But there’s no getting around it: taken as a whole, there is a dismaying discrepancy between the Ayn Rand of real life and Ayn Rand as she presented herself to the world. The discrepancy is important because Rand herself made such a big deal about living a life that was the embodiment of her philosophy. “My personal life is a postscript to my novels,” she wrote in the afterword to “Atlas Shrugged.” “It consists of the sentence: ‘And I mean it.’ I have always lived by the philosophy I present in my books—and it has worked for me, as it works for my characters.” As both books [the Heller and Burns biographies] document, that statement was self-delusion on a grand scale.Incidentally, this is the 20th anniversary of The Bell Curve.
Friday, November 14, 2014
Charles Murray on Ayn Rand
Charles Murray writes on Ayn Rand.
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1 comment:
Actually it was this that started to pull me out of objectivism. The idea that the originator of the philosophy couldn't live up to it was really a wake up call.
Kelly
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