{"id":148460,"date":"2016-06-24T07:34:48","date_gmt":"2016-06-24T11:34:48","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.designerchildren.com\/ayn-rand-stanford-encyclopedia-of-philosophy\/"},"modified":"2016-06-24T07:34:48","modified_gmt":"2016-06-24T11:34:48","slug":"ayn-rand-stanford-encyclopedia-of-philosophy","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/ayn-rand\/ayn-rand-stanford-encyclopedia-of-philosophy\/","title":{"rendered":"Ayn Rand (Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy)"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><p>1. Introduction        1.1 Ayn Rand and Philosophy    <\/p>\n<p>    In Rands own words, her first and greatest love, her life    purpose, was the creation of the kind of world  that    represents human perfection, while her interest in    philosophical knowledge was only for the sake of this purpose    (Journal entry for 4 May 1946; in 1997: 479).[1]    Nevertheless, her interest in philosophical knowledge continued    long after she had created this world in her magnum opus,    Atlas Shrugged, her last work of fiction. In her    non-fiction, Rand developed a conception of metaphysical    realism, rationality, ethical egoism (rational self-interest),    individual rights, laissez-faire capitalism, and art,    and applied her philosophy to social issues. She wrote    polemical, philosophical essays, often in response to questions    by fans of Atlas Shrugged and The    Fountainhead; lectured on college campuses; and gave radio    and television interviews. In her own words, her philosophy,  <\/p>\n<p>      in essence, is the concept of man as a heroic being, with his      own happiness as the moral purpose of his life, with      productive achievement as his noblest activity, and reason as      his only absolute. (Rand 1957 [1992]: Afterword)    <\/p>\n<p>    Capitalism, the unknown ideal, is for her the only    political-economic system compatible with this philosophy    because it is the only system based on respect for human beings    as ends in themselves. The free-market libertarian political    movement, though largely disowned by Rand, drewand drawsgreat    inspiration from her moral defense of the minimal state, that    is, the state whose only raison dtre is protection    of individual rights.  <\/p>\n<p>    Whereas Rands ideas and mode of presentation make Rand popular    with many non-academics, they lead to the opposite outcome with    academics. She developed some of her views in response to    questions from her readers, but never took the time to defend    them against possible objections or to reconcile them with the    views expressed in her novels. Her philosophical essays lack    the self-critical, detailed style of analytic philosophy, or    any serious attempt to consider possible objections to her    views. Her polemical style, often contemptuous tone, and the    dogmatism and cult-like behavior of many of her fans also    suggest that her work is not worth taking    seriously.[2] Further, understanding her views requires    reading her fiction, but her fiction is not to everyones    taste. It does not help that she often dismisses other    philosophers views on the basis of cursory readings and    conversations with a few philosophers and with her young    philosophy student acolytes. Some contemporary philosophers    return the compliment by dismissing her work contemptuously on    the basis of hearsay. Some who do read her work point out that    her arguments too often do not support her conclusions. This    estimate is shared even by many who find her conclusions and    her criticisms of contemporary culture, morality, and politics    original and insightful. It is not surprising, then, that she    is either mentioned in passing, or not mentioned at all, in the    entries that discuss current philosophical thought about    virtue ethics, egoism, rights,    libertarianism, or markets. (Readers may also find the entry on    Nozicks political    philosophy to be of interest.) We present specific    criticisms of her arguments and claims below, in the relevant    sections of this entry.  <\/p>\n<p>    Ayn Rand was born Alissa Zinovievna Rosenbaum, to a bourgeois    Jewish family in St. Petersburg, Russia, on 2 February 1905. A    witness to the Russian Revolution and civil war, Rand opposed    both the Communists and the Tsarists. She majored in history,    but the social science program in which she was enrolled at    Petrograd State University included philosophy, law, and    philology. Her teachers emphasizedas she herself later didthe    importance of developing systematic connections among different    areas of thought (Sciabarra 1995). Rands formal philosophical    education included ancient philosophy (especially Plato and    Aristotle), logic, philosophical psychology, Marxism-Leninism,    and non-Marxist political thought. But she was evidently also    exposed to Hegelian and Nietzschean ideas, which blossomed    during this period (known as the Russian Silver Age), and read    a great deal of Friedrich Nietzsche on her own. After    graduating from Petrograd State University in 1924, an interest    in screenwriting led her to enroll in the State Institute for    Cinematography. On the literary side, she studied the great    Russian novelists and poets, but fell in love with Victor Hugo,    to whose influence she owes the Romantic Realism of her    novels.  <\/p>\n<p>    In 1925 Rand succeeded in obtaining permission to visit    relatives in the United States; hating the Soviet system, she    left with no intention of returning. After six months with    relatives in Chicago, she made her way to Hollywood where, on    her second day, a fortuitous encounter with Cecil B. DeMille    led to a job as a script reader, and later as a screenplay    writer. The next week she had another fortuitous encounter,    this time with the actor Frank OConnor, whom she married in    1929. She was married to him till his death in 1979. She    adopted the pen name Ayn Rand to (it is thought) protect her    family back in Russia, although she also told the New York    Evening Post in 1936 that Rand was an abbreviation    of her Russian surname.  <\/p>\n<p>    Rand and her husband moved permanently to New York City in    1951, where she became involved with, and was influenced by,    the circle of mostly New-York-based intellectuals involved in    the revival of classical liberalism, such as the economic    journalist Henry Hazlitt, the Austrian economist Ludwig von    Mises, and the Canadian-American novelist, literary critic, and    political philosopher Isabel Paterson. Rand also studied, and    was a great admirer of, the Lockean philosophy of the American    founding. Rand lived and worked in New York City until her    death in 1982.  <\/p>\n<p>    Rand holds that philosophy, like all forms of knowledge and    achievement, is important only because it is necessary for    living a good human life and creating a world conducive to    living such a life. Philosophy supplies the most fundamental    cognitive and normative abstractions which, respectively,    identify and evaluate what is. Everyone, according to Rand,    needs a philosophy and is guided by at least an implicit one    (1982a: ch. 1). Her novels express her belief that if our    philosophy is more or less correct, our lives will be more or    less successful, if our philosophy is wildly off the mark, our    lives will be disastrous. Philosophy thus has an urgent,    practical importance. But unlike Marx, her philosophical and    political antipode, Rand thinks that social change has to start    with a moral revolution within each individual and the spread    of the right ideas and ideals through rational discourse and    the inspiration of art.  <\/p>\n<p>    Rands ideal human being appears, in varying degrees of    development, in all her novels; her ideal world appears in    Atlas Shrugged. Her novels feature striking, complex    plots with subtle psychological explorations of her characters    emotions and thoughts, and philosophical reflections that    rarely lose sight of the dramatic context. Like many famous    Russian novelists, especially Dostoevsky, whom she recognized    as a great psychologist, Rand also uses long speeches to lay    out her philosophy, a device that has both its supporters and    its detractors. She described Atlas Shrugged as a    stunt novel and a murder mysterythe murder of the human soul    by a collectivist culture. By soul, however, she meant not an    immortal substance that survives the death of the bodyshe is    not a dualist in any aspect of her philosophybut the mind, or    the human spirit that celebrates life on thi<br \/>\ns earth. She took a    familiar phenomenon and literary tropea workers strikeand    turned it on its head to show what happens when the men of    mindscientists, philosophers, industrialists, entrepreneurs,    writersthe prime movers of a societygo on strike. It also    purports to show how the wrong metaphysics can lead to the    wrong ethics and thus to disastrous personal choices and a    disastrous political and economic system, and how the right    philosophy is needed for the rebirth of the soul and the    rebuilding of the world. Her protagonists are not knights on    white steeds rescuing damsels in distress, or swordsmen who can    fight off a dozen enemies single-handed, but men and women in    the mid-20th century industrial America of steel    mills, skyscrapers, and glimmering highways: women who run    transcontinental railroads and men who revolutionize    architecture or (long before clean energy became a cause    clbre) build a motor powered by static electricity to    produce limitless, clean energy. Her novels show the importance    of striving to be the best we can be:  <\/p>\n<p>      Do not let your fire go out, spark by irreplaceable spark, in      the hopeless swamps of the approximate, the not-quite, the      not-yet, the not-at-all. Do not let the hero in your soul      perish, in lonely frustration for the life you deserved, but      never have been able to reach. Check your road and the nature      of your battle. The world you desired can be won, it exists,      it is real, it is possible. (Atlas Shrugged, 1957      [1992]: 983).    <\/p>\n<p>    Her novels inspire readers because they present heroes of    unbreached integrity, heroes who lead colorful and remarkable    lives and succeed not in spite of, but because of, their    uncompromising virtue. This estimate of their virtue is not, of    course, shared by all: many readers find her characters wooden,    her writing stilted, and her ethical and political views    misguided.  <\/p>\n<p>    Rand paid tribute to Aristotle, whom she considered the    greatest of all philosophers, in the titles she gave to the    three Parts of Atlas Shrugged (Non-Contradiction,    Either-Or, A is A) and to one of the chapters    (The Immovable Movers). While she differed sharply from    Nietzsche on many issues, including rationality, free will, and    individual rights, his influence is evident in her provocative,    often aphoristic, point-counterpoint writing style, as well as    in her transvaluation of traditional values and her powerful    affirmation of life and joy and the spirit of youth. In the    Introduction to the 25th Anniversary edition of    The Fountainhead, she stated that the novels sense of    life is best conveyed by a quotation from Nietzsches    Beyond Good and Evil: The noble soul has reverence    for itself. (For The Fountainheads partly    sympathetic and partly critical engagement with Nietzsches    ideas, see Hunt 2006.)  <\/p>\n<p>    Fundamental to Rands outlookso fundamental that she derives    the name of her philosophical system, Objectivism, from itis    a trichotomy among three categories: the intrinsic,    the subjective, and the objective (ITOE:    5254; Rand 1965: 1323). An intrinsic phenomenon is one whose    nature depends wholly on factors external to the mind; a    subjective phenomenon is one whose nature depends wholly on the    mind; and an objective phenomenon is defined, variously, as    that which depends on the relation between a living entitys    nature (including the nature of its mind) and its environment,    or as that which depends on the relation between a properly    functioning (rational) mind and extramental reality.    Commentators are divided over the best way to interpret Rands    views on this issue.  <\/p>\n<p>    Rand holds that there is a widespread tendency to ignore the    third category or to assimilate it to the second, thus setting    up a false dichotomy between the intrinsic and the subjective.    On Rands view, many of the fundamental questions of    philosophy, from the existence of universals to the nature of    value, involve fruitless debates over the false alternative    intrinsic or subjective? in cases where the phenomenon in    question is neither intrinsic nor subjective, but rather    objective.  <\/p>\n<p>    If ethics is the branch of philosophy concerned with practice,    then in a sense all of Rands philosophy is ethics, for Rand    stresses the supremacy of actual living over all    other considerations, and insists that philosophy needs to be    brought up to the realm of actual livingadding I    say intentionally brought up to it, not down (Journal    entry for 15 May 1934, p. 72; in Rand 1997: 73). Consequently,    Rand regularly concerns herself with the practical implications    and social relevance not only of moral and political    philosophy, but likewise of the seemingly more arcane strata of    metaphysics and epistemologyas when she identifies errors in    concept-formation as one of the roots of racism, or mind-body    dualism as a root of the dichotomy between economic and    personal freedom. This approach likewise reflects Rands    emphasis on integrating each piece of information into the    total context of ones knowledge, and her consequent hostility    to compartmentalization.  <\/p>\n<p>    Rands conviction of the vital practical importance of abstract    theory may help to explain the passionately polemical nature of    her philosophical writing, which some readers find inspiring    and others hyperbolic and off-puttingthough Rands admiration    for Nietzsche, as well as her having been educated in a    Marxist-Leninist atmosphere, may also play a role. Rand also    tendedperhaps owing in part to the same two influencesto    regard philosophical errors as revelatory of the psychological    flaws of their authors.  <\/p>\n<p>    For a more in-depth presentation of Rands views on    epistemology and metaphysics, please see the supplement on Epistemology and    Metaphysics  <\/p>\n<p>    Ethics  <\/p>\n<p>      is a code of values to guide mans choices and actionsthe      choices and actions that determine the purpose and the course      of his life. (1961b: 13)    <\/p>\n<p>    Before we can decide which code of values we should accept, we    need to ask why we need a code of values at all. Rand    claims that no philosopher before her has provided a    scientific answer to this question, and so none has    provided a satisfactory ethics.  <\/p>\n<p>    Rand starts by describing value or the good, in classical    fashion, as the object of pursuit: that which one acts to gain    and\/or keep (1961b: 16). Thus, the concept of value    presupposes the concept of an entity capable of acting to    achieve a goal in the face of an alternativeand the basic    alternative facing any living entity is life or death (1961b:    16). It is the conditional nature of life that gives rise to    values, not just human values, but values as such. As she puts    it:  <\/p>\n<p>      Metaphysically, life is the only phenomenon that is      an end in itself: a value gained and kept by a constant      process of action. (1961b: 18)    <\/p>\n<p>    Survival is the organisms ultimate value, the final goal or    end to which all [its] lesser goals are the means, and the    standard of all its other values: that which furthers its life    is the good, that which threatens it is the evil (pp. 1617).    The same, suitably modified, applies to human beings. Life is    the standard and goal of all genuine human values, in the sense    that all of themfrom food to philosophy to fine art to    ethicsmust be explained and justified as requirements of human    survival. Ethics is an objective, metaphysical necessity    of mans survival (p. 24). Thus,  <\/p>\n<p>      [t]he standard of value of the Objectivist ethics  is      mans life, or: that which is required for mans      survival qua man, (1961b: 25)    <\/p>\n<p>    that is,  <\/p>\n<p>      the terms, methods, conditions and goals required for the      survival of a rational being through the whole of his      lifespanin all those aspects of existence which are open to      his choice. (1961b:<br \/>\n 27)    <\/p>\n<p>    To choose to live is to accept ones own life as    ones ethical purpose.  <\/p>\n<p>    Rands metaphysical arguments make two points central to her    axiology and ethics. (1) Values are not just a human phenomenon    but a phenomenon of life: life necessitates value. Thus, values    are neither intrinsic properties of things, nor subjective,    neither free-floating Platonic entities, nor mere matters of    desire or preference, culture or time. Rather, values are    relational or objective, dependent on the    nature of the valuing entity and the nature of its environment.    (2) An entitys values are determined by the requirements of    survival for entities of its kind, and ethics is a requirement    of human survival.  <\/p>\n<p>    Rand seeks to bolster this claim by arguing that the concept of    value entails the concept of life:  <\/p>\n<p>      epistemologically, the concept of value is genetically      dependent upon and derived from the antecedent concept of      life. (1961b: 18)    <\/p>\n<p>    She supports it by asking us  <\/p>\n<p>      to imagine an immortal, indestructible robot, an entity which      moves and acts, but which cannot be affected by anything,      which cannot be changed in any respect, which cannot be      damaged, injured or destroyed. (1961b: 16)    <\/p>\n<p>    Such an entity, she concludes, cannot have values.  <\/p>\n<p>    Critics raise two objections to this argument. (i) It begs the    question by assuming what is at issue, namely, that a    non-living entity cannot be harmed (Nozick 1971). Unlike the    robot of this example, real robots can be damaged or    destroyed, not only by external events, but also by a failure    to perform their functions well, that is, by their own actions    or inactions. Hence they can, quite straightforwardly, be said    to have values.[3] (ii) Even if one were to accept that    the concept of value entails the concept of life, one could    consistently regard ones survival as a means to a certain    kind of life: a life of dedication to the greater    glory of God, the common good, the environment, and so on (Mack    1984).  <\/p>\n<p>    Rands naturalism, and her rejection of intrinsicism and    subjectivism in favor of objectivism, anticipate recent    naturalisms and echo Aristotles argument, against both the    Platonist and the subjectivist, that the good must always be    good-for-something. Her conception of the function of    morality is notable both for its affinity to, and its    difference from, Thomas Hobbes conception: like Hobbes, Rand    sees morality as a necessary means to long-term survival, but    unlike Hobbes, she does not see morality as requiring a    contract or even as a fundamentally social affair. The need for    morality, according to Rand, is dictated by our nature as    creatures that must think and produce to survive; hence we    would need morality even on a desert island. There is, however,    no duty to survive; morality is based on a hypothetical    imperative: if you choose to live, then you must value your own    long-term survival as an ultimate end, and morality as a    necessary means to it. (The much-debated question of whether    the choice to live is a moral choice (Mack 1984, 2003; Long    2000; Rasmussen 2002, 2006) or a pre-moral one (Peikoff 1991;    Gotthelf 1999; Smith 2000, 2006), and the implications of    either position for the objectivity of Rands Objectivist    ethics must, unfortunately, be left undiscussed.) If asked why    the choice to live commits you to your own long-term survival    rather than some other ultimate end (such as, for example, the    greatest happiness of the greatest number (Nozick 1971), or    becoming worthy of eternal life in heaven), the answer is:    because any other ultimate end, if consistently adhered to,    would lead to death.  <\/p>\n<p>    Rands ethics is thus firmly teleological, this-worldly, and    foundationalist. Virtue is the act by which one gains\/and or    keeps values in light of a recognition of certain facts    (1961b: 27, 28); it is not an end in itself  not its own    reward (1957 [1992]: 939). A fact central to a scientific    ethics is that reason is the chief indispensable human tool of    survival, and we exercise reason by choice. Hence rationality    is the fundamental moral virtue, a virtue implicated in all the    other virtues, including productiveness (Section 2.4 below).  <\/p>\n<p>    Rand is widely credited by Objectivists (Peikoff 1991;    Binswanger 1990, 1992; Kelley & Thomas 1999see Other    Internet Resources; Gotthelf 1999; Smith 2000, 2006) with    having solved the is-ought problem by showing that morality is    essential for long-term survival as a rational being, and so    anyone who chooses to live ought to be moral (1961b: 19). But    if the choice to live is itself a moral choice, in the sense    that we ought to choose to live, then the argument proceeds    from an ought to an ought, not from an is to an ought. On the    other hand, if the choice to live is a non-moral choice (an    idea thats hard to reconcile with Rands general view that all    significant choices are moral choices), then suicide can never    be wrong, even if it is done for cowardly, irresponsible, or    unjust reasons, a view that seems incoherent (King 1984 and    Narveson 1998 criticize this and other aspects of Rands moral    views). Even more problematically, if morality is needed only    for long-term survival, and choosing suicide is not immoral,    then a suicide-bomber does no wrong in killing innocent people.  <\/p>\n<p>    Relatedly, how should we understand the idea of survival as a    rational beingthe life proper to a rational being (Rand    1961b: 27). Is a life proper to a rational being a necessary    means, and only a necessary means, to literal, long-term    survival? Or is such a life also, in part, the ultimate goal,    something to be created and preserved for its own sake? Again,    what are we to make of the many passages in which Rand states    that the ultimate goal is ones own happiness?  <\/p>\n<p>    Rand herself thought that she had only one, consistent    metaethical view: the ultimate goal is the individuals own    survival; the only way to survive long-term, i.e., over a    complete life-span, is to live by the standard of mans life as    a rational being, which means: to live morally; and happiness    is the psychological result, reward and concomitant (p. 32)    of living thus. Many of Rands commentators follow her in    holding that there is only one consistent view, while    disagreeing on the right interpretation of it (Den Uyl &    Rasmussen 1978; Machan 1984, 2000; Peikoff 1991; Bidinotto    1994see Other Internet Resources; Hunt 1999; Kelley &    Thomas 1999see Other Internet Resources; Gotthelf 1999; Smith    2000, 2006). Others (Mack 1984, 2003; Badhwar 1999, 2001; Long    2000) argue that Rands writings actually allow of two, if not    three, mutually incompatible views of the ultimate goal, and    our task is to see which of these is the dominant or most    plausible view. The three views are: survival, survival    qua rational being, and happiness in the ancient    Aristotelian sense of flourishing or eudaimonia. In    the rest of Section 2, we will present the textual evidence for    each of these views of the final goal, and the common    objections to them, in turn.  <\/p>\n<p>    The survivalist view holds that just as literal survival is the    ultimate value for other living entities, so it is for human    beings (Kelley & Thomas 1999; Gotthelf 1999; Smith 2000).    Survival is the source and final goal of all the actions of an    entity, that which gives point to all its other values. For    human beings, happiness, intellectual and artistic pursuits and    rationality\/morality are all means to survival. The vicious can    achieve their goals [only] for the range of a moment, as    evidenced by any criminal or any dictatorship (1961b: 26).    Even those whose vice consists of imitating others rather than    looting them live a precarious existence because they are    likely to follow any destroyer who promises to be their savior<br \/>\n   (1961b: 25).  <\/p>\n<p>    Non-survivalists make the following objections:  <\/p>\n<p>        Like Hobbes, Rand rightly points out that if everyone or        most people were to start preying on each other, then no        one would survive for longliterally, and that        generations of predators would end up destroying or driving        away the producers, and thus destroying themselves        (Anthem and Atlas Shrugged). But this        doesnt show that a few predators in a society of producers        cannot survive by predation. Indeed, Rand herself sometimes        acknowledges that evil people can survive by free-riding        (hitch-hiking, as she calls it) on rational, productive        people:      <\/p>\n<p>          If some men attempt to survive by means of brute force or          fraud  it still remains true that their survival is made          possible only by their victims, only by the men who          choose to think and to produce the goods which they, the          looters, are seizing. (1961b: 25)        <\/p>\n<p>        In Mans Rights, Rand explains an individuals right to        his own life as      <\/p>\n<p>          the freedom to take all the actions required by the          nature of a rational being for the support, the          furtherance, the fulfillment and the enjoyment of his own          life. (1963b: 93 and 1967a: 32122)        <\/p>\n<p>        Life here is explicated in terms of not only continued        survival but also the enjoyment proper to a human being.      <\/p>\n<p>    For all these reasons, a more plausible interpretation of    Rands view is that morality is required for surviving qua    human being, that is, for living a life proper to a human    being.  <\/p>\n<p>    Just as the standard of value is survival qua    human being, so the ultimate goal is ones own    survival qua human being. To accept this standard and    goal is to accept (i) the three cardinal values of reason,    purpose (or purposiveness) and self-esteem as not only the    means to but also the realization of ones ultimate value,    ones own life (1961b: 27), and (ii) the three corresponding    virtues of rationality, productiveness, and pride. These    values are means to ones life insofar as they further ones    life as a rational being, and they realize it insofar as they    express the value we place on our lives.  <\/p>\n<p>    What it means to value survival qua human being turns    on the relationship of the three cardinal values to the three    virtues. Rand often states that virtue is only a means to    value. But when she explains how the three cardinal values    correspond to their three virtues, she does not provide a    means-end analysis (Badhwar 1999, 2001). Thus, she says:  <\/p>\n<p>      Productive work is the central purpose of a rational      mans life, the central value that integrates and determines      the hierarchy of all his other values. Reason is the source,      the precondition of his productive workpride is the result.      (1961b: 27)    <\/p>\n<p>    The virtue of productiveness becomes the central example of    purpose (one of the three cardinal values), reason (another    cardinal value) becomes its source, and the virtue of pride    becomes its result. Rand also defines rationality, which is    the basic virtue, in terms of  <\/p>\n<p>      the recognition and acceptance of reason as ones only source      of knowledge  and ones only guide to action. (1961b: 28)    <\/p>\n<p>    By this definition, being rational means valuing reason in    thought, word, and deed, and realizing reason in ones life    means being rational: the virtue and the value entail each    other.  <\/p>\n<p>    This point generalizes to all the virtues and values. Further,    since the (cardinal) values are both the means to and the    realization of ones ultimate value (1961b: 27), it follows    that the (cardinal) virtues are also both the means to and the    realization of ones ultimate value: long-term survival    qua human being. On this interpretation, to survive    qua human being is none other than to lead a virtuous    life in which one has realized ones potential.  <\/p>\n<p>    Both survivalists and eudaimonists, however, point out    that this conception of the final end contradicts Rands    oft-repeated claim that Virtue is not an end in itself. In    addition, eudaimonists make the following objections:  <\/p>\n<p>    Eudaimonists hold that the dominant and\/or more    plausible view expressed in Rands writings is that happinessa    happy lifeis the ultimate value, where a happy life is    understood as a life of emotional fulfillment in worthwhile    goals and activities. Happiness in this sense necessarily    involves virtue, but is not identical with    virtue (Den Uyl & Rasmussen 1978; Machan 1984, 2000; Mack    1984; Badhwar 1999, 2001; Hunt 1999; Long 2000).[4]  <\/p>\n<p>    Happiness is the existentially and psychologically successful    state of life (1961b: 27). As an emotion it is not simply a    positive subjective state, as on some contemporary views, but    an emotion that meets certain normative standards: a state of    non-contradictory joya joy without penalty or guilt,    achievable only by  <\/p>\n<p>      the man who desires nothing but rational goals, seeks nothing      but rational values and finds his joy in nothing but rational      actions. (1961b: 32)    <\/p>\n<p>    Happiness is also a form of life-affirmation:  <\/p>\n<p>      the feeling of ones blessing upon the whole of the earth,      the feeling of being in love with the fact that one exists      and in this kind of world. (1957 [1992]: 1056)    <\/p>\n<p>    Thus, happiness is an objectively worthwhile and emotionally    positive state of life.  <\/p>\n<p>    Rand holds that the pursuit of happiness is inseparable from    the activity of maintaining ones life through the rational    pursuit of rational goals (1961b: 29, 32). A virtuous life is,    thus, essential to happiness. It is also a shield against    soul-wracking unhappiness. Just as even great misfortunes dont    throw Aristotles virtuous individual into misery, they dont    throw Rands heroes into misery. Even at the worst of times,    the virtuous individuals pain only goes down to a certain    point (1943: 344), never touching the core of her being: the    self-esteem that consists of the conviction that she is worthy    and capable of happiness.[5]  <\/p>\n<p>    In keeping with their richer conception of the final end,    Rands novels also employ a richer conception of virtue as an    integrated intellectual-emotional character trait to think,    feel, and act in certain ways, rather than simply as an act in    light of a recognition of certain facts (Badhwar 1999, 2001).    Her characters reveal their souls not only in what they say or    do, notice or fail to notice, focus on or evade, on this or    that occasion, but in their cognitive, emotional, and action    dispositions, their style of being in the world. Their actions    show not only an intellectual commitment to the right but a    wholehearted love of rectitude (1957 [1992]: 512).  <\/p>\n<p>    This basically Aristotelian view of virtue goes hand-in-hand    with a basically Aristotelian view of emotions. Rand rejects    the reason-emotion dichotomy as stemming, ultimately, from a    false mind-body dichotomy. Emotions are neither raw feelings    nor inherently irrational but automatized value-judgments:  <\/p>\n<p>      estimates of that which furthers mans values or threatens      them  lightning calculators giving him the sum of his profit      or loss. (1961b: 27)    <\/p>\n<p>    Emotions provide instant guidance when circumstances do not    permit reasoning everything out anew. But our emotions are only    as good as our reason, because they are programmed by our    reason. Hence they can only be corrected by conscious    reasoning, and in a conflict between reason and emotions, one    must always side with the former.[6]  <\/p>\n<p>    Eudaimonists argue that Rands vision of a virtuous    and happy life in her novels can be understood only as a form    of eudaimonism, even if she often makes statements    inconsistent with this vision. The chief objection to<br \/>\n  eudaimonism is that, by defining a happy life partly    in terms of virtue, it employs an unconvincing    conception of happiness. The philosophical literature on    happiness in this sense (usually called well-being) makes and    answers many such objections (Badhwar 2014).  <\/p>\n<p>    The chief Objectivist virtues are rationality, integrity,    honesty (with self and others), justice, independence,    productiveness, and pride. Rationality,  <\/p>\n<p>      ones total commitment  to the maintenance of a full mental      focus in all issues, in all choices  to the fullest      perception of reality within ones power, (1961b: 28)    <\/p>\n<p>    is the basic virtue of which the other virtues are aspects or    derivatives. The virtues are thus united or reciprocal. Each    virtue is defined partly in terms of a recognition and    whole-hearted commitment to some fact or facts, a commitment    understood by the agent to be indispensable for gaining,    maintaining, or expressing her ultimate value. For example,    integrity is the recognition of the fact that you cannot fake    your consciousness (1957 [1992]: 936), a recognition that is    expressed in loyalty to ones rational values and convictions,    especially in the face of social pressures to surrender them    (1961b: 28; 1964a: 52, 80); honesty is the recognition of the    fact that you cannot fake existence, a recognition that is    expressed in truthfulness in thought and speech (1957 [1992]:    93637); and justice is  <\/p>\n<p>      the recognition of the fact that you cannot fake the      character of men as you cannot fake the character of nature,       that every man must be judged for what he is and      treated accordingly. (1957 [1992]: 937)    <\/p>\n<p>    Conspicuous by their absence from Rands list of the cardinal    virtues are the virtues of benevolence, such as kindness,    charity, generosity, and forgiveness. Rand states that charity    is not a major virtue or moral duty (1964b); likewise,    presumably, kindness, generosity, and forgiveness. Whether, and    how much, one should help others depends on their place in    ones rationally defined hierarchy of values, and on the    particular circumstances (whether they are worthy of help, what    the likely consequences are of helping them, and so on). The    greater their value vis--vis ones rational    self-interest, the greater the help that one should be willing    to give, ceteris paribus. What is never morally    appropriate is making sacrifices, that is, surrendering    something of value to oneself for the sake of something of less    or no value to oneself. Thus, it can never be moral to    knowingly risk ones life for a stranger (unless, of course,    ones life is no longer worth living) or to court unhappiness    for the happiness of another, whether stranger or friend. It is    appropriate to help a stranger only in an emergency, and only    when the risk to our own life or well-being is minimal (1963c:    4345). This should not be taken to imply that helping a    stranger is morally optional, regardless of the strangers    plight. Indeed, people who are totally indifferent to anything    living and would not lift a finger to help a man or a dog left    mangled by a hit-and-run driver are psychopaths (1963c:    4345) Rand makes even more concessions to common sense    morality when she states that its good to help a neighbor    going through a hard time till he can get back on his own feet,    if we can afford to and if we have no reason to think that he    is undeserving. Charity understood thus is a virtue because it    is an expression of the generalized good will and respect that    all normal people have towards others as creatures who share    with them the capacity to value (1963c: 4647). Nathaniel    Branden tries to reconcile charity with a narrow act-egoism by    declaring that the former stems from a species-identification    with another, such that, in revering others, people are    revering their own life. By acting charitably, people    actualize this sense of kinship, without sacrificing their own    well-being.  <\/p>\n<p>    This last is true, but the desire to reduce all motivations to    act-egoistic motivations leads Branden (and Rand and many    Objectivists) to ignore the fact that charity is first and    foremost profoundly other-regarding, prompted by anothers    plight rather than concern for ones own self-actualization The    same is true of trying to rescue a dog mangled by a hit-and-run    driver, where the egoistic motivation is even weaker, since    here there is no species-identification, but rather only a    genus-identification with another sufferer.  <\/p>\n<p>    At any rate, the argument from identification can also be used    to justify charity towards strangers in non-emergency    situations, for example, for those who are permanently disabled    and unable to care for themselves (Badhwar forthcoming-b). Rand    concedes as much in What is Capitalism? (1965) where she    argues that people who are unable to work must rely on    voluntary charity, thus implying that it is proper for those    who can afford it to support strangers in non-emergency    situations.  <\/p>\n<p>    The question arises why Rand thinks that charity, kindness etc.    are not major virtues when they meet all the conditions of    appropriateness: the recipient is worthy of help, one can    afford to help, it is in ones rational self-interest (or not    contrary to it) to help, and so on. Perhaps Rand thinks that    they are minor virtues because we are not obligated to act on    them at all times, the way we are obligated to act justly and    honestly at all times. A deeper reason, however, might be her    conception of people as essentially agents rather than    patients, doers rather than receivers, self-sufficient rather    than dependent. Nevertheless, Rands view of the unity of the    virtues dictates that, even if we are not obligated to    act on charity, kindness etc. at all times, they are    just as important to possess as the other virtues.    Moreover, in keeping with her emphasis on the importance of    goodwill towards others and the benevolent universe premise,    Rands heroes are often extraordinarily (and almost always    appropriately) kind and generous, not only to those they love    but also to mere acquaintances, and even sometimes adversaries    (Badhwar 1993bsee Other Internet Resources). Striking examples    include, from The Fountainhead, Howard Roarks    unsought-for attempt to give hope and courage to Steven    Mallory, the gifted young sculptor whose failure to get work    has driven him to the verge of a spiritual and physical    collapse; Roarks unreproachful help to his erstwhile    adversary, Peter Keating, when Keating falls on hard times; and    from Atlas Shrugged, Dagnys support to a heart-broken    and despairing Cheryl Taggart who, in the past, has treated    Dagny with scorn; and Hank Reardens generosity towards his    exploitative family before he realizes their    exploitativeness.