the archetypes which we had known, before birth, in that other dimension.)

              I think the concepts of forms and shapes rubbed her the wrong way.

              Here's a quote from Piekoff that I think explains why much better than what Rand would have written.

              > Momentous conclusions about man are implicit in this metaphysics (and were later made explicit by a long line of Platonists): since individual men are merely particular instances of the universal "man," they are not ultimately real. What is real about men is only the Form which they share in common and reflect. To common sense, there appear to be many separate, individual men, each independent of the others, each fully real in his own right. To Platonism, this is a deception; all the seemingly individual men are really the same one Form, in various reflections or manifestations. Thus, all men ultimately comprise one unity, and no earthly man is an autonomous entity—just as, if a man were reflected in a multifaceted mirror, the many reflections would not be autonomous entities.

              • yownie 1 hour ago
                something I've always wondered about but never fully grasped about Platonists before. thank you for the wonderful explanation.
            • heavymetalpoizn 9 hours ago
              [dead]
        • alabastervlog 12 hours ago
          Despite heading in more and more romantic directions in my thinking—from a very-analytic start—I don't find the core problem with Rand's thinking to be primacy of reason, but sloppy (or, motivated—it can be hard to tell which) reasoning that leads to ultra-confident conclusions. A consistent pattern is you'll see a whole big edifice of reasoning out of her, but peppered about in it, and usually including right at the beginning, are these little bits that the cautious reader may notice and go "wait, that... doesn't necessarily follow" or (VERY often) "hold on, you're sneaking in a semantic argument there and it's not per se convincing at all, on second thought" and then those issues are just never addressed, she just keeps trucking along, so most of the individual steps might be fine but there are all these weird holes in it, so none of it really holds together.

          I've even, after complaints about this were met with "you just didn't start with her fundamentals, so you didn't understand", reluctantly gone all the way to her big work on epistemology(!) and... sure enough, same.

          I find similar things in basically anything hosted on the Austrian-school beloved site mises.org. IDK if this is just, like, the house style of right wing laissez faire or what.

          • kbelder 10 hours ago
            I don't think it has anything to do with being right wing -- Rand despised and was despised by much of the right wing -- but more to do with her traditionalist method of doing philosophy. I'd even call it Russian-influenced. I think Rand approached her philosophy from a literary perspective, and viewed her philosophy as a grand treatise that addressed every important aspect... an entire philosophical system. The overbearing rigidity and confidence sprung from this. It is very 19th-century in feel.

            It is very different from a modern, more scientific approach, where we would view the system as a work in progress which would be refined over time. It would have been better for Rand to say about (for instance) free will, "it may function this way" or "we can make at least these statements about it", but I think Rand was not constitutionally able to couch her beliefs with qualifiers. It hurt her philosophical arguments, while at the same time perhaps made her a more interesting author.

            I'm not an Objectivist, despite being sympathetic, because Rand created it and wouldn't agree that I was one. The reason is because I would tweak her philosophy. I'd incorporate some Bayesian probabilistic arguments into her metaphysics and epistemology, which she would despise. I'd modify her ethics with findings from game theory. I'd fold insights from cellular automata and chaos theory into her philosophy of consciousness. The broad swaths would be mostly the same, but it would no longer by Ayn Rand's Objectivism (tm).

        • tmnvix 12 hours ago
          I've always considered reason to allow for emotional motivations, as opposed to rationality, which does not.

          Edit: Iain McGilchrist makes a useful distinction here https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iUJDsdt7Pso

      • klank 15 hours ago
        I had what I thought to be an immensely successful 25+ career and personal life based upon my intellect.

        And, as you mention, I grew older, wiser, and realized it was not at all what I thought it was. In my professional life alone I have caused immense harm. Indirectly, sure, but no less real, serious, harm and death. Being unable to escape this fact has caused depression and massive disruption to my personal life.

        But I am not unhappy that I have learned what I have, about myself, about this world. It's horrible, but a more clear, diverse understanding is worth the pain. And as a person, even with the pain, I'm far more comfortable with my newfound place in the world and I'm a far, far better person to the people around me.

        • JKCalhoun 14 hours ago
          I can't imagine what your career was.

          I was a programmer at Apple and have to really scratch my head to think of any way I might have even slightly worsened someone's life.

          • autoexec 14 hours ago
            > I was a programmer at Apple and have to really scratch my head to think of any way I might have even slightly worsened someone's life.

            If you were responsible for itunes I could give you a few examples.

          • klank 14 hours ago
            I (along with others) created pricing optimization software for the multi-family housing industry.
            • chimpanzee 12 hours ago
              You're getting some flippant, dismissive responses, but I applaud your perspective and your acceptance of the partial responsibility you (and most of us) bear. It takes courage, introspection, selflessness, and a broader, empathic worldview. If more people were like you, the world would be a far better place. Thank you.

              That said, I am sorry you've been burdened to the point of depression and personal struggles. It can be a natural outcome of difficult realizations and guilt, but I don't wish it upon someone for longer than necessary to make positive changes in their life (which you seem to have achieved, given your openness).

              • klank 7 hours ago
                Thankfully, it is not difficult for me to see a past version of myself in the flippant or dismissive responses, which makes them considerably less painful. I can only hope the authors are faster studies than I was.

                Thank you for the kind words. They were uplifting and appreciated.

            • wileydragonfly 14 hours ago
              Let me gather some pitch forks..
            • readthenotes1 14 hours ago
              A good apology requires:

              - overt recognition that I have harmed someone else

              - following through on whatever reparations I can make to undo part of the harm

              - actively trying to change myself to avoid making the same type of mistake again.

              --

              It sounds like you have taken this to heart.

            • BeetleB 13 hours ago
              As someone who has dabbled in real estate, this doesn't sound all that bad.

              Yes, some (most? not sure) such companies did some wrong stuff - and perhaps you were involved (you don't really say, so I'm guessing).

              But the category itself? It seems fine as long as they follow the regulations related to price fixing.

              When you said you caused great harm in your professional life, I was thinking more along the lines of "being a terrible person to work with", which is probably more in line with the original person you responded to was thinking.

          • jeltz 14 hours ago
            I have worked with online gambling. An industry where for most companies the bulk of the income comes from the addicts, not the non-problematic gamblers.
            • alabastervlog 12 hours ago
              I thought I could dissociate work-for-pay from my sense of self enough for this not to matter. It's all mercenary work, right? I've never cared about most of it, right? What's the difference?

              I made it about three months in that industry. The pay was great but I was hardly sleeping by the end of the first month.

              I found my limit, I guess.

              • klank 11 hours ago
                I too dissociated from my work and I did it for decades. This is not a healthy thing for a human to do and there will be an emotional debt paid, at some point even if only done for weeks, or months.

                I'm glad you did not last long in the industry, for your personal and our collective goods. I hope you're in a good place today.

            • klank 11 hours ago
              Sadly and unfortunately, in addition to the MFH ills that I have done, I also was involved with optimization for gaming hospitality as well as systems and tools around slots optimization.

              I regret my involvement here as well and am sorry I did what I did.

          • squigz 14 hours ago
            Is it so hard to imagine areas of the software industry that produce real measurable harm? One doesn't even need to go so nuanced as gambling or other such things - how many software engineers does the 'defence' industry employ?
            • KittenInABox 13 hours ago
              There's also software engineers that work in ads. Instagram [known to have a causal effect in eating disorders, which is one of the more deadly mental illnesses]. Health insurance [unitedhealthcare was using software to automatically deny people healthcare-- this definitely has killed people].
          • ASalazarMX 14 hours ago
            Working for a megacorp famous for blatant anticonsumer practices, I have to scratch my head to think of an innocuous IT position inside it. Maybe infrastructure? Even seemingly innocent roles like design have dark patters at their core that use things like green bubbles and social pressure as part of their sales strategy.
            • klank 11 hours ago
              After I left the MFH industry I took a position at AWS. My thinking at the time was this was a safe "infrastructure" position where I could apply myself in relative safety just worrying about bits being pushed around the internet.

              However, after taking a good hard look at my past career contributions, it was impossible for me to not apply the same moral framework to my involvement at AWS. And while it wasn't quite as direct harm in the way of my MFH optimization work, it still wasn't difficult for me to see that if I succeeded, while the bits would flow fast and the metrics would rise high, I wasn't doing good. I was, at best, furthering an exploitive system.

              While I don't feel the same level of regret for my contributions to AWS, I don't feel good about my contributions either.

              • sapphicsnail 9 hours ago
                It's really uplifting to hear this? If it's not too personal, what shifted your perspective? Have you been able to reach out to people in a similar situation?
            • hinkley 13 hours ago
              I’m sure the employees of Bayer and their suppliers told themselves the same thing during WWII. We’re just making tools and equipment that let the bad guys do their work. We aren’t actually involved in the bad stuff.

              I took a job at Boeing when the 787 was being built, with those fancy engines and airframe designs that improved efficiency considerably. But I did the math and I want to say you still have a bigger footprint in the new planes than driving a family of 3 to the destination in a private car, and that’s before you include Jevon in the picture. Never mind rail or other forms of transit.

              I left that place much less proud than when I arrived. I left before that turned to shame, however.

              • TylerE 8 hours ago
                Can’t drive a car across the corn, though.
          • black_13 13 hours ago
            [dead]
      • chubot 12 hours ago
        I've learned that people will forget what you said, people will forget what you did, but people will never forget how you made them feel.

        - Maya Angelou

        This applies to so many things ... people don't remember what happened, or what's true. They remember how they felt! [1]

        And it makes from a psychological perspective - emotions are basically an evolutionary shortcut for remembering. You can compress a 5- or 10-year experience into an imprecise feeling

        [1] For anybody who thinks they are rational or objective, try keeping a journal for a few decades, and then reading it. Your memory is very selective!

      • kibwen 15 hours ago
        > At the end of the day situations that involve humans always involve feelings.

