Ayn Rand (, Ayn rhyming with fine; – March 6 1982), born Alisa Zinov'yevna Rosenbaum (), was a Russian-born Jewish-American author best known for developing the philosophy of Objectivism and for writing the novels The Fountainhead, Atlas Shrugged, We the Living, and Anthem.
Her philosophy and her fiction both emphasize, above all, the concepts of reason, individualism, rational egoism ("rational self-interest"), and laissez-faire capitalism. She believed that people must choose their values and actions by reason; that the individual has a right to exist for his or her own sake, neither sacrificing self to others nor others to self; and that no one has the right to take what belongs to others by physical force or fraud, or impose their moral code on others by physical force. Her politics have been described as minarchism and libertarianism, though she never used the first term and detested the second. at the Ayn Rand Institute. Rand stated in 1980, "I’ve read nothing by a Libertarian...that wasn’t my ideas badly mishandled—i.e., had the teeth pulled out of them—with no credit given."
The express goal of Rand's fiction was to showcase the idealized Randian hero, Lewis, John. The Literary Encyclopedia 20 October 2001. a man whose ability and independence causes conflict with society, but who nevertheless perseveres to achieve his goals.
Her mother taught her French and subscribed to a magazine featuring stories for boys, where Rand found her first childhood hero: Cyrus Paltons, an Indian army officer in a Rudyard Kipling-style story by Maurice Champagne, called "The Mysterious Valley".Throughout her youth, she read the novels of Sir Walter Scott, Alexandre Dumas and other Romantic writers, and expressed a passionate enthusiasm toward the Romantic movement as a whole. She discovered Victor Hugo at the age of thirteen, and fell deeply in love with his novels. Later, she cited him as her favorite novelist and the greatest novelist of world literature. Rand wrote the ideal educational curriculum would be "Aristotle in philosophy, von Mises in economics, Montessori in education, Hugo in literature." Long, Roderick:
Rand was twelve at the time of the Russian Revolution of 1917, and her family life was disrupted by the rise of the Bolshevik party. Her father's pharmacy was confiscated by the Soviets, and the family fled to Crimea to recover financially. When Crimea fell to the Bolsheviks in 1921, Rand burned her diary, which contained vitriolic anti-Soviet writings. Rand then returned to St. Petersburg ("Petrograd") to attend university. at the Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy She studied philosophy and history at the University of Petrograd. Her major literary discoveries were the works of Edmond Rostand, Friedrich Schiller, and Fyodor Dostoevsky. She admired Rostand for his richly romantic imagination and Schiller for his grand, heroic scale. She admired Dostoevsky for his sense of drama and his intense moral judgments, but was deeply against his philosophy and his sense of life. Roger Donway, Donway writes that Rand's objectivism "brought full circle the three-way argument that Chernyshevsky and Pisarev; the Underground Man and Nietzsche ; and Dostoevsky the Christian philosopher conducted in Russia after 1860." She completed a three-year program in the Department of Social Pedagogy that included history, philology, and law, and received Certificate of Graduation (Diploma No. 1552) on 13 October 1924.Sciabarra, Chris Matthew. She also encountered the philosophical ideas of Nietzsche, and loved his exaltation of the heroic and independent individual who embraced egoism and rejected altruism in Thus Spoke Zarathustra, but later rejected his philosophical center of "might is right" when she discovered more of his writings.
Rand continued to write short stories and screenplays. She entered the State Institute for Cinema Arts in 1924 to study screenwriting; in late 1925, however, she was granted a visa to visit American relatives.
After a brief stay with her relatives in Chicago, she resolved never to return to the Soviet Union, and set out for Hollywood to become a screenwriter. She then changed her name to "Ayn Rand". There is a story told that she named herself after the Remington Rand typewriter, but she began using the name Ayn Rand before the typewriter was first sold. Rand stated her new name was derived from the Cyrillic spelling of her family's name, and the Ayn Rand Institute noted a similarity between the name Rand and the spelling of "Rosenbaum" in Cyrillic on her college diploma. . This answer refers to the June 2000 edition of Impact, the Ayn Rand Institute newsletter. Ayn Rand biographical information at the IMDB: http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0709446/bio She stated that her first name, 'Ayn', was an adaptation of the name of a Finnish writer. This may have been the Finnish-Estonian author Aino Kallas, but variations of this name are common in Finnish-speaking regions.