[7] By contrast, Rands villains lack    genuine goodwill towards others and, thus, lack true kindness    or generosity.  <\/p>\n<p>    Just as rationality, a focus on reality, is at the heart of    every virtue, so irrationality, evasion of reality (including    self-deception), is at the heart of every vice. Rands villains    are all master evaders motivated by a desire for power, social    status, fame, or unearned wealth, and resentment of the good.    They are second-handerspeople whose primary relationship is    to other people rather than to reality. Between the virtuous    and the vicious are the innocently wrong, people who adopt    wrong moral principles or make wrong choices, not through    evasion but through an error of judgment (Rand does not    explicitly recognize any moral category other than virtue,    vice, and moral error, although her novels portray characters    that do not easily fit into any of these categories). Hank    Rearden, in Atlas Shrugged, is the great innocent    living under a burden of unearned guilt because of his mistaken    sense of honor and his charity towar<br \/>\nds a family interested only    in manipulating and using him. Cheryl Taggart is killed by the    too-sudden revelation that the man she loved and admired as the    embodiment of her ideals is a fraudand that the world is full    of such frauds.  <\/p>\n<p>    As already indicated, Rand justifies virtue in both    instrumental and non-instrumental terms, though without    distinguishing between them. The instrumental arguments show    the existential and psychological rewards of virtue and costs    of vice. Virtue creates a sense of inner harmony and enables    mutually beneficial interactions with others. Evasiveness, by    contrast, traps one in a tangled web of rationalizations and    pretenses. The evader who deceives others is either eventually    caught, or lives in fear of being caught, becoming dependent on    others unconsciousness. He is a fool, says a character in    Atlas Shrugged, whose source of values is the fools    he succeeds in fooling (1957 [1992]: 945). Further, like    Sartre, Rand holds that no evasion is completely successful,    because the truth constantly threatens to resurface. Hence, the    evaders diseased soul is in a state of constant inner    conflict and anxiety as he tries to suppress his awareness of    uncomfortable truths while maintaining his hold on others. His    lack of integrity and of esteem for reality results in a lack    of self-love or self-esteem and, indeed, of a solid self. (It    is noteworthy, however, that her portrayal of Gail Wynand in    The Fountainhead is closer to Aristotles portrayal of    the vicious man in Book III of the Nicomachean Ethics    as someone who is unconscious of his vice, than to her own    stated view of the evader.)  <\/p>\n<p>    These views are familiar from the history of philosophy, but    many readers find their expression in Rands novels to be of    unusual psychological depth and conviction. Nevertheless, the    views are subject to the well-known objection that the    complexity and variability of human psychology and society    allow only for the most part generalizations about the    existential and psychological benefits of virtue or costs of    vice. Thus, it is possible for a small injustice to lead to    great rewards, especially since others are willing to shrug off    or forgive occasional transgressions. It is also possible for    poor introspection, forgetfulness, or self-acceptance to allow    one to evade something without any need for supporting evasions    or damage to ones self-esteem. Again, even if every wrongdoing    carries psychological costs, these might sometimes be    outweighed by the long-term costs of doing the right thing (as    Rand herself suggests in her portrayal of the embittered Henry    Cameron and Stephen Mallory in The Fountainhead).  <\/p>\n<p>    The non-instrumentalist justification of virtue in Rands    novels is largely immune to these objections (though subject to    the objections noted in 2.4 above).    To compromise morally is, necessarily, to compromise ones own    (objectively conceived) happiness, because no existential loss    can compare to the loss of moral integrity. Rectitude is partly    constitutive of genuine happiness because it expresses the    right relationship to reality: to existence, to oneself, and to    others. For the same reason, it is partly constitutive of a    self worth loving, an ideally human or rational self. Like    Plato and Aristotle, Rand argues that virtue necessarily    creates inner harmony and certitude. Any value gained at the    price of rectitude is only the simulacrum of genuine value. In    a variety of conceptually interconnected ways, then, virtuous    individuals are necessarily better off than those willing to    take moral short-cuts. In its structure and much of its    content, Rands ethical egoism is thus of a piece with the    egoism of ancient eudaimonistic theories.  <\/p>\n<p>    An objection often levied against egoistic theories is that    they give the wrong reason for acting in other-regarding ways:    justly, kindly, etc. My act is not really just if I give you    your due because it is good for me rather than because you    deserve it; it is not really charitable if I help you for my    own benefit rather than yours. A common reply is that the    egoists justification is egoistic but not her    motivation, a reply that itself invites the charge of    moral schizophrenia. Rand does not address the wrong-reason    objection, but its unlikely that she would accept this    dichotomy between justification and motivation. So insofar as    her view is instrumentalist and act-egoistic, the problem    remains. The non-instrumentalist strand in her theory, however,    implies that the objection itself is mistaken, because giving    you what you deserve\/merit is partly constitutive of    my rational interests; there is no conflict between your    rational interests and mine (cf. 1964a: 5765).  <\/p>\n<p>    Rand regards goodwill towards others, or a generalized    benevolence, as an offshoot of proper self-love, with no    independent source in human nature. There is only one    alternative to being rationally self-interested: sacrificing    ones proper interests, either for the sake of other people    (which she equates with altruism) or for the sake of the    supernatural (which she calls mysticism) (1982a: ch. 7). Kants    ethics is a secularized mysticism insofar as it rests on    categorical commands and duty for dutys sake, which is to say:    regardless of any earthly desire or interest (1970). An    altruistic ethics equates right action with self-sacrifice for    the sake of others good and immorality with selfishness,    while saying nothing about the standard of the good    (Introduction, 1964a: iii; 1974). It thus fails to answer the    prior question of what code of values we should follow and why,    and provides no motivation to be moral other than guilt over    selfishness. When taken to its logical conclusion, altruism    does not simply tell us that it is selfish to pursue our own    desires, but also that it is selfish to uphold [our own]    convictions,  [that we] must sacrifice them to the convictions    of others (Rand 1957 [1992]: 943; Galts Speech, Rand 1961a:    142). In foreign policy, altruism is used to justify and gain    support for Americas intervention in other countries (1966a).    