        My more cynical take is that humans are emotional beings first and foremost, and reason is a distant second at best. And even our pretenses to reason can't be trusted, as they are often just emotion masquerading as reason, and the most insufferable of the reasonpilled are those that refuse to understand this.

        I'm not trying to say emotion/reason are good/bad. What I am trying to say is that any hopes for a human society that place reason above emotion are fundamentally unachievable.

        • hinkley 15 hours ago
          I know some people are pushing back on Thinking, Fast and Slow’s assertions but whether everyone’s brains work that way or not, there’s at least a visible minority of people whose brains do, and I’m among them.

          We do many things based entirely on intuition, and then afterward gin up a reason for having done them that doesn’t make us sound insane, or like five year olds. It’s part explanation/excuse and part description, but presented as description.

          And if you’ve read anything on anger management, there’s a split second where the angry individual is experiencing some other emotion, like vulnerability or betrayal, before they sublimate it into anger. The problem is in how fast and to what degree they perform the substitution, and often even they miss the event, which takes away their own agency in the response. Recovery involves clawing back that agency.

          • hannasanarion 13 hours ago
            Thinking Fast and Slow's biggest issues are in the middle chapters that rely heavily on priming research, which has been pretty thoroughly disproven since the book's release.

            The general gist of the core idea: that there are multiple modes of thinking and some of them are more likely to produce the most rational decisions than others in a given circumstance, is pretty trivially true.

            I think where Kahneman's book does harm is in the implication (intended or otherwise) that "fast thinking" is bad. It's not. Thinking is expensive in time, attention, effort, and skill. We have instincts and emotional reactions for good reasons, they help us navigate crises when there isn't time for deep thought, and they are the consequences that reverberate through the complex web of interpersonal relations that makes up society.

            Your note about anger management is really interesting though. I think there may be a tendency for people to generalize emotions that they feel into flavors that are more externalizable and less actionable. Vulnerability and betrayal are things that inspire changes in behavior, like building up defenses or reorienting loyalties, but when you're angry, well then you're just angry, and the only thing that will make you stop being angry is the world being different.

            I think there's another version that I experience often, where I see my partner doing cool fun things with other people, and my brain triggers jealousy, which like anger is externalized and inflictive. If I slow down and spend some time with that feeling and drill down into it, I usually conclude that what I'm actually feeling is envy, which is more actionable: i can go get/do the thing that I am envious of (like make a plan to do the cool fun thing with my partner or somebody else in the future) and then I won't be envious anymore, without having to make the world change for me.

          • BeetleB 13 hours ago
            > We do many things based entirely on intuition, and then afterward gin up a reason for having done them

            This is much better covered in Haidt's "The Righteous Mind". He goes into detail on when this happens and when it doesn't.

            What studies have shown (and jives well with my experience): For topics you believe involve morality, this is precisely what happens: You make the decision, and the rationale follows. It happens so fast even you believe the rationale comes first.

            One of the ways they tested it was by showing that moral decisions tend to have no cognitive load. If you ask someone something that requires cognitive load (e.g. analyzing some data), they slow down significantly while multitasking with trivial activities (e.g. putting lots of food in an organized way in the fridge). But when posed with issues of morality, they show no slowdown.

            • kbelder 10 hours ago
              Or, issues of morality are mostly trivial.
        • drdaeman 13 hours ago
          > any hopes for a human society that place reason above emotion are fundamentally unachievable

          If you haven't read it, you may enjoy Robert Sapolsky's "Determined: A Science of Life Without Free Will". I haven't yet finished it (only halfway through the book) but I found it a very fascinating read so far, no matter whenever one agrees with the conclusions or not. And I think it resonates and kind of confirms your comment, coming at it from a neurological viewpoint.

          The book basically outlines which parts of the brain are responsible for our decision making. While I understand that he's drastically [over]simplifying things for readers' sake (as it's always the case with pop-sci), it provides a nice overview (a bunch of fun facts, with references to the actual scientific research where they came from) of how our decisions are heavily influenced by a lot of various things, in the context of your comment specifically - the processes going on in our brains that we can roughly call "emotions".

        • BeetleB 13 hours ago
          > What I am trying to say is that any hopes for a human society that place reason above emotion are fundamentally unachievable.

          What is sad is that you label this with cynicism, whereas everyone else considers this fundamental to life.

          • kibwen 12 hours ago
            Again without trying to make an overall value judgment on emotion vs. reason, one of the things that is attractive about reason is that it has built-in capacity for self-correction, i.e. we can use logic to prove that our own logic is faulty, and this is an ordinary and non-traumatic event. In contrast, self-correcting an emotional process is something an individual might spend a lifetime struggling with, if they can even identify a problem in the first place. To suggest that people are fundamentally emotional animals is to suggest that individuals cannot be expected to improve themselves.
        • 8bitsrule 15 hours ago
          > any hopes for a human society that place reason above emotion are fundamentally unachievable.

          Hopes for mutual checks and balances between the two might be, for some if not all.

        • QuadmasterXLII 15 hours ago
          we spend most of our lives playing iterated prisoners dilemmas, a game which presumably can be cracked by some godlike intellect, but which is far beyond the capabilities of our current philosophy. Emotions, put well to use, do well at this task.
          • hinkley 15 hours ago
            That’s probably why we evolved emotions in the first place. First to create and protect your own offspring and then to allow allegiances against the elements and other creatures.
            • klank 14 hours ago
              To add to the conversation:

              If it is accurate to consider the philosophical concept of a valence as a fundamental building block of emotions, then I think I'm fairly comfortable going a step further from just the evolutionary explanation of emotions to a more positive directive around emotional development within ones self and the support of that development within others as being a deeply moral action as well.

      • randysalami 15 hours ago
        I think this exact phenomenon is shown pretty well in the series, Better Call Saul with Chuck McGill.
      • zerealshadowban 15 hours ago
        >the road back is full of brambles

        v.good image, thank you

      • zpeti 14 hours ago
        I think you have to consider personality types when discussing things like this. Rand seems to me like she probably had Asperger’s, which explains why she is attracted to rationality, and her heroes are like that too.

        That works for some people.

        I read Nietzsche after rand and I thought his philosophy had some similarities to rand but from a more emotional perspective. They say very similar things about being yourself and being selfish, but one from rationality the other from emotions.

        For me the difference between musk and Steve jobs demonstrates this. One is an engineer entrepreneur the other an artist entrepreneur. Both incredibly successful but couldn’t be more different, but of course both are assholes too and took what they wanted from the world.

        • hinkley 14 hours ago
          I’m talking to a group of people I assume to be substantially software developers, and the facts on the ground are that many of us are attracted to this field by logic, and we are all encouraged in college and for a few years after to invest every spare moment into CS and not any other endeavors. Don’t socialize without an agenda, don’t develope your EQ, just computers and logic all the time.

          That consumes most of the years when your prefrontal cortex is still malleable.

          Once you understand that, the consequences are everywhere you care to look.

          And while it’s true we have twice the density of the general population of neurodivergent people, we nearly all of us make ourselves neurodivergent in the pursuit of this field, whether we are born with it or not. When we eventually find time for hobbies and charities we find out we don’t think like everyone else, and often not in a good way. We have “missed out” on experiences others take for granted.

          • jocaal 9 hours ago
            > When we eventually find time for hobbies and charities we find out we don’t think like everyone else, and often not in a good way. We have “missed out” on experiences others take for granted

            Could you expand a bit on this statement for the young and inexperienced.

          • godsinhisheaven 13 hours ago
            People certainly can make themselves neurodivergent, but I think most people are born that way. I think there are lots of reasons why CS and tech at large is full of neurodivergent people, but I think people are joinging because they are neurodivergent, not the other way around. That being said, there are lots of neurodivergent people in finance and (the higher levels of) politics, they're just mostly psychopaths.
    • kashunstva 16 hours ago
      > what this reveals about how Objectivism operates in practice...the movement's central contradiction

      Is it only the gatekeepers of Rand's legacy that exhibit this discrepancy, or was it contradiction from the beginning? I seem to remember the first Objectivist herself accepted assistance from the Federal government near the end of her life.

      Anyway, to someone with a distant outsider's view of this movement, it can seem that it misses something fundamental about the human psyche as it evolved to operate in co-dependent groups.

      • btilly 15 hours ago
        Accepting assistance is perfectly in accord with her philosophy.

        You can verify her position from https://courses.aynrand.org/works/the-question-of-scholarshi.... She views taxation as theft. Those who agree and advocate against this theft, may morally accept government largesse as restitution. But those who accept both the taxation and the redistribution become complicit in the theft, and are therefore immoral.

        There is a lot to criticize in her views. But this piece of it is not inconsistent. Only bizarre to someone who doesn't understand her.

        • glenstein 14 hours ago
          Right, and I think there has unfortunately been an avalanche of low effort gotchas along these lines.

          My favorite (or least favorite?) example is from Jennifer Burns' biography Goddess of the Market, which charges that title "The Fountainhead" was a haphazard last second choice, selecting a word that never appears in the novel. But slight problem with that, a climactic conversation about ideals, perhaps the climactic articulation of values in the book, occurs between two main characters who use the term "fount" as a stand-in term for the wellspring of human creation, value, and meaning. Fountainhead, then, is who the main character is, and nothing other than typical artistic restraint in selecting a title that simultaneously points to the intellectual center of the novel without being browbeating about the term itself. I actually emailed Jennifer Burns and pointed this out at one point but didn't hear back.

          I do think the collapse of many of Rand's closest interpersonal relationships, the depression and drinking that her husband went into, as well as the legacy of her institute and estate, are quite damning. As of course is the shallow treatment of complicated topics, the fundamental misunderstanding of Kant that inspired the name of the whole philosophy, and the inapplicability of principles to mortals who wrestle with personal flaws. Those are real, but the social security thing isn't.

          • btilly 12 hours ago
            One of the major reasons why there are so many low effort gotchas is that her message is so emotionally uncomfortable for many. Facing what is legitimate in her criticisms is hard. And so people only consider her views long enough to come up with easily rejected caricatures. The arguments that they then use to reject those caricatures show how they did not actually process her point of view.

