I haven't ever read Ayn Rand, and I have no intention of doing so. However, I am told that the author of the series I am currently reading, Terry Goodkind, is heavily influenced by her works, and her concepts of "objectivism" and "enlightened self interest." Anyone care to explain these concepts to me in shorter form?
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Date: 2008-04-06 01:11 pm (UTC)Basically her philosophy is that of enlightened self interest. If all people, working with perfect information and perfect rationality, worked toward their own best long term interests, and those of their children, then everyone would do well, and the most elite people would do best.
The thinking is that people operating under enlightened self interest will not oppress other people, because oppressed people may rise up and make life difficult for the elites.
So, the elites will make sure that life is acceptable to the proles, and so that those proles don't make the elite's life more difficult. That the elite will only take for themselves enough that it does not degrade life for the non-elites.
This will all allow every person to rise to their own best level.
It isn't a terrible philosophy, just unrealistic, primarily in these factors.
So, until we have perfectly rational people, in a fully controlled environment, with perfect information about current and predicted future conditions, objectivism is simply an unrealistic philosophy.
It still has some interesting and attractive features. Just as Plato's Republic, and Moore's Utopia, and Jesus's Kingdom of God do.
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Date: 2008-04-06 01:27 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-04-06 01:34 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-04-06 02:04 pm (UTC)