Initially, Rand struggled in Hollywood and took odd jobs to pay her basic living expenses. A chance face-to-face meeting with famed director Cecil B. DeMille led to a job as an extra in his film King of Kings, and subsequent work as a script reader. at AynRand.org She also worked as the head of the costume department at RKO Studios. Leiendecker, Harold.
While working on the film, she intentionally bumped into an aspiring young actor, Frank O'Connor, who caught her eye. The two married on April 15, 1929, and remained married for fifty years, until O'Connor's death in 1979 at the age of 82. In 1931, Rand became a naturalized citizen of the United States; she was fiercely proud of the United States, and in later years said to the graduating class at West Point, "I can say—not as a patriotic bromide, but with full knowledge of the necessary metaphysical, epistemological, ethical, political and esthetic roots—that the United States of America is the greatest, the noblest and, in its original founding principles, the only moral country in the history of the world." Rand, Ayn. Address to the Graduating Class Of The United States Military Academy at West Point, New York - March 6, 1974.
In an article about Rand, that appeared in The Economist in 1991, it is stated that "Rand’s novels sell some 300,000 copies a year, exhorting readers to think big about themselves, build big and earn big. New editions of all her books carry postcards for readers who might be inclined to learn more about “objectivism”, the author’s credo, a blending of free markets, cold reason and guiltless Nietzschean self-assertion."''Still Spouting", The Economist, November 25, 1999
Rand then published two novels, We the Living (1936), and Anthem (1938): "Rand described We the Living as the most autobiographical of her novels, its theme being the brutality of life under communist rule in Russia." at the Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy. Its harsh anti-communist tone met with mixed reviews in the U.S., where the period of The Great Depression was sometimes known as "The Red Decade" in reference to the highwater mark of sympathy for socialist ideals. Stephen Cox, at The Objectivist Center, observed that We The Living "was published at the height of Russian socialism's popularity among leaders of American opinion. It failed to attract an audience."Cox, Stephen.
Frank O'Connor and Ayn Rand spent the summer of 1937 in Stony Creek, Connecticut, while Frank worked in summer stock, and Ayn planned Anthem, a dystopian vision of a futuristic society where collectivism has triumphed. Anthem did not find a publisher in the United States and was first published in England.
Rand's first major professional success came with her best-selling novel The Fountainhead (1943), which she wrote over a period of seven years. The novel was rejected by twelve publishers, who thought it was too intellectual and opposed to the mainstream of American thought. It was finally accepted by the Bobbs-Merrill Company publishing house, thanks mainly to a member of the editorial board, Archibald Ogden, who praised the book in the highest terms ("If this is not the book for you, then I am not the editor for you.") and finally prevailed. Cato Institute, Eventually, The Fountainhead was a worldwide success, bringing Rand fame and financial security. In the sixty years since it was published, Rand's novel has sold six million copies, and continues to sell about 100,000 copies per year.
Rand's magnum opus, Atlas Shrugged, was published in 1957. Due to the success of The Fountainhead, the initial printing was 100,000 copies,Chambers, Whittaker. Reprint of contemporary review of Atlas Shrugged from The National Review. and the book went on to become an international bestseller. (The frequent claim that Atlas Shrugged was later found to be the "second most influential book in America, after The Bible," showing this widespread claim. appears to be an exaggeration of the findings of one 1991 survey.) Provides detail about the actual survey and findings.Salmonson, Jessica Amanda. Although the author appears to have a strong dislike of Rand and her supporters, her conclusions about the "Book of the Month Club" survey appear to be supported.
Atlas Shrugged is often seen as Rand's most extensive statement of Objectivism in any of her works of fiction. In its appendix, she offered this summary:
The theme of Atlas Shrugged is "The role of man's mind in society". Rand upheld the industrialist as one of the most admirable members of any society and fiercely opposed the popular resentment accorded to industrialists. This led her to envision a novel wherein the industrialists of America go on strike and retreat to a mountainous hideaway. The American economy and its society in general slowly start to collapse. The government responds by increasing the already stifling controls on industrial concerns. The novel deals with issues as divergent as sex, music, medicine, politics, and human ability.