            But this is not just a problem that faces non-Objectivists. For example consider how Ayn Rand rejected the scientific evidence for smoking causing harm. She never had a logical argument. What she had was such an overwhelming emotional commitment to smoking being good that she would latch on to any plausible sounding argument against smoking being bad.

            For a more current example, look at Alex Epstein's arguments on global warming. It quickly becomes apparent that he has such a strong emotional alignment with the great good caused by fossil fuels that he easily accepts any argument, no matter how flawed, that they might also cause harm. Compounding the trouble, global warming presents the exact kind of tragedy of the commons that undermines the economic theories by which Objectivism should lead to an economic utopia. This fact adds to the emotional dynamics for ignoring evidence that reality doesn't actually work in the ways that Ayn Rand claimed.

        • amanaplanacanal 11 hours ago
          That's still very self serving. The taxes she paid were spent on something else, the largesse she received was stolen from somebody else. I guess receiving stolen goods was ok in her philosophy?
        • ceejayoz 14 hours ago
          The ability to explain away hypocrisy is not the same as a lack of hypocrisy.
          • glenstein 14 hours ago
            I mean if it's a good explanation, then it most definitely is the same as lack of hypocrisy.

            I do see how you can squint and feel that there's something there, after all Rand imagined a capitalist utopia. But it's not at all a crazy argument to understand accepting the benefits as a recovery of resources that were rightfully yours to begin with. It's actually refreshingly coherent and responsive, and a huge contrast with how modern public figures don't even pretend to address instances of personal hypocrisy.

            I might raise a little bit of an eyebrow but I don't see the knockdown gotcha, and if you do, well, you've gotta make the argument.

            • ceejayoz 14 hours ago
              > But it's not at all a crazy argument to understand accepting the benefits as a recovery of resources that were rightfully yours to begin with.

              I rather suspect Rand's politics didn't include giving land back to Native Americans, or paying reparations to slaves.

              • glenstein 14 hours ago
                Great point and no disagreements from me there, it's actually a great illustration of an intellectual blind spot her philosophy is practically helpless to address.

                But one comment ago the subject was social security, and I don't think the charge of hypocrisy sticks on that one.

                • ceejayoz 14 hours ago
                  > But one comment ago the subject was social security, and I don't think the charge of hypocrisy sticks on that one.

                  But that difference is the hypocrisy!

                  "I get to have this… because it was taken from me! No, that doesn't apply to your thing, because… uh..."

                  • glenstein 13 hours ago
                    We could live in a world where there was no injustice visited on Native Americans and Ayn Rand still either was or was not a hypocrite about Social Security. But I think Rand neutralized that by putting it in the context of losing money via taxation and recovering it as a benefit.

                    What's essential to that argument is what's contained in Rand's philosophy about taxation and her personal actions in electing to receive the benefit. Broadening the scope of the argument to include Native Americans in order to sustain the charge of hypocrisy is an indicator that the Social Security argument is not able to stand on its own.

            • btilly 12 hours ago
              The fact that it is a good explanation, doesn't mean that hypocrisy is missing. It is quite common for us to do things for one reason, while actually being motivated by a second, unacknowledged, reason.

              For example consider this case. When we become dependent upon another's largesse, it is easy to emotionally deal with it by holding the other in contempt. Thereby making it emotionally comfortable to accept the largesse, and hiding from any potential feeling of guilt. For example Ayn Rand did an excellent job of portraying this dynamic on a personal level with the example of Lillian Reardon. Who holds Hank in contempt exactly because it keeps her from having to face how much of a parasite she has become.

              I've seen Objectivists fall into exactly this dynamic. When their contempt for the government becomes a way to avoid thinking about how dependent they have actually become on said government, continuing to spout Ayn Rand's justification becomes hypocrisy. And as long as the underlying emotional reality is ignored, it remains hypocrisy no matter how logical and reasonable the explanation may be.

              • glenstein 12 hours ago
                We must have fundamentally different ideas of what it means for something to be a good explanation. It takes more than gesturing toward the hypothetical possibility of acting due to unacknowledged motives for it to count as a best, or even good, explanation.

                I used to follow a lot of RSS feeds and the political blogosphere when that was a thing. And one of the best was Brendan Nyhan, and he had a routine segment criticizing op-ed sections for fabricating internal monologues of political actors, making assumptions about internal states of mind that could never be disproved and proceeding to analysis that depended upon such unfalsifiable speculation.

                I think it was a good principle against which to judge media accountability, and I would generalize by saying that such speculation involves relaxing the norms that usually apply to critical thinking writ large. At the level of genre, this category of speculating I would say does not enjoy default legitimacy due to its departure from normal critical thinking principles relating to substantiation and a fundamental lack of interest in responding to arguments on their merits.

                • btilly 12 hours ago
                  I'm arguing for the hypothetical possibility that an Objectivist could have hypocrisy on this. The argument that any individual Objectivist actually does requires a tremendous amount of additional information.

                  I do personally know some Objectivists who I believe are hypocritical on this matter. But that is based on years of interaction, and I wouldn't expect you to be convinced of that simply because I said it.

        • imtringued 22 minutes ago
          The problem is that if you do understand Any Rand, then she herself is the biggest tax advocate in history. Therefore she was one of the most immoral people.

          How is this possible? Creating a tax free society requires more than getting rid of the government. It requires you to build a cooperative society where people willingly help each other out with no expectation of a return. Ayn Rand is the archetypical enemy of such a society.

      • kbelder 15 hours ago
        She addressed the problem with accepting assistance in relation to student tuition assistance. Briefly, she said hate the game, not the player. The students have a structure imposed upon them, and it's not irrational or unethical to take the aid the government provides since the government still regulates them and taxes them in various ways. However, it would be unethical to advocate for increasing that assistance (because the benefit is taken forcibly from others).
      • notahacker 16 hours ago
        Even her fictional utopia Galt's Gulch is basically a commune, a commune where people cosplay at being hardnosed capitalists who won't give anything for free by charging each other token amounts for everything...
        • lazystar 15 hours ago
          Exactly - theyre all non-conformists, and you can be a non-conformist and join them in their commune if you act just like them in every way.
        • fireburning 9 hours ago
          [dead]
      • thrance 16 hours ago
        Not really a defense of this clown ideology, but Rand would be acting rationally (if a bit hypocritically) by accepting the Government's check. In her views, it's the State that's acting irrationally by offering support in the first place.

        On a similar subject, she believed disabled people (or more generally, people unable to work) should not receive any help other than from "voluntary charity" [1], a fact I find absolutely disgusting and should discredit this ideology to any sane person.

        [1] https://youtu.be/rM4HqlqQYwo

    • cle 15 hours ago
      The irony isn't one of dependency. The philosophy celebrates interdependence and the achievements of groups of cooperating people who take care of each other.

      The irony and tragedy is broader and encompasses both the cult leaders and the cult detractors who are both unwilling separate the ideas from the people.

    • btilly 14 hours ago
      The central problem of Objectivism is that they tie their logical conclusions into emotional knots. You can see this in their use of loaded language such as "theft".

      The problem is that this causes them to believe that their conclusions are purely logical, even when they are not. Therefore any disagreements are "proof" that the other is being illogical and should be rejected. This leads to an intolerance of disagreement, that in turn leads to the excommunication, loyalty tests, and so on. All of which will be expressed in the rhetoric of the philosophy, which is designed to appeal to reason while connecting to emotion.

      It is perfectly predictable emotional behavior. As is the inability to process inconvenient information that does not align with what the philosophy wishes to believe is true.

    • jollyllama 16 hours ago
      > The gap between preaching individualism while demanding conformity has always been the movement's central contradiction.

      Check out Adam Curtis's documentaries for work that zeroes in on this.

    • richardanaya 14 hours ago
      Your understanding of objectivism is deeply flawed if you think the philosophy sees no possible value in the trade between two people. Radical independence in objectivism as a virtue is independence of judgment, not some caricature you present of being an irrational loner.
    • glenstein 14 hours ago
      Could not have put it better myself! After finding myself very inspired by the novels, mostly as an introduction to the virtues of critical thinking and how those can be foundational to a worldview (which is good!), the cracks in the armor really started to show when looking at the community, and especially Rand's relationship with Nathaniel Branden.

      There's lots to say about how Objectivism oversimplifies and attacks caricatures, and doesn't address itself to sophisticated economic thinking. You can get good out of it (I read it during the Bush admin and felt like it was making the same warnings against the excesses of state power that 1984 was), and it's not terrible to expose a person to the virtues of philosophy, and critical thinking. In my case it opened my eyes to moral realism, at which point I traded in any interest in Objectivism for that instead.

      Even if you want to take the novel on its own terms that it has super-intellectual heroes, how humans work is every bit as much a part of reality as the physics of inventing a new metal. And the talent of administering human organizations is never present. It also never really models how mere mortals can reconcile their imperfections to the standards articulated, and is not self aware enough to speak to the population of mere mortals who would misdiagnose themselves as misunderstood heroes.

    • _wire_ 12 hours ago
      All Watched Over by Machines of Loving Grace - Adam Curtis

      https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/All_Watched_Over_by_Machines...

      See ep-1 "Love & Power," on contradictions of Ayn Rand's life versus her philosophy; can be found on yt / vimeo

      Series supplies interesting history for any nerd interested in systems analysis and provides a survey of California Ideology.

      His documentary on the legacy of Henritta Lacks' immortal cells and biology, "The Way of All Flesh" is also interesting food for thought on systems analysis.

    • cmrdporcupine 16 hours ago
      Whenever I go reading about these people and this ideology and community it reminds me a lot of the various Trotskyist or other far left sects and personalities I encountered when I was younger. Similar dramas and egos and personality quirks and strident philosophical emissions, ideologically-focused groups built around persons/personalities. Often involving sexual relationships and dubious power dynamics. Just from, y'know, 180 degree philosophical positions.

