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    For the New Intellectual by Ayn Rand

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    (Mass Market Paperback - Reissue)

    • Pub. Date: December 1963
    • 224pp
    • Sales Rank: 29,946

    Reader Rating: (3 ratings)

    Detailed Rating: "Innovative" See All

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      Product Details

      • Pub. Date: December 1963
      • Publisher: Penguin Group (USA)
      • Format: Mass Market Paperback, 224pp
      • Sales Rank: 29,946

      Synopsis

      This is Ayne Rand's challenge to the prevalent philosphical doctrince of our time and the "atmosphere of guilt, of panic, of despair, of boredom, and of all-pervasive evasion" that they create. One of the most controversial figures on the intellectual scene, Ayn Rand was the proponent of a moral philsophy - an ethic of rational self-interest - that stands in sharp opposition of the ethics of altruism and self-sacrifice. The fundamentals of this morality - "a philosophy for living on earth" - are here vibrantly set forth by the spokesman for a new class, For the New Intellectual.

      Biography

      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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      Customer Reviews

      Perfect intro to objectivism.by kyleb

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      March 30, 2009: This book is a wonderful spring board into objectivism. Ayn Rand runs through the founding principles of her philosophy in the first half of the book. In the second half she takes key excerpts from her novels that illustrate those principles. You will not be disappointed!

      I Also Recommend: Liberty and Tyranny.

      A reviewerby Anonymous

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      March 18, 2007: FOR THE NEW INTELLECTUAL When many years ago I decided that Rand's work was an area that I needed to investigate, I found myself at a floor-to-ceiling rack of her volumes in a bookstore. Intimidating. Even today there are few first-rate introductions to her vast output then, there was only, either in that rack or otherwise known to me: the 'For The New Intellectual' volume. It's a snapshot of her philosophical viewpoint, but as presented in the novels, not in her nonfiction essay collections. One may question the strategy there, since the philosophy (outside the context of story characters) is approached differently in the nonfiction (and thus some readers could suffer confusion), but for a one-volume taste of the total viewpoint, I found it just the thing needed. It didn't bring me to a total understanding of Objectivism, but it gave me enough basics to know what sections to pursue next, and as well helped to clarify that which Objectivism was not. A closer observation of the book's structure reveals that it's actually not one but two things. First, as the back-cover blurb indicates, it has the philosophical passages from the well-known novels. But there's also the longer and opening title piece, new at the time and not included in different essay collections since. That 50-page essay (as opposed to the novel excerpts which sketch answers to various philosophical problems) brings to light her conception of the problems that required the answers. In about 20 pages she pretty much covers the intellectual history of the Western world, along the way describing how later thinkers either followed or deviated from previous ones. Proceeding toward the middle ages, the essay is the prose equivalent of an intellectual disaster movie (as humanity turns away from civilization) and then becomes more upbeat (as the Renaissance sees a reduction in ignorace and suffering). It concludes with a view of the contemporary situation, setting the stage for the recommendations in the novel excerpts that follow. Any number of later books claim to offer convenient introductions to Rand's core work. This is the one I myself used at the start of my research on her, and found that it worked well both as backstory (the title essay) and as sales pitch or inducement (the excerpts). As with any large system, there's no shortcut to apprehending Objectivism, but this book contains the initial small steps by which readers could later hit their stride.


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