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(Mass Market Paperback - Reissue)
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This collection of essays was the last work planned by Ayn Rand before her death in 1982. In it, she summarizes her view of philosophy and deals with a broad spectrum of topics. According to Ayn Rand, the choice we make is not whether to have a philosophy, but which one to have: rational, conscious, and therefore practical; or contradictory, unidentified, and ultimately lethal. Written with all the clarity and eloquence that have placed Ayn Rand's Objectivist philosophy in the mainstream of American thought, these essays range over such basic issues as education, morality, censorship, and inflation to prove that philosophy is the fundamental force in all our lives.
Ayn Rand is one of the rare writers who not only drew in readers with her novels, but created a philosophical movement with them. Her seminal Atlas Shrugged and The Fountainhead, cornerstones of her individualistic Objectivist world view, can be viewed as literature, self-empowerment texts, or both.
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August 22, 2008: a good introduction to rand style philosophy.it mught make more sense to read this before her other writings.here,rand shows herself to be a bitter enemy of totalitarianism,russia,nazi germany,the philosopher kant, and other freedom obstacles.
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April 05, 2007: Although there's a philosophy section in another anthology called THE VOICE OF REASON, this volume is the only one of Rand's devoted entirely to that subject. It's my recollection that all the others except VOR stuck to particular single subjects with philosophical import 'ethics, knowledge, economics, politics, art, etc.', but this book's not just a survey or a broad view. It's meta-philosophical 'or about philosophy' in that its collected content supports contentions within the first few articles regarding the subject's importance. Rand thought that philosophy directly affected life choices and outcomes, as opposed to the more popular view that the subject is only of narrow technical concern or not relevant to everyday life at all. She also maintained that deny it as they might, people use philosophical suppositions in the act of supporting or attacking any position. The bulk of the articles collected examine specific instances of ideas affecting action. A chess tournament in 1974 provides an opportunity to suggest how Boris Spassky may have reacted had his government 'the USSR of the time' changed the rules of chess as it determined the rules of life. Censorship cases are examined to show how 'do-gooder' efforts against pornographers could affect the ability of everyone else to express anything else. And she describes the contrast of duty VS free will with an apparently 19th-century saying: 'In answer to a man telling her that she's got to do something or other, a wise old Negro woman said, Mister, there's nothing I've got to do except die.' In my experience, serious philosophers are rarely folksy, and Rand's turn of phrase here would be as close as I've ever seen one get.