      Maybe it was a product of her original linguistic/cultural extraction, but when I read Rand's "Capitalism: The Unknown Ideal" as a teen it reminded me very much of Stalinist or Trotskyite tracts I encountered around the same time. Different positions, same tone of absolute certainty and similar polemical flourishes.

      All of which to say, it all strikes me as more theological than philosophical.

      • sevensor 12 hours ago
        > it reminds me a lot of the various Trotskyist or other far left sects and personalities

        I think she never stopped being a child of the Russian Revolution. It was the formative event of her youth.

      • Pixelbrick 15 hours ago
        Too right. Never trust someone who thinks they have all the answers.
      • lukan 15 hours ago
        "All of which to say, it all strikes me as more theological than philosophical."

        Oh yes, when marxists debate about the interpretation of the holy words of the manifest and how dictatorship is not bad, if only the right people with the right ideological mindset are in charge, then it always annoyed me, that they claim to be rational scientists.

        • cmrdporcupine 15 hours ago
          I mean, I'm a Marxist, and I don't say those things.
          • lukan 14 hours ago
            That would be a good start for a debate then.

            (But maybe not the right place and I don't have my arguments at hand, has been a while that I engaged with marxists)

            • hannasanarion 13 hours ago
              I think they're just trying to inform you that you're painting with a broader brush than you might realize.

              There are lots of flavors of Marxism out there, the one you're describing is often called "Orthodox Marxism" or the closely related "Marxism-Leninism".

              It's now considered pretty outdated, with most of Marxist thought having moved on to less rigid modes of conceptualizing history and geopolitics, like Western Marxism (Frankfurt School), Autonomist Marxism, Eco-Marxism, Libertarian Marxism, Structural Marxism, etc.

              There is a reason that "leftist infighting" is a century-old meme. Leftism is fundamentally a political movement grounded in moral philosophy, but since moral philosophy is an unsolved and likely unsolvable field, fractionalism is guaranteed.

            • cmrdporcupine 13 hours ago
              It is incredibly hard to separate three things, perceptually, before even having a discussion with anybody about these topics, so I rarely try.

              1. Marx and -- various political-economic thinkers who came after him inspired by him -- who were analysts of capitalism and modern society. Maybe also dabbling in prescriptive aspects -- but a lot less than laymen would think. Just full on boring economics or political philosophy concerned with analyzing the present, not describing any future.

              2. Eastern bloc & Maoist "Marxist-Leninism", Stalinism, or whatever which became official state ideology in eastern bloc countries with simplifications of some of the above along with a series of rationalizations for the "way things were" in the USSR and related countries. Usually mangling some form of #1 to do that.

              3. Various Marxist political action/groups/parties/sects which merged varying aspects of #1 and #2 along with whatever else, in various combinations and permutations, to intervene in politics at either an activist level or in political parties, or armed groups etc.

              Especially people who grew up in the eastern bloc definitely perceive I think a lot more correspondence between #1 and #2 than I'd personally say is valid. A whole educational industry was built around it there for the purpose of ideological legitimation of some Really Bad Stuff. With some of that leaking into the west, too.

              And I don't feel it's really a "no true Scotsman" type of statement to say that either. Marx himself had little to say about the future, and just a lot to say about the present (which is still our present). What #2 said about themselves doesn't bear much resemblance to #1 because it wasn't actually the concern of Marx or many of the thinkers who came after. They were critics of capitalism, not prophets attempting to come up with recipes to be used as justification by Slavic autocrats for crimes against humanity...

              • lukan 1 hour ago
                Hm, being born in a stalinist country I definitely encountered more of the Stalinisit interpretations and ideology and they are definitely religion like.

                But I also did met various other marxists and I did read some of Marx books, or rather some pages.

                And I do remember him speaking of the utopian future. And also the part where he thinks, concentration camps for the enemies of the proletariat (everyone who does not want to have his property taken) will likely be necessary.

                So gulags would not be a Stalin invention then.

                (I think I read that in some of the letter exchanges with Engels, will look up)

      • stevenAthompson 16 hours ago
        I think this is an astute observation. Taking any extreme position will inevitably put someone in the position where they find it difficult or impossible to live up to their own ideals. At the far ends of the spectrum everything starts to look alike.

        Ayn Rand herself died while collecting Social Security and Medicare.

        • cmrdporcupine 16 hours ago
          I mean, I dislike Rand's outlook passionately but I would not hold it against her to withdraw from a system she paid into or from living in the framework of society she lived in, even if she resented it.
          • stevenAthompson 16 hours ago
            She wanted to let the disabled starve or beg on street corners so she'd have a tiny fraction more wealth to fritter away. We don't owe her the benefit of the doubt.
            • olalonde 15 hours ago
              I think that’s a misrepresentation of her views. She opposed self-sacrifice but she wasn’t against charity. She supported it when it came from a genuine personal desire to help others (as opposed to a moral duty).
              • InsideOutSanta 15 hours ago
                >She wanted to let the disabled starve or beg on street corners so she'd have a tiny fraction more wealth

                >She opposed self-sacrifice but she wasn’t against charity. She supported it when it came from a genuine personal desire to help others (as opposed to a moral duty).

                These do not seem like contradictory statements. They are just different ways of phrasing the same concept: There is no moral duty to help others, and if people can't get somebody to desire to help them, they deserve to die.

                • olalonde 15 hours ago
                  Phrasing is important though.

                  "She wanted to let kids die from accidental drownings so she'd be able to have a pool."

                  vs

                  "She wanted pools to be legal."

                  • stevenAthompson 14 hours ago
                    When you say that those unable to work "have to rely on voluntary charity" it is functionally equivalent to saying that people should be left to starve when others don't have extra money (IE - During a recession). She was either a short-sighted simpleton who couldn't see that, or evil enough to see it and ignore it.

                    I suspect that it was the latter.

                    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rM4HqlqQYwo

                    • bigstrat2003 14 hours ago
                      You're engaging in a false dichotomy. The possibilities are not "Rand was a dum-dum" or "Rand was evil". There's also the (very likely) possibility that either she was wrong, or you are wrong (and yes, you could be wrong in your analysis even though I don't blame you for not thinking you are), through no fault of character. These sorts of big issues are hard to analyze and get right.
                      • KerrAvon 13 hours ago
                        You seem to be implying there’s some moral gray area on the issue of allowing disabled people to starve? Am I misreading what you’re saying?
              • stevenAthompson 15 hours ago
                You are half-right. She did say that it should be left to charity, but that of course implies that when nobody gives the street corner beggar money they will starve.
                • kbelder 9 hours ago
                  The question then becomes, whose money are you going to take against their will and give to the beggar?

                  And you may believe that this would be a greater good, and a proper role of government... different people may think differently about that, and discussions can be held. Don't gloss over the fact, though, that the only alternatives to voluntary charity are either no charity or involuntary charity.

            • terminaloutpost 14 hours ago
              [flagged]
      • Barrin92 11 hours ago
        >it reminds me a lot of the various Trotskyist or other far left sects and personalities I encountered when I was younger.

        because that is exactly what it is. Rand idolized and worshipped great men and industrialists the way the Soviets taught you too, except through an American funhouse mirror.

        Her individualism wasn't an authentic lived inner freedom of for example Tolstoy (in a religious way) or Stirner (in an atheist way) but simply worship of individuality and particular individuals. It's why it made for a fantastic mass movement and fandom of sorts.

    • trhway 10 hours ago
      >What's most disturbing isn't the personal drama but what this reveals about how Objectivism operates in practice. For a philosophy obsessed with reason and independence,

      ideology. People pervert everything into ideology.

      > its institutional guardians seem remarkably focused on excommunication, loyalty tests, and controlling access to primary sources. The gap between preaching individualism while demanding conformity has always been the movement's central contradiction.

      that can be said about any ideology. Ideologies can be different yet those guardians and the gap between declaration and practice is always the same.

    • yapyap 16 hours ago
      That is pretty funny, in the ironic sense.

      What it feels like to me is the leaders of the Objectivism movement are all narcissists and the followers are paradoxically not Objectivists because they’re following a philosophy instead of being guided by the self.

      Being a peak Objectivist would be to not care about being an Objectivist or not, basically making it impossible to be an Objectivist if you follow the philosophy, even at the top of it because you are dependent on your followers for influence, status and power.

      The irony of it all, turns out a philosophy based on self sufficiency is as big of a grift as a political movement trying to convince everyone that in this day and age self sufficiency is the best move, mostly cause they can’t fathom sharing.

      One of the _most_ ironic bits being that if everyone were truly self sufficient there would be no social hierarchy and no money anymore.

      • MadnessASAP 15 hours ago
        > Being a peak Objectivist would be to not care about being an Objectivist or not, basically making it impossible to be an Objectivist if you follow the philosophy, even at the top of it because you are dependent on your followers for influence, status and power.

        So basically objectivism is the punk of the philosophical world?

        • marcosdumay 14 hours ago
          If you have the extremist definition that says that nobody can actually be punk.
          • MadnessASAP 2 hours ago
            I don't define punk, punk is the absence of definition.
        • gopher_space 15 hours ago
          Punk is more about positive nihilism, from my perspective.
      • gnramires 15 hours ago
        It should be noted: Rand's definition of objectivism doesn't exactly match what you expect from the common sense usage of the word.

        I think Objectivism fails because at least in part it doesn't establish solid enough foundations, and takes as fact unproven things that rely on mountains of suppositions and not always reliable evidence.

        For example, whatever you think of "laissez-faire capitalism" (as supported by Rand), it's very weird to make its defense part of a philosophy, more so as a kind of axiomatic statement. Imagine someone were deep into some math book, say a dense Algebraic Geometry textbook, and it was just declared out of the blue that "laissez-faire capitalism is an ideal system" or something like that. That could even be true within some context, but I think it's out of place. It also relies on so many assumptions and is far from conclusively proven (the way capitalism is implemented also varies considerably today, and I don't agree that being maximally "laissez-faire" turned out to be better, at least not obviously)[1]. I would even understand she divulged her political ideas, but kept separate from the basis of a philosophy.