Rand's Objectivism encompasses positions on metaphysics, epistemology, ethics, politics, and aesthetics. (Listen to Rand explaining Objectivism) Along with Nathaniel Branden, his wife Barbara, and others including Alan Greenspan and Leonard Peikoff, (jokingly designated "The Collective"), Rand launched the Objectivist movement to promote her philosophy.
The destruction of Gail Wynand in The Fountainhead is an example of her later view, a rejection of Nietzsche, that the great cannot succeed by sacrificing the masses: "her * journals suggest a rejection of traditional false-alternative ethics. Her May 15 entry, for example, identifies the error of Nietzscheans such as Gail Wynand: in trying to achieve power, they use the masses, but at the cost of their ideals and standards, and thus become "a slave to those masses." The independent man, therefore, will not make his success dependent upon the masses." In the end, Rand made peace with her changing views of Nietzsche and his influence, and the introduction to the 25th anniversary edition of The Fountainhead concludes with Nietzsche's statement, "The noble soul has reverence for itself."
Rand was deeply opposed to the philosophy of Immanuel Kant. Their divergence is greatest in metaphysics and epistemology rather than the ethics of Kant's well known categorical imperative (her critique of Kant's ethics is directly rooted in Kant's metaphysics and epistemology, and there is debate over whether the categorical imperative is compatible with Objectivism). See: John Ku's which argues that Rand utilizes the Categorical Imperative, and William Thomas' for a counterargument. Rand and Kant had significantly different theories of concepts, identity and consciousness: In Objectivist epistemology reason is the highest virtue and reason and logic can be used to understand objective reality. Kant believed that we cannot have certain knowledge about the true nature of reality ("things-in themselves"), but only of the manner in which we perceive reality. For example, we can know for certain that we are unable to conceive of an object which is not extended, but it does not follow that no object which is not extended can exist. Rand believed that if an object has an effect upon the senses, then that effect upon the senses gives us knowledge about the object itself. At the most basic level, it informs us that that object is of a particular character such that when it interacts with one's sense organs it causes a particular sensation; and, that is knowledge about a quality of the object itself. It is not in fact clear that Kant would have disagreed with such a weak formulation of realism. In Rand's view, Kant's dichotomy severed rationality and reason from the real world — a betrayal of the very nature of man. In Rand's words,
"I have mentioned in many articles that Kant is the chief destroyer of the modern world...You will find that on every fundamental issue, Kant's philosophy is the exact opposite of Objectivism." Hsieh, Diana.In the final issue of The Objectivist, she further wrote,
"Suppose you met a twisted, tormented young man and...discovered that he was brought up by a man-hating monster who worked systematically to paralyze his mind, destroy his self-confidence, obliterate his capacity for enjoyment and undercut his every attempt to escape... Western civilization is in that young man's position. The monster is Immanuel Kant." Hsieh, Diana.
In 1950 Rand moved to 120 East 34th Street Branden, Nathaniel. in New York City, and formed a group with the deliberately ironic name "The Collective," which included future Federal Reserve chairman Alan Greenspan and a young psychology student named Nathan Blumenthal (later Nathaniel Branden), who had been profoundly influenced by The Fountainhead. According to Branden, "I wrote Miss Rand a letter in 1949...* I was invited to her home for a personal meeting in March, 1950, a month before I turned twenty."
The group originally started out as informal gathering of friends who met with Rand on weekends at her apartment to discuss philosophy; later the Collective would proceed to play a larger, more formal role, helping edit Atlas Shrugged and promoting Rand's philosophy through the Nathaniel Branden Institute ("the NBI.") Many Collective members gave lectures at the NBI in cities across the United States, while others wrote articles for its sister newsletter, The Objectivist.
After several years, Rand and Branden's friendly relationship blossomed into a romantic affair, despite the fact that both were married at the time. Their spouses were both convinced to accept this affair but it eventually led to Branden's separation from and then divorce of his wife.
