A pretty amusing review of a new Ayn Rand biography.
Some lines I liked:
"...her temperament could have neutered an ox at 40 paces"The paragraph about William James' theory of the foundations of personal philosophy is pretty interesting, too.
“Tell me what a man finds sexually attractive,” she once wrote, “and I will tell you his entire philosophy of life.”
As a child, she was solitary, opinionated, possessive, and intense—a willful and brilliant loner with literally zero friends. At 9, she decided to become a writer; by 11 she’d written four novels, each of which revolved around a heroine exactly her age but blonde, blue-eyed, tall, and leggy. (Rand was—by her own standards—unheroically dark, short, and square.) At 13, she declared herself an atheist. It’s hard not to suspect, based on many of these childhood anecdotes, that Rand suffered from some kind of undiagnosed personality disorder. Once, when a teacher asked her to write an essay about the joys of childhood, she wrote a diatribe condemning childhood as a cognitive wasteland—a joyless limbo in which adult rationality had yet to fully develop. (It was possibly a good thing that she never had children.)
By the way, Stephen Colbert explained Atlas Shrugged earlier this year:
The Colbert Report | Mon - Thurs 11:30pm / 10:30c | |||
The Word - Rand Illusion | ||||
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http://www.lewrockwell.com/rothbard/rothbard23.html
ReplyDeleteThanks, MCB, that was a good read.
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