        Also, like many philosophies, I don't think objectivism survives a closer scientific scrutiny. I suppose there was no firm grasp on what the mind was, or the nature of conscious (there is still some uncertainty, but much more clarity). I like how Dr Rachel Barr (a neuroscientist I follow on social networks) put it: old philosophies, specially about the human mind and soul, made great observations some of which unfortunately (such as that the 'Pineal gland is the principal seat of the soul' as regarded by René Descartes) can be "swept away" and basically definitely disproved by science from a better understanding of the nature of our brains and minds. Some assertions about perception and consciousness seem to be outdated.

        I particularly object (no pun intended) to the basis of ethics as individuals. As I've argued previously[2], we now understand the nature of consciousness to, in my view, not justify an ethics that is based solely on the primacy of self-interest. We are part of a giant network of interactions, and although the self seems like a very important concept for our society, metaphysically it doesn't make much sense to prioritize the self at all costs (even when this prioritization includes some strategic concessions for altruism), though I think it's important that we take care of ourselves for pragmatic reasons, because we basically are the ones that understand ourselves the most and live with ourselves 24/7.

        I think Objectivism (although again I am no specialist, I haven't studied it profoundly) has merits around notions of reality being singular and shared by everyone in one way or another, and (hypothesis mine) if everything derives from a singular reality, by understanding this singular reality we should be able to in a certain sense understand everything (including ethics, art and morality, which I think is highly counterintuitive) -- because our brains and minds which form the basis of such questions are part of reality, as well as any internal processes within those that enable subjective perception and subjective reality.

        I wrote more about this here[3]. Please take a look if you're interested.

        [1] Not to mention, we hardly got to try out 2 (or maybe 3) political systems in any serious way: capitalism and socialism (also perhaps social democracy), although there are a myriad of variations to experiment with as well (forms of voting, systems of regulation, the design of various institutions) that aren't considered when talking about "political systems". Who knows if something else could be better? I think a more general view of society as a whole as a kind of giant system is necessary to understand how to design better societies in general.

        [2] https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=43528352

        [3] https://old.reddit.com/r/slatestarcodex/comments/1iv1x1m/the... Please see the questions where I expanded a little upon those ideas :)

        • glenstein 14 hours ago
          Caveat that I used to be into Objectivism but now would say I'm extremely unsympathetic to it as a project. I don't think it's so odd that a philosophy would venture into economic systems as part of the course to staking out moral axioms and preferred conditions of relations between people. I'm not laissez-faire by any stretch, but there are such things as economic philosophies that wrestle with questions of liberty. Economics is a very philosophical subject, and moral, political, and economic philosophy can become quite entangled, for good reasons.

          While I think your math example is basically right, it would be surprising there, I don't think economic order emerging out of moral and philosophical reflections is particularly surprising.

        • hannasanarion 13 hours ago
          > Objectivism has merits around notions of reality being singular and shared by everyone in one way or another, and (hypothesis mine) if everything derives from a singular reality, by understanding this singular reality we should be able to in a certain sense understand everything (including ethics, art and morality, which I think is highly counterintuitive)

          But this is a violation of Hume's Guillotine. You cannot derive "ought" statements from "is" statements. There is only one reality, and science can tell us how it is, but science cannot tell us how it ought to be, how much we should like it, or in what ways we should want to alter it.

          Rand and her followers fail in their attempted logical chain by leaping from "humans evolved rationality as a tool to survive and enhance their lives" to "enhancement of each individual's life via self-interest is the standard of moral value", which is non-sequitur. Rationality is the ability to make plans and accomplish goals, the fact that it exists does not tell us which goals we should use it in the service of.

          She smuggles in her own pre-existing moral preference when she defines individual flourishing as the ultimate moral good. You can see this very easily if you take the exact same syllogism and substitute "community interest" for "personal interest". In fact this modified version of the argument may be even more valid, since a defining feature of humanity even more than our rationality is our unique community organizing power, which is also evolved, and thus community service also serves perfectly well as an evolution-informed yardstick of moral value.

      • seanhunter 16 hours ago
        Objectivism has many of these sorts of contradictions. Most famously, Ayn Rand herself collected medicare and social security as her health deteriorated towards the end of her life.
        • lumenwrites 16 hours ago
          Is that really a contradiction? We all have our ideals, and we all fail to live up to them sometimes, because life can be brutal.
          • seanhunter 14 hours ago
            Socrates allowed himself to be put to death even though his supporters had bribed the jailer to allow him to escape. Given his philosophy of ethics, even though his trial had been unjust, he felt it was incompatible with his teachings for him to avoid the sentence that had been handed down to him.

            Some people believe that their ideals are important enough to live up to even though life can be brutal.

          • stevenAthompson 16 hours ago
            To be fair, Rand herself said (to paraphrase) that because the state took it from her against her will it was fair play to take it back and I think that was self-consistent.

            That said, she wanted to let the disabled starve to death so I don't think anyone really has to be fair to her at all. Empathy is only for the empathetic.

            • autoexec 13 hours ago
              "Selfish person happily takes from the government, but feels bad about having ever given the government anything" seems pretty consistent to me too.
            • marknutter 15 hours ago
              Ayn Rand did not "want to let the disabled starve to death". What a ridiculous lie.
              • stevenAthompson 15 hours ago
                It is not a lie. She felt that the government had no right to assist, and that they should be left to depend on "charity" (IE - Begging).

                There are also tapes of her saying that the retarded should not "be allowed to come near children," and that children cannot deal with the "spectacle of a handicapped human being."

                • stevenAthompson 15 hours ago
                  Question from audience: [muffled audio which sounds like:] "...why is this culture..."

                  [loud noise which sounds as if it represents a point where the tape has been edited]

                  Rand: [mid-sentence] "...for healthy children to use handicapped materials. I quite agree with the speaker's indignation. I think it's a monstrous thing — the whole progression of everything they're doing — to feature, or answer, or favor the incompetent, the retarded, the handicapped, including, you know, the kneeling buses and all kinds of impossible expenses. I do not think that the retarded should be ~allowed~ to come ~near~ children. Children cannot deal, and should not have to deal, with the very tragic spectacle of a handicapped human being. When they grow up, they may give it some attention, if they're interested, but it should never be presented to them in childhood, and certainly not as an example of something ~they~ have to live down to."

                  - Ayn Rand, The Age of Mediocrity, Q & A Ford Hall Forum, April, 1981

                  *EDIT* Youtube video: https://youtu.be/Q1HD8KXn-kI

                  • glenstein 14 hours ago
                    Great pull, thank you for the quote and the link.
                  • try_the_bass 13 hours ago
                    > Children cannot deal, and should not have to deal, with the very tragic spectacle of a handicapped human being. When they grow up, they may give it some attention, if they're interested, but it should never be presented to them in childhood, and certainly not as an example of something ~they~ have to live down to."

                    There's an irony in here, since this is more of less a summary of the ideology that wants "safe spaces" in schools.

                    Just, you know, with an entirely different set of things that proponents want to shield children/young adults from.

        • MisterBastahrd 13 hours ago
          I don't agree with her worldview, but it isn't a contradiction. She paid into the system.
    • MrMcCall 16 hours ago
      [flagged]
      • IncreasePosts 15 hours ago
        Republicans on average are more charitable than Democrats: https://www.nytimes.com/2018/11/03/your-money/republicans-de...

        Maybe Democrats are less charitable because they are more likely to live in Democratic controlled areas that provide more government services to the needy. However, does that really reflect compassion if you merely live in a system which provides those services through mandatory taxation? A republican moving from Kansas to NYC doesn't become more compassionate simply by paying more in taxes because they have to.

        • JKCalhoun 14 hours ago
          Might Christianity (and the likelihood one group or another is more Christian) have something to do with their charitable giving?
          • IncreasePosts 13 hours ago
            Sure, but why would it matter if it did?
          • MrMcCall 14 hours ago
            In addition to tax write offs.
            • IncreasePosts 13 hours ago
              Tax write offs are available to Democrats equally.
              • MrMcCall 13 hours ago
                That doesn't mean they use them to the fullest, and GOPers are really, really into avoiding taxes. It's like a religion to them, and they are about to crush our economy to make more absurd tax cuts for their rich friends and sycophants.
      • guhidalg 16 hours ago
        I agree with you that the most consistent theory for explaining the current GOP going off the rails is a lack of compassion and empathy for their fellow human beings, replaced by a hope that Trump will smile upon them and be compassionate to them. It's a vicious cycle of signaling, since Reagan, that your government is not compassionate towards you therefore you should not empathize with your government and instead trust corporations (but don't think about their need to make money).

        I don't know how to promote empathy and compassion without relying on religious arguments. I usually find the strictly secular and over atheists are very compassionate and empathetic, but the mildly religious and definitely the evangelists in my life and the absolute _least_ compassionate people to those outside their tribe.

        • MrMcCall 15 hours ago
          > I usually find the strictly secular and over atheists are very compassionate and empathetic, but the mildly religious and definitely the evangelists in my life and the absolute _least_ compassionate people to those outside their tribe.

          Sadly enough, I am of the same opinion, too. That is because true spiritual seeking must accompany humility and love for ALL others, not just of those of their tribe, and most religious practitioners fail that miserably. That is why universal compassion is the only real purpose of religion, as it is the target that we must all aspire to, or we will fall well short of the mark.

          Most people of all ilks fall prey to selfish self-superiority, thinking incorrectly that their path is the only one that is "saved". They are just coldly and completely wrong. That is why one of the Masters said, "That which you do to the least of my brothers and sisters, that you have done unto me."

          > I don't know how to promote empathy and compassion without relying on religious arguments.