Throughout the 1960s and 1970s, Rand developed and promoted her Objectivist philosophy through both her fiction and non-fiction works, and by giving talks at several east-coast universities, largely through the Nathaniel Branden Institute which Branden established to promote her philosophy: "The Objectivist Newsletter, later expanded and renamed simply The Objectivist contained essays by Rand, Branden, and other associates...that analyzed current political events and applied the principles of Objectivism to everyday life." Rand later published these in book form.
Rand's theory of sex is implied by her broader ethical and psychological theories. Far from being a debasing animal instinct, she believed that sex is the highest celebration of our greatest values. Sex is a physical response to intellectual and spiritual values—a mechanism for giving concrete expression to values that could otherwise only be experienced in the abstract. In Atlas Shrugged, she writes "Tell me what a man finds sexually attractive and I will tell you his entire philosophy of life. Show me the woman he sleeps with and I will tell you his valuation of himself."Rand, Ayn. Atlas Shrugged, p453
In a Playboy interview, Rand stated that women are not psychologically suited to be President and strongly opposed the modern feminist movement, despite supporting some of its goals. Rand, Ayn. The New Left: The Anti-Industrial Revolution, (1993) ISBN 0452011256 Feminist author Susan Brownmiller called Rand "a traitor to her own sex," while others, including Camille Paglia and the contributors to 1999's Feminist Interpretations of Ayn Rand, have noted Rand's "fiercely independent — and unapologetically sexual" heroines who are unbound by "tradition's chains...* who had sex because they wanted to."
Some in the BDSM community see Rand's work as relevant and supportive because she endorsed strongly-defined sex roles combined with power difference fetishism * in which "Men are metaphysically the dominant sex". Young, Cathy. Reason August/September 1999.
In Atlas Shrugged, Rand writes that the "band on the wrist of * naked arm gave her the most feminine of all aspects: the look of being chained." This novel, along with Night of January 16th (1968) and The Fountainhead (1943), features sex scenes with stylized erotic combat that borders on rape. In a review of a biography of Rand, writer Jenny Turner opined,
"the sex in Rand’s novels is extraordinarily violent and fetishistic. In The Fountainhead, the first coupling of the heroes, heralded by whips and rock drills and horseback riding and cracks in marble, is ‘an act of scorn . . . not as love, but as defilement’ – in other words, a rape. (‘The act of a master taking shameful, contemptuous possession of her was the kind of rapture she had wanted.’ In Atlas Shrugged, erotic tension is cleverly increased by having one heroine bound into a plot with lots of spectacularly cruel and handsome men.)
Another source of controversy is Rand's view of homosexuality. According to remarks at the Ford Hall forum at Northeastern University in 1971, Rand's personal view was that homosexuality is "immoral" and "disgusting." Ford Hall forum remarks, cited in Specifically, she stated that "there is a psychological immorality at the root of homosexuality" because "it involves psychological flaws, corruptions, errors, or unfortunate premises." A number of noted current and former Objectivists have been highly critical of Rand for her views on homosexuality. Varnell, Paul. at the Indegay Forum, originally published in the Chicago Free Press Dec. 3, 2003. Others, such as Kurt Keefner, have argued that "Rand’s views were in line with the views at the time of the general public and the psychiatric community," though he asserts that "she never provided the slightest argument for her position, * because she regarded the matter as self-evident, like the woman president issue." Keefner, Kurt. A review of Chris Matthew Sciabarra’s Ayn Rand, Homosexuality, and Human Liberation (2003, Leap Publishing) In the same appearance, Rand noted, "I do not believe that the government has the right to prohibit behavior. It is the privilege of any individual to use his sex life in whichever way he wants it."
Rand defended the right of businesses to discriminate on the basis of sexual orientation and race. Rand's defenders argue that her opposition to government intervention to end private discrimination was motivated by her valuing property rights above civil or "human rights" (due to a rejection of the validity of the distinction) and therefore her view did not constitute an endorsement of the morality of the prejudice per se. Rand argued that no one's rights are violated by a private individual's or organization's refusal to deal with them, even if the reason is irrational.
