Alright D&D'ers, This is an Atlas Shrugged thread. This is inspired originally by this thread:
http://forums.penny-arcade.com/showthread.php?t=102182
In which, I stated that Atlas is a good book, and its probably a good idea to read it.. A few posters came in the thread and disagreed, which is cool.. but didn't say why, and thats probably better to keep it out of that thread.. so here is this one...
This won't be a particularly amazing OP, so bear with that. I'm more interested in having a dialogue as to why some feel its a 'bad' or terrible book. I admittedly say, that I don't agree with everything that Rand states, but I do think there is some good value in some of the things she preaches. Granted, Atlas is indeed a very polarizing book depending on your outlying belief system and world-view.
That all said, I want to keep this civil with no flaming or anything. I'm intellectually curious what people think about it, as I don't have many people within my own social circle who have in fact read it.. It is a doozy at 1k+ pages...
I originally got the book out of the recommendation of several business speakers/entrepreneurs who I've heard speak both live at seminars as well as cd's and these were all people I greatly admire. Not that that really has much to do with anything, but the book has been regarded highly amongst business owners, business professionals and entrepreneurs..
In general I'll state that its obviously a good idea to have read the book, and at least have a basic idea of Rand's Objectivist philosophy..
Heres a wiki just in case however....
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atlas_shrugged
I'll add more to the OP if people see a need for it, or it that it could add to the thread, but for now its probably enough to get some degree of discussion going..
Posts
because it is a way for selfish people to justify being selfish
and it came to be because Rand grew up in a horrible place and came to what she saw as a capitalist paradise in comparison, which she basically came to worship
Also, imagine the police department, fire department, military, and FDA run by private corporations.
Let 'em eat fucking pineapples!
They tried to bury us. They didn't know that we were seeds. 2018 Midterms. Get your shit together.
I think people sometimes misconstrue 'selfishness' with 'rational self-interest' as the two are quite different.. There really wasn't a time where it was stated that you should be 'selfish' at the cost and/or potential burden of others so that you can pursue your own personal and self-fulfilling desires. It had more to do with valuing yourself and what you are capable as man, and that the pursuit of your own rational self-interest/happiness was your highest moral value.
I do however understand, and agree that growing up in a communistic country and immigrating to a capitalist nation would largely skew her beliefs. That said, I still see nothing wrong with capitalism in general, as it is what founded this country. However, I will say that I don't agree with Rand in the idea of Laissez-faire capitalism as it does need to be regulated. Rand also didn't believe in patents and copyright law either, which I don't agree with.
― Marcus Aurelius
Path of Exile: themightypuck
Nevermind. Found it.
Apparently this guy hasn't. Or has, and didn't understand.
Let 'em eat fucking pineapples!
They tried to bury us. They didn't know that we were seeds. 2018 Midterms. Get your shit together.
It doesn't help that our media is run by corporations who have a vested interest in preventing the general public from learning the immoral actions they've undertaken.
No, imperialism did.
They tried to bury us. They didn't know that we were seeds. 2018 Midterms. Get your shit together.
Calvin's comics is better, anyways.
They tried to bury us. They didn't know that we were seeds. 2018 Midterms. Get your shit together.
I could stand to see it again because I forgot what it is.
Edit: okay yeah I never seen that before. I had a chuckle.
I would say that Fountainhead is worse, actually, but then I'm biased what with her using an architect as the protagonist(?) of the book.
Both of them violate some pretty basic realities, though. Fountainhead pretty much is exactly the opposite of what architecture is, and Atlas defies the second law of thermodynamics. Which is just about the only way that her 'philosophy' could work. If the laws of the universe were to just be suspended for no apparent reason.
I'll actually retract that statement as I worded it wrongly. I didn't mean to say that this country was founded on it, but more along the lines, that capitalism in general did elevate the US, more so I'm thinking in regards to the industrial revolution.
I think people sometimes mistake "Rational Self Interest" for a capacity that humans possess.
Demanding rationality from a human being is like demanding speech from a dog. Except I suppose the dog can answer the question of what is on top of a house.
You're making me want to read this.
They tried to bury us. They didn't know that we were seeds. 2018 Midterms. Get your shit together.
Capitalism didn't mean it! He'd had a rough day is all...
Also, slaves.
Pretty much what I was going to say. Slavery was pretty damn profitable, particularly when things like the cotton gin came along, and did quite a bit to elevate the country (economically, anyway...).
Because I've never seen it worded this way specifically I'll have to disagree in the context of not caring at all about others.
They tried to bury us. They didn't know that we were seeds. 2018 Midterms. Get your shit together.
I got a copy for free at a book trading shindig.
Every day I contemplate burning it.
The main character basically invents a perpetual motion machine, but doesn't want to share his free energy.
Yeah, the guy comes up with a way to get infinite free energy. And then other people think that such a discovery should be shared by the people instead of either restricted to only the rich or all the money flowing directly to this guy when he wants to sell it.
How dare those other people!
now, I haven't read the book myself, but I believe I read what was supposed to be a trustworthy summary of the premise and the events that trigger the plot in the book, so I must ask: doesn't that completely undermine Galt's whole little tizzy?
To that end I agree, and feel that it does need and should be regulated and not all left to free market as there are those who it can potentially hurt.