          I have settled on this fact: that no human being can survive the first years of their life without selfless, compasssionate care from adults in their orbit. This is the template for human life, but most people do not realize that this care should be attended to by every human being to every other human being as we grow older, where we are hopefully lucky enough to transition from the helped to the helper.

          We know that those with a more comfortable upbringing tend to do better in life, financially, mentally, and physically. If we were to invest, as societies, in the "least of our brothers", we would essentially be the water that lifts all boats, and our entire world would flow more smoothly. The problem is that it would take those who have more to give more, and generosity is a virtue of the spirit that has its counterpart vice, greed, active in our being as well.

          Every human being resides in the crux between the various vices they are susceptible to and the virtues they are presupposed to manifesting. It is incumbent upon us all to honestly search ourselves to find out in which ways we are less virtuous and then seek to become better. There are 19 pairs of vice/virtue pairs in the human being, so that's a lot of whack-a-mole to perform along our lives, but few of our fellows care enough to care enough about others to "Know thyself" deeply enough to do what Gurdjieff called "The Work".

          Caring for the happiness of others is the best balm for not only our own spiritual development, but for the ills of the world.

          Please remember that religion is always a personal affair, involving the internal relationship between the human being and our Creator. It does not enforce Its suggestions on our free will, which is truly given -- that's why there is so much mischief upon our world, and so much resulting suffering. As we Sufis say, "When you take one step towards God, It comes running."

          Self-evolution is the act of manifesting the miracle of defeating our selfish ego over many battles with many losses and less victories. It is how we learn humility, grace, mercy, kindness, and compassion, among all the other virtues. Of course, that requires the person to truly want to become a better person; most people are simply satisfied that they perform certain practices in accordance with their traditions, but that ain't love and doesn't count for shit in the grand scheme of things.

          As Rumi says, "The Way goes in."

          Peace be with you, friend. I am at your service.

  • teekert 16 hours ago
    I also get such energy from Atlas Shrugged, I don't understand why. I know that the good guys are very carefully crafted, they don't cheat, they don't do things like lobbying to win. They don't compromise on their world view to the extreme. They don't have children, that makes it all easier, but also less real.

    Raised christian but feeling burned out by the contradictions, the emptiness of trying to live for others (it's killing for relationships I can tell you), the mental struggle to rationalize all the rules, I too felt that spark. I realize dogmatism is always bad but that voice inside keeps saying: It's not when the theory is perfect! The truth is knowable and can be discovered through reason. How super comforting (and damn that Incompleteness Theorem I learned about later).

    I don't know what it is, my hunger for a system? For rules to make sense of the world? Whatever it is, Rand's philosophy remains so appealing. It's probably the reason I started a company, walk into meetings now boldly, with a goal, why I enjoy things now, just to enjoy myself. As a rational, healthy human, there is nothing wrong with that, in contrast to what my upbringing tried to instill in me.

    Perhaps that's it, it liberated my from a confining worldview. Perhaps another worldview could have done the same.

    • stevenAthompson 15 hours ago
      > I don't know what it is, my hunger for a system?

      Karl Popper called it "monocausotaxophilia". Humans want everything to have a single cause.

      • sram1337 15 hours ago
        "Aha, 'monocausotaxophilia', finally a name for the thing causing all my problems!"
        • teekert 12 hours ago
          That’s pretty funny. It goes into my drawer with jokes like: I’m a biologist, and biologists never generalize!
          • ahartmetz 4 hours ago
            Don't anthropomorphize things, they hate that!
      • impish9208 9 hours ago
        Wikitionary says it was Ernst Pöppel…
        • stevenAthompson 6 hours ago
          You're correct. Apparently it's a common misattribution, and it's been wrong in my quotes.txt file for ages.

          Thanks for catching it.

    • ycombinete 4 hours ago
      I understand how you feel.

      Trying to live in a relationship with a Christian philosophy only works if both parties in the relationship have the same mindset.

      It’s a shortcut to being abused if one partner turns the other cheek, and the other keeps on slapping them.

      I’m still not sure if this identifies poor partners or a poor outlook.

      • teekert 24 minutes ago
        Good insight. My partner is strong willed, more of a Dagny. She respects me and wants to make me happy, does not like guessing what I want because we’ll just end up with stuff we both don’t like. I have a lot of respect for that. I think hers is the better way.

        I now see the conflicts between her and my parents and often she’s like: why don’t they just say what they want? She gets the feeling they do stuff for her/us, but she wants them to do things they like! Of course we really like it if they want to see our children because they like to be with them. Not always because they want to help us out or something indirect. I mean, that’s wat love is right?

    • JKCalhoun 14 hours ago
      I have to say, Quakers are cool Christians if you're wanting to hold on to your faith but abandon the hypocrisy. (I find the Quaker community surprisingly welcoming of me, an atheist.)
    • thoughtpalette 15 hours ago
      Funnily enough, I felt the same energy after reading The Fountainhead by Rand.

      It's been over a decade at this point, but I remember Howard Roarks(?) endless ambitious energy was infectious. Sounds like it's time for another read.

      • low_tech_love 14 hours ago
        The Fountainhead is a great book, one of my favorites. Atlas Shrugged is also a very good book in a slightly different way (but it overstays its welcome). I love Ayn Rand as a writer, she was bold, energetic, smart. She could weave a fictional alternate reality like nobody else, while keeping the human characters at the very center of everything.

        The problem is that for some reason she couldn’t keep it at the fictional level and started thinking maybe the fiction was a good model of reality. That kinda taints a bit the legacy, in my opinion.

        • plusmax1 13 hours ago
          I read "Atlas Shrugged" but I found it to be a frustrating read, mostly because of how simplistic its worldview is. When I read it, I felt like the complex issues it tries to tackle—capitalism, government, individualism—were reduced to black-and-white moral arguments, without much room for nuance or ambiguity.

          The characters didn’t help either. They came across as one-dimensional: the so-called heroes are always right, always rational, while anyone who disagrees with them is portrayed as either stupid or evil. That kind of writing makes it hard for me to take her "philosophy" seriously.

    • HeckFeck 16 hours ago
      > the emptiness of trying to live for others

      Someone else was burned one too many times. It's fine and dandy until you notice a pattern: others who lack conscience will always work your convictions against you. Though the religion admits as much - it eschews 'worldly wisdom' - i.e. what you need to make anything of a life in this world.

      • teekert 15 hours ago
        I mean it's empty because you deny people that love you to do nice things for you (I don't care (and it shows!), what do you want to do?). Keep it up long enough and you don't even know what you like anymore. And then you aren't really a fun person anymore.

        At least, that is how I experienced it.

        • gizzlon 1 hour ago
          > I mean it's empty because you deny people that love you to do nice things for you

          Uf, that sounds horribel. Reminds me of the mother in C.S. Lewsis Screwtape Letters

          https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Screwtape_Letters

          I at some point it becomes performative and false. And not very Christian at all

    • fatbird 15 hours ago
      "It's chaos, be kind" [0]

      [0] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sicUhD1n-es

    • sweeter 11 hours ago
      It's basically "divine right to rule" for rich people, sans religion. I remember hearing about Rand and eventually reading Rand, and I quite literally thought it was satire. Tbf it would be peak if it was satire, but I genuinely don't understand how anyone can subscribe to this in earnest.
  • Animats 13 hours ago
    I read both The Fountainhead and Atlas Shrugged, and wasn't impressed by either. The author never got the "show, not tell" memo. Long, long speeches.

    (In the movie version of The Fountainhead, Howard Roarke's architecture is terrible. His buildings resemble 1960s US housing projects such as the Robert Taylor Homes in Chicago. There's good minimalism, but that's not it.)

    • cryptonector 11 hours ago
      Pretty much. Plus her approach to love is completely off-putting and inhumane.
    • gavinray 12 hours ago
      My Ayn Rand "unpopular opinion" is that Atlas Shrugged is a wordier, less interesting The Fountainhead.

      Wouldn't suggest anyone read Atlas Shrugged, saying this as someone who also read Peikoff's "Objectivism: The Philosophy of Ayn Rand"

      Just read The Fountainhead and imagine that with trains and the railroad.

      "Anthem" is a short read and also pretty solid.

  • jonfw 16 hours ago
    I fail to see the irony of "inheriting" an empire from Rand, when the protagonist of atlas shrugged and other main characters were heirs to a fortune. Inheritance is thoroughly explored in her work.

    To me- this article is about the social dangers of taking a philosophy to the extreme, and about how easy it is to take advantage of the elderly when estranged.

    • n4r9 13 hours ago
      The quote I think you're referring to:

      > like many tragedies, this one is marked by a dark irony: A man devoted to the principle of individualism has ended up living a life defined by a reliance on others.

      The irony is that Peikoff believed himself an advocate of individualism, while simultaneously subjugating himself, saying stuff like “I would let her step on my face if she wanted.”

    • bigstrat2003 14 hours ago
      The thing that I felt came through in this article (or maybe it's just my biases) was the hollowness of engaging in relationships purely for one's own selfish ends. Sooner or later (as happened to these people), the selfish desires don't line up any more, and the relationships get torn apart. Contrary to Rand, I don't think that love is inherently selfish (quite the opposite in fact), and it seems to me that love based on altruism is much more stable (and more praiseworthy) than love based on what the other person can do for me.

      But then again I would say that, so it's hard to tell if that actually is something I took away from the article or if it's just confirmation bias at play.