Rand did oppose some prejudices on moral grounds, in essays like "Racism" and "Global Balkanization," while still arguing for the right of individuals and businesses to act on such prejudice without government intervention. She wrote, "Racism is the lowest, most crudely primitive form of collectivism...notion that a man is to be judged, not by his own character and actions, but by the characters and actions of a collective of ancestors," Rand, Ayn. "Racism," in Return of the Primitive: The Anti-Industrial Revolution ISBN 0452011841, p. 179, at but also opposed governmental remedies for this problem: "Private racism is not a legal, but a moral issue — and can be fought only by private means, such as economic boycott or social ostracism." "Racism," in Return of the Primitive: The Anti-Industrial Revolution, p. 182
See also:Objectivism, Ayn Rand, and Homosexuality
"If we had good reason, if that is what you believe, all right, then why not tell the truth? Say it is a dictatorship, but we want to be associated with it. Say it is worthwhile being associated with the devil, as Churchill said, in order to defeat another evil which is Hitler. There might be some good argument made for that. But why pretend that Russia was not what it was?"Rand's HUAC testimony, cited atAfter the hearings, when Rand was asked about her feelings on the effectiveness of their investigations, she described the process as "futile."
Rand underwent surgery for lung cancer in 1974, and conflicts continued in the wake of the break with Branden and the subsequent collapse of the NBI. Many of her closest "Collective" friends began to part ways, and during the late 1970s, her activities within the formal Objectivist movement began to decline, a situation which increased after the death of her husband on November 9, 1979. ARI, One of her final projects was work on a television adaptation of Atlas Shrugged. She had also planned to write another novel, To Lorne Dieterling, but had only written "preliminary sketches."
Rand died of heart failure on March 6, 1982 at her 34th Street home in New York City, Saxon, Wolfgang. The New York Times, March 7, 1982. years after having successfully battled cancer, and was interred in the Kensico Cemetery, Valhalla, New York. Kipling's poem "If" was read at the graveside by David Kelley. * Rand's funeral was attended by some of her prominent followers, including Alan Greenspan. A six-foot floral arrangement in the shape of a dollar sign was placed near her casket.
Edward Hudgins, a veteran of the Heritage Foundation, the Cato Institute and the Joint Economic Committee of Congress, is now executive director, with Kelley taking the title of Founder and Senior Scholar. The Atlas Society/Objectivist Center also publishes The New Individualist (formerly Navigator) which comes out ten times a year. It has been given a major facelift by editor Robert Bidinotto and it was the first magazine in the U.S. to feature one of the infamous Mohammad cartoons on the cover.
Neil Peart, the drummer and lyricist of the Canadian progressive rock band Rush, was influenced by Rand's philosophy, as evidenced by the track "Anthem" from the album Fly By Night (1975) and the title track from the album 2112 (1976).
In season four of The Simpsons (the episode "A Streetcar Named Marge"), Maggie is placed in the "Ayn Rand School for Tots," where bottles and pacifiers are banned to encourage developing "the bottle within" and the school's proprietor reads from The Fountainhead Diet.
"The Atlasphere," an online community devoted to admirers of Rand, maintains a blog citing Rand's influence on popular or newsworthy figures who cite the influence of Rand's works on their lives,, while "Randex" updates a list of recent media references to Rand or her work.
The forthcoming PC and Xbox 360 game Bioshock takes place in the ruins of a city described as the ultimate capitalistic and individualist paradise. Founded in 1946 by a Soviet expatriate named "Andrew Ryan" (clearly a wordplay on "Ayn Rand"), the city is an embodiment of the Randian ideal, although one that has fallen into ruin.
Her supporters are trying to bring Rand's work into the academic mainstream. For instance, the Ayn Rand Society, founded in 1987, is affiliated with the American Philosophical Association, and the Journal of Ayn Rand Studies promotes philosophical research related to Rand's views. In a 1999 interview in the Chronicle of Higher Education, Rand scholar Chris Matthew Sciabarra said, "I know they laugh at Rand", while also noting a growing interest in her work in the academic community.Sharlet, Jeff. In 2006, Cambridge University Press published a volume on Rand's ethical theory written by ARI-affiliated scholar Tara Smith, a philosophy professor at the University of Texas at Austin.
The Ayn Rand Institute has spent more than $5M on educational programs advancing Objectivism, including scholarships and clubs. These clubs often obtain educational materials and speakers from the ARI. The Objectivist Club Association and ObjectivismOnline provide free hosting and organizational resources for Ayn Rand clubs. There are also several conferences organized by various organizations, such as the Objectivist Conferences, which are attended by several hundred "new intellectuals" each summer for two weeks and feature dozens of philosophy courses and presentations of new publications and research.
The most famous review of Atlas Shrugged from a conservative author was written by Whittaker Chambers and appeared in the National Review in 1957. It was unrelentingly scathing. Chambers call the book "sophomoric" and "remarkably silly," and said it "can be called a novel only by devaluing the term." The tone of the book was described as "shrillness without reprieve" and Chambers implied that Rand might advocate genocide in the most controversial part of the review, where he wrote From almost any page of Atlas Shrugged, a voice can be heard, from painful necessity, commanding: To the gas chambers-- go!" Mimi Gladstein argues Rand's characters are flat and unteresting, and her heroes implausibly wealthy, intelligent, physically attractive p. 140: "Most of Rand's protagonists are 'physically' beautiful, but that physicality is metaphorically symbolic of harmony between outer form and inner purpose;" p. 99, "The awkward age is the worst age to read Ayn Rand. She liked people to be tall, slim, and beautiful, and I was now slouched, dumpy, and pustular, but I took up Objectivism anyway." and free of doubt while arrayed against antagonists who are weak, pathetic, full of uncertainty, and lacking in imagination and talent.
Rand herself replied to these literary criticisms (in advance of many of them) with her 1963 essay "The Goal of My Writing," and in essays collected in The Romantic Manifesto: A Philosophy of Literature (2nd rev. ed. 1975), in which she states the goal of her fiction is to project her vision of an ideal man: not man as he is, but man as he might and ought to be. Further, defenders of Rand's novels have noted that many of her heroes are far from flawless, and that not all are wealthy. They note that Rearden, the Wet Nurse, and Fred Kinnan suffer due to either moral flaws or errors in reasoning *; further, they point out that not all of the villains in Rand's novels are weak and pathetic: Ellsworth Toohey is portrayed as a masterful communicator, critic, and manipulator, while Robert Stadler is a brilliant scientist.
Several authors, such as Murray Rothbard who helped define modern libertarianism and anarcho-capitalism,Rothbard, Murray. Jeff Walker, author of The Ayn Rand Cult, Walker, Jeff (1999). The Ayn Rand Cult. Chicago: Open Court. ISBN 0812693906 and Michael Shermer, founder of The Skeptics Society,Shermer, Michael. Originally published in Skeptic vol. 2, no. 2, 1993, pp. 74-81. have accused Objectivism of being a cult.
The Biographical FAQ of the Objectivism Reference Center website discusses these allegations and offer a letter in which Rand replies to a fan who wrote her offering cult-like allegiance by declaring "A blind follower is precisely what my philosophy condemns and what I reject. Objectivism is not a mystic cult".Rand, Ayn Letters, p. 592 Letter dated December 10, 1961, Plume (1997), ISBN 0452274044, as cited in
The Fountainhead was a Hollywood film (1949, Warner Bros.) starring Gary Cooper, for which Rand wrote the screen-play. Rand initially insisted that Frank Lloyd Wright design the architectural models used in the film, but relented when his fee was too high. Skousen, after Barbara Branden The Passion of Ayn Rand ISBN 0-385-19171-5
An adaptation of Atlas Shrugged is currently in pre-production. As of April 2006, Lionsgate Film reports that it is moving forward with their plans for the movie, with Howard and Karen Baldwin as producers and screen stars Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie reported to be interested in playing the parts of John Galt and Dagny Taggart. The movie may be created in multiple parts to allow a fuller presentation of the novel's plot.
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