      • ahartmetz 4 hours ago
        IMO: In the end, everything we do is out of inner motivation, and love is no exception, so: all selfish. But that is not to be taken too literally - being unselfish can feel good, too, and is therefore "selfish". Rand's recognizing moral character or whatever as the base of love seems completely random, not how any of that works. We're smart animals! Biological creatures. We need to reproduce. It gets messy.
  • kleton 15 hours ago
    Confusingly, at various point in this article they refer to him in the past tense, "was a good father" etc, while he's still alive.
    • miltonlost 14 hours ago
      "He was a red head. Now, after the hair dye, he has black hair" is perfectly normal way of using past tense of someone while they are alive.
    • dmitrygr 15 hours ago
      Was, and then there was a lawsuit with kid. Probably hard to claim still is then? Lawsuits tear families apart.
  • richardanaya 14 hours ago
    Peikoff is a wonderful man who wrote books that inspire me and intrigue me to this day.
    • glenstein 14 hours ago
      He suggested on a podcast that if a woman had no access to resources to perform an abortion she should throw herself down the stairs. Presumably as a way to solve it that doesn't involve getting freebies from the state.
  • reverendsteveii 14 hours ago
    Ayn Rand is the ultimate proof of something I've realized as I've grown: doing the right thing is actually really simple. It's not easy as in "low difficulty of accomplishment", but it's simple as in "low difficulty of understanding". In fact, I've started to think of complex decision making as the moral equivalent of a code smell: if I'm waffling back and forth over what the right thing to do is sometimes it's a genuinely complex situation where principles are in conflict but much (Much, MUCH) more often it's just that I no what the right thing to do is and just don't wanna do it. Objectivism feels like the inverse of this: you can make anything feel like the right thing to do if you just expand, generalize, hypotheticalize and muddy the question until "Should I give a hungry person a sandwich when I've got one I won't miss?" becomes something like "How do you expect society to function if no one works?"
    • grandempire 14 hours ago
      The question of Ethics is what we should we do, With life. There is nothing easy or clear about that.

      Morality is not just being generally nice when it’s convenient for all parties.

      One of the themes in the Fountainhead is contrasting someone with this attitude with the individual with a longer term vision and goals.

      • reverendsteveii 13 hours ago
        >expand, generalize, hypotheticalize and muddy the question
        • grandempire 9 hours ago
          Yes that is something you said. And no I don’t think it’s true.

          If you don’t have an answer to the question of what should be done in life, you have no framing for other dependent moral questions.

  • greener_grass 15 hours ago
    Readers might enjoy Mozart Was a Red, a play by Murray Rothbard

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KIk5C2qsRH8

  • _rm 4 hours ago
    "In the throws of narcissism" is best way to describe them.

    Living hellish painful lives purely volitionally, from the mental cage they created for themselves.

    Must've had extra specially unpleasant childhoods.

  • ryandrake 16 hours ago
    I have the pleasure of living in a pretty "red" part of the country, and everyone I know who is a self-described libertarian (or otherwise worships at the altar of self-sufficiency) lives utterly dependent on societal systems. They're on Medicare, Disability or Social Security, live in neighborhoods with solid public services, rely on the rule of law for protection from crime, and enjoy clean air and drinking water, safe food and medicine, that they only have access to due to strong environmental and safety regulations. They were the first ones to freak out on Social Media during COVID when they had to actually rely on themselves for a bit.

    As someone else put it on Twitter, they are like house cats: absolutely convinced of their fierce independence while utterly dependent on a system they don't appreciate or understand.

    • jonfw 16 hours ago
      Ayn Rand didn't write novels about homesteading- none of the characters in her books are self sufficient.

      I don't think that participation in society as it exists should prevent anybody from holding their philosophy of choice.

      • glenstein 14 hours ago
        >Ayn Rand didn't write novels about homesteading

        Galt's Gulch seems to fit that description.

        >none of the characters in her books are self sufficient.

        I think they were in the sense that they, within the fiction of the books, had irreplaceable economic skills that made them fortunes. They were (again just in the logic of the books), more than pulling their weight.

        Doesn't mean I agree with it as a system but I can see the internal consistency in this respect at least.

        • int_19h 12 hours ago
          Aside from Galt's Gulch, there's also Dagny's brief stint on her own, during which she more or less magically automates everything that needs to be done.
          • TeaBrain 4 hours ago
            Also, in Anthem, the two main characters end up living self-sufficiently in secluded wilderness.
          • cryptonector 11 hours ago
            Yes, it's all magical for her heroes. There was no homesteading in the gulch or whatever. There was only magical abundance and sterile happiness.
      • jplusequalt 16 hours ago
        You're right, Ayn Rand wrote about a fantastical world, full of make believe people and things.
        • alabastervlog 15 hours ago
          Her non-fiction isn't any more rigorous or convincing, incidentally.
          • glenstein 14 hours ago
            Love it or hate it, her novels, over and over again could set generations of young minds on fire, which her essays could never do. I think it's fair to say the non-fiction was a lot worse.
          • richardanaya 14 hours ago
            As someone who has read most of her non-fiction. I thoroughly disagree.
        • jonfw 16 hours ago
          AKA fiction
          • slater 15 hours ago
            Always a good time to remember this fantastic quote:

            “There are two novels that can change a bookish fourteen-year old’s life: The Lord of the Rings and Atlas Shrugged. One is a childish fantasy that often engenders a lifelong obsession with its unbelievable heroes, leading to an emotionally stunted, socially crippled adulthood, unable to deal with the real world. The other, of course, involves orcs."

          • os2warpman 15 hours ago
            [flagged]
    • garciasn 16 hours ago
      Cognitive dissonance, lack of critical thought, and self-introspection is an outcome of the Conservative push for education elimination.

      This is exactly why Conservatives feel educators are evil; they work to enable the ideals/traits in individuals which run counter to what’s most successful for following Conservative ideology.

      • jonfw 15 hours ago
        Do you feel that the department of education is responsible for your ability to think critically?

        Do you feel that it would be impossible to think critically without the department of education?

        Do you feel that folks from other countries, who grew up without our illustrious department of education, lack critical thought?

        • os2warpman 15 hours ago
          The department of education is not a service provider.

          It is a conduit through which funding flows and is a standards and enforcement body.

          They (or at least, they used to) insure that "state's rights" advocates don't implement curricula that teach children that the world is 6,000 years old and flat. They are in the process of being dismantled.

          One's local school district is responsible for a vast majority of one's critical thinking skills and it has been this way in the United States since at least the early 1800s when people realized that only wealthy parents had the time, energy, and money to hire private tutors to impart critical thinking skills on their children.

          I imagine that in other countries, especially western countries, the story is the same.

          We can look back far into history to see that people have used state-run or sanctioned institutions to teach critical thinking skills since well before the Platonic Academy, from which much of our modern system is derived, based on evidence of organized vocational education ranging from Siberia to Ancient Egypt to city states that dotted the land prior to the Old Babylonian Empire.

          The main difference between those ancient systems and today is that, for now, all children get the chance to have a formal, standardized education, instead of just the children of the wealthy, well-connected, or lucky.

          • bigstrat2003 14 hours ago
            > They (or at least, they used to) insure that "state's rights" advocates don't implement curricula that teach children that the world is 6,000 years old and flat. They are in the process of being dismantled.

            That is, in my view, a good thing. We should not be a monolithic nation and were never meant to be. If the people of (insert state here) wish to teach their children things I don't agree with, or even things which are outright false, that is their right. Nor does it hurt me in any way.

            One of the great problems with our country today is people trying to get the federal government to control more and more things. That is directly responsible for much of the division in our country, as federal elections (especially for president) turn into this big fight over who is going to get to impose their dramatically differing way of life on others for the next 4ish years. To reduce tensions, we need to return to the original design: decisions about government should be made as locally as possible, so that the government can reflect the very diverse needs and cultures that exist across our country.

            • autoexec 13 hours ago
              > That is, in my view, a good thing. We should not be a monolithic nation and were never meant to be.

              What we absolutely should be is a nation with a minimum standard of education that all American children capable enough are expected to have by the time they leave school. That standard should include the fact that the world isn't flat.

              Providing a minimum standard of quality education is critical to the security and success of the nation because a democracy doesn't function when the population is made up of uneducated people who are easily fooled, can't read, and whose heads are filled with lies that will often conflict with what's been taught to the children one state over.

              > If the people of (insert state here) wish to teach their children things I don't agree with, or even things which are outright false, that is their right. Nor does it hurt me in any way

              If you don't think that it is possible for you to be harmed by the votes or actions of people who are uneducated, intentionally misinformed, and unable to think critically you obviously still have some learning to do yourself.

        • garciasn 15 hours ago
          You literally put words in my mouth; I said nothing about the DoE.
          • jonfw 15 hours ago
            > Conservative push for education elimination.

            I assumed this was a reference for the conservative push to eliminate the DOE.

            Or do you believe that conservatives actually want to eliminate the abstract concept of education?

            • garciasn 15 hours ago
              They are openly attacking university and public school educators; calling them liberal agitators with agendas which indoctrinate students to ideologies counter to Conservative values.
            • techpineapple 14 hours ago
              > Or do you believe that conservatives actually want to eliminate the abstract concept of education?

              What do you mean by conservatives? Do you mean my fellow citizens in arms, or certain people who happen to hold power right now?

        • mckn1ght 14 hours ago
          Look at what happens in poor areas of less developed countries. Honor killings, deification of dictators, rampant scamming and crime, cartels and gangs... all still things.

          Your questions betray an ignorance of how a significant plurality of the world still lives to this day. You need to get out more, and not just at the resort towns.

          And new problems are cropping up in the foremost developed nations, like depression due to social media addiction, that we'll also need to think critically about, instead of reverting to medieval religious remedies.

          Alternatively, maybe you just think we're better off because we're intrinsically better kinds of humans? Gods chosen few? No doubt many people actually believe that.

          • jonfw 14 hours ago
            To be clear on my intentions- the OP said that conservatives wanted to eliminate critical thought. I assumed this was related to the elimination of DOE. My questions intended to dissect why exactly he thought that the DOE was responsible for critical thought.

            I am not a fan of the DOE- I think that the relationship between standardized tests and funding mean that schools prioritize skill development and memorization more than they prioritize critical thought / reasoning.

            I am not sure where your line of criticism comes from- it doesn't seem like we're understanding each other

            • mckn1ght 13 hours ago
              You asked a bunch of specious questions about the DoE. The DoE is part of a complicated and fragile system. It isn't as simple as turning off a light switch for a part you don't like, and chances are you probably don't fully understand the thing you don't like in the first place. Chesterton's fence.

              ---

              Now, to your point about standardized testing of skills vs reasoning, I would love to hear a proposal for ensuring "correct" critical thinking is assimilating into student populations. This doesn't scale and is subject to severe bias. Standardized testing measures more objective traits that are indicators for critical thought. IMO a solution must build on top of that foundation, not throw it away. You add a compass, you don't throw out the map.

    • AnotherGoodName 15 hours ago
      Ayn Rand herself was on social security too fwiw.

      https://www.snopes.com/fact-check/ayn-rand-social-security/

      • richardanaya 14 hours ago
        When you understand the immorality of taxes, there’s nothing immoral about getting your money back from a government that took it while repudiating the taxes.
        • FredPret 14 hours ago
          I love capitalism and am a former Rand fan.

          But I don't think taxes are in and of themselves immoral.

          A human being is a social animal, and each gets a lot of value from the people around us.

          These are nice to have:

          - clean streets

          - police

          - non-corrupt judges

          - a stable legal framework

          - living among educated people

          - fire department that just shows up

          - not getting bombed and invaded by a foreign army

          - much more

          These are "true expenses" in that if you didn't pay for them... you'd eventually pay the price for them when you're the victim of crime, fire, or exposure to the illiterate.

          If you lived in Galt's Gulch or some gated community in an anarchic society, you'd pay a regular fee for these services, like voluntary taxes.

          Taxes are infamously as inevitable as death because the expenses it's meant to pay for are also inevitable. We might as well set up a system.

          Government waste is held up as an example of immorality, and some/most governments certainly should be leaner, but some waste & inertia would happen in any large organization, public or private. The only other time a government could be straight-up immoral is if it's persecuting innocent citizens or foreigners for no reason. Thinking through the implementation details of Galt's Gulch makes me think taxes aren't so bad after all.

        • surgical_fire 14 hours ago
          It's all fun and games until you don't have paved streets anymore.
        • goatlover 9 hours ago
          What makes taxes immoral? People want their government to provide certain services. Those need to be paid for. What services should be funded depends on who you ask. It's interesting how the Nordic people are fine with paying more for strong social safety nets. They see it as an investment in society.
      • dmitrygr 15 hours ago
        "In her later years"....well, yeah! I will structure my finances that way too. I get money stolen from me yearly by force for "SS TAX", and i surely plan to get every cent back out of it that i can. I will not get even 10% back, but that is better than 0
        • surgical_fire 14 hours ago
          This is not how it works.

          Did you ever use the streets in front of your house? Ever went to a public park? Ever relied on police to protect your property? Ever needed the help of public health services? Firefighters?

          It's funny that you get money stole from you (while you certainly use a ton on infrastructure society provides), but never once considered leaving it behind and go live as a hunter gatherer in some remote place.

          After all, you are posting here.

          • grandempire 14 hours ago
            How much of the budget is police, parks, and roads?

            When the budget is questioned the response is always the most popular examples and ignore everything else.

            When was the last time you used a sociology research grant? Or an ICBM?

            • AngryData 11 hours ago
              I use them daily, in not being some poor serf, by not risking famine every year, and not living in a land beleaguered by war.

              Those things are sort of like having competent IT security. If they are doing everything right, they will seem like they aren't doing anything at all, but when they are gone all of a destruction and doom is always just a day away.

              • grandempire 9 hours ago
                So you’re taking the position that the government budget mostly consists of good things that most people would agree are good value?

                Why did you lead with police and parks instead?

              • surgical_fire 10 hours ago
                Sometimes I think that the libertarians should be condemned to live in their dream society, without laws, regulations, public service, etc.

                It gets tiresome listening to their "taxes are theft" bullshit.

                • card_zero 10 hours ago
                  Why are they not collected through consent?
                  • AngryData 8 hours ago
                    What kind of consent? On an individual basis? Because the assholes won't pay putting more burden on those who do while the assholes use the further power/capital disparity to corrupt society in their favor. Governmentally we have many times, every time a new government is formed, and there is always the option of the people tearing it all down when it stops doing what it is suppose to when all the other alternatives are made impossible.

                    Also every society that concentrates power into a larger government through taxation will inevitably invade and destroy or subjugate those who decided they wanted the smallest bare minimum of community support and collective services that leaves them vulnerable.

                    • card_zero 6 hours ago
                      Yes, on an individual basis. I don't think I like the sound of group consent. Hi! Your peer group has decided that you consent to xyz.
                  • krapp 10 hours ago
                    No one would consent.
                    • grandempire 9 hours ago
                      There are many community groups historically funded through consent with seemingly no direct kickbacks, including churches.
                      • krapp 8 hours ago
                        We're not talking about communities, we're talking about modern countries. Most people aren't willing to pay out of pocket for anything that doesn't benefit them directly, which is why the reason most people give to charity is that its tax deductible. A few might give out of the kindness of their heart or some sense of civic duty, but not enough.
                        • grandempire 7 hours ago
                          I agree that the primary function of taxation is to fund things that have serious free rider problems otherwise.

                          But part of the problem is the lack of community structure and expectation that we can centrally fund and manage problems. There are whole communities in the US that lived for generations on civic duty and kindness of heart.

            • surgical_fire 10 hours ago
              What exactly is the problem with sociology research? Is it not a valid field of study? Or are you just against research grants as a whole?

              I think it benefits society to fund academic research.

              • grandempire 9 hours ago
                > I think it benefits society to fund academic research.

                see how you mentally group all these things under one umbrella. No I don’t think sociology research is on the same standing as physics research and I also don’t think all physics research is equal.

                Based on the reports coming from Doge I think there are a lot of bad studies funded in the name of science or academic research.

            • jeltz 13 hours ago
              The reason we pay for ICMBs is to prevent warmongers like Putin from invading countries which would be bad for the whole global economy. So you get advantage from ICMBs all the time indirectly.
              • grandempire 9 hours ago
                I personally don’t lose sleep over what Putin might do because it’s outside of my circle of influence.

                Interesting to hear the military budget is now completely necessary from HNers.

          • dmitrygr 13 hours ago
            "SS TAX" does not pay for roads or parks, you know
    • thrance 16 hours ago
      It took thousands of years of technical and social progress to produce people that think they can survive alone.
  • ratrocket 12 hours ago
  • GlibMonkeyDeath 14 hours ago
    This is a truly tragic story. Toward the end of the article (regarding the 2024 findings in San Diego Superior Court), Peikoff sounds like he has his faculties intact, according to multiple doctors and attorneys. He has freely chosen to marry his caregiver, much to the dismay of his daughter (who believes the caregiver is a grifter, and so his daughter forced the court inquiry.) His response, "if being unreasonable is choosing to be with the woman I love, then I choose to be unreasonable" is peak objectivism. He is going to do what he wants - to do anything else would be a betrayal of objectivist principles.

    He is now estranged from his daughter Cordelia -er, Kira - over this.

  • 4fterd4rk 13 hours ago
    It's interesting to me how Rand wrote books about socialism leading us to a world where irrationality takes over in a dysfunctional world and we now live in a world where unrestrained capitalism has caused irrationality to take over in a dysfunctional world.
    • Duwensatzaj 9 hours ago
      > unrestrained capitalism

      I’m not sure how you can look at an America where it is largely illegal to build and claim with a straight face that anything is unrestrained.

    • booleandilemma 11 hours ago
      I wonder if the end result is always dysfunction.
  • nonrandomstring 13 hours ago
    Getting famous and having a cult following isn't always the best thing for an author. Not for their works. Rand wrote one good book [0]. Actually really got to me. Probably not one you think of. "We The Living", a pretty bleak account of collectivisation and the exodus from communism. A shocking, semi-autobiographical account of watching the world you love and know torn up. I think it might be more apropos Americans today than any of the "objectivism" stuff. All her later work I read in my 30s seemed lacking. But that first one really had an impact, not quite Solzhenitsyn or Kafka, but a hard hit with a similar interior. That book really defines her I think.

    [0] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/We_The_Living

  • arp242 14 hours ago
    Seems like an unpleasant person.

    I read on his Wikipedia page that he called Obama's re-election "the worst political event ever to occur in the history of this continent" and "worse than the Civil War".

    An estimated 600,000 to one million people died in the war. And many more suffered life-long injuries, had to deal with the loss of their child, spouse, etc. Also seems to me the slave system in the US – where people were born in to slavery with no realistic hope of freedom – is the ultimate in state control and stripping of individual rights that people like him are supposed to be against.

    You can dislike Obama, nothing wrong with that. But is having a president you dislike for 4 years really worse than up to a million dead people? And the institute of slavery?

    Also denies property rights to Palestinians and native Americans. The notion that individual rights are paramount again goes out of window at the first sign of inconvenience.

    So not just unpleasant on a personal level, also morally decrepit and intellectually vapid.

    • glenstein 14 hours ago
      The attempt by Randians to apply her to modern politics was a major tell when I was young to get out of that crowd. One person, supposedly a an intellectual leading light of Objectivism at the time, said that nuking Iran was fine because Iran pursing nuclear enrichment constituted "initiation of force" (important term of art in the Rand lexicography), seemingly squaring the circle between Rand's brand of hardcore libertarian isolationism and neocon warmongering that was popular at the time.

      I wanted to see intellectual hero philosophers as the legacy, but what objectivism produced, outside of Nathaneil Branden and David Kelly who were at least interesting, was largely a complete joke.

  • Devasta 12 hours ago
    Atlas Shrugged was one of the most important books I ever read.

    A society where the rich destroy the entire world fighting stupid battles against each other, even witholding technology that would aid all humanity because someone other than them would benefit, all the while ordinary men like Eddie Willers are left to die in the desert?

    Marx couldn't have laid it out so clear to me as Rand has.

  • fireburning 9 hours ago
    [dead]
  • black_13 13 hours ago
    [dead]
  • richardanaya 15 hours ago
    [flagged]