Altruism is also the reason why so many sympathize with, or    even praise, bloody dictatorships that proudly proclaim that    the sacrifice of the individual is a necessary and noble means    to the goal of the collective good (Rand 1966a).  <\/p>\n<p>    As a moral code, altruism is impractical, because its    requirements are contrary to the requirements of life and    happiness, both the agents and other peoples. As such, it is    also profoundly immoral. Altruism leaves us without any moral    guidance in our everyday lives and gives morality a bad name.  <\/p>\n<p>    What, then, is the psychological explanation for the widespread    equation of altruism with morality? Rand suggests various    explanations reminiscent of Nietzsches analysis of the    psychology of altruism. The theorists and preachers of altruism    are motivated largely by a desire to control and manipulate    others by playing on their guilt. Those who accept their    teachings typically do so either because of guilt over their    own superior achievements, or because, lacking any    intellectual integrity, love of truthor a passionate    dedication to an idea, they have nothing much worth saving,    and so do not mind sacrificing themselves (Selfishness Without    a Self, 1973b; 1982a). Some altruists are altruists because    their mentalities are still frozen in a tribal past when    survival required the sacrifice of some for the sake of others    (1973b). Rand herself rejects a zero-sum picture of human    relationships, so long as everyone in the relationship acts    rationally.  <\/p>\n<p>    Rands defense of selfishness and rejection of altruism are    part of the reason both for her popularity with the general    reader, and her unpopularity with philosophers and other    intellectuals, alth<br \/>\nough some would no doubt agree with her    rejection of abject self-sacrifice and her recognition of    proper concern with the self as moral (Falk 1963; Gilligan    1982; Hampton 1993; Badhwar 1993a). The general reader who    responds positively to Rands work finds, for the first time, a    moral justification for pursuing a life of her or his own and a    liberation from unearned guilt. The philosopher who responds    negatively to her work finds many biased and simplistic    interpretations of philosophers and philosophical doctrines,    including her claim that she is the first to consistently    defend a morality of rational self-interest, all other    philosophers having defended either altruism or mysticism    (Pojman 1995). Her critics also challenge her equation of    altruism with abject self-sacrifice (Rachels 2000, Flew 1984),    and her claim (explained below) that there is no conflict    between peoples rational interests (Flew 1984). An    adequate interpretation of her views, however, requires    attention both to the fact that, in the absence of special    obligations created by bonds of love, contract, or family, she    regards others needs as making no claim on us, and to the fact    that she is an uncompromising defender of justice, honesty, and    respect for others as ends in themselves.  <\/p>\n<p>    Rands moral society is a society of independent individuals    who respect each others natural rights to life, liberty, and    property, and who trade value for value, materially and    spiritually. They live, in her words, by the trader    principle. Individual (natural) rights and the trader    principle are both dictated by the fact that, as rational,    independent beings, we need to think and act for our proper    survival (1961b: 31). Both are required by respect for    individuals as ends in themselves, not mere means to others    ends.  <\/p>\n<p>      Rights are a moral conceptthe concept that provides a      logical transition from the principles guiding an      individuals actions to the principles guiding his      relationship with othersthe concept that preserves and      protects individual morality in a social contextthe link      between the moral code of a man and the legal code of a      society, between ethics and politics. Individual rights      are the means of subordinating society to moral law.      (1963b: 92).    <\/p>\n<p>    These natural rights are basically rights to actions, not to    things or outcomes, and they can be violated only through the    initiation of force or fraud. Hence, all natural rights are    negative, that is, claims on others non-interference, and not    claims on them to provide one with certain goods or    outcomes.[8] The fundamental right is the right to    life: the right to take the actions necessary for sustaining    the life proper to a human being.  <\/p>\n<p>      The right to life meansthe freedom to take all the actions      required by the nature of a rational being for the support,      the furtherance, the fulfillment and the enjoyment of his own      life. (Such is the meaning of the right to life, liberty and      the pursuit of happiness.). (1963b: 93)    <\/p>\n<p>    The right to liberty is the right to act (including to write    and speak) on ones judgment; the right to the pursuit of    happiness is the right to pursue goals for ones own    fulfillment; the right to property is the right to gain, to    keep, to use and to dispose of material values (1963b: 94).    Like the mind-body dichotomy, the common dichotomy between    human rights and the right to property is a false one,    because to own ones life is to own ones actions and their    fruits (1962b: 91).[9] Just as there is a causal and logical    connection between the virtues, so there is between these    rights: a government that violates human rights also violates    property rights. Thus, for example, in violating the right to    freedom of expression by banning obscene speech on TV, the    government violates the property right of the owners of the TV    station to use their property as they see fit. Like other    libertarians, both right (market) and left (egalitarian), Rand    opposes state regulation of morality, as well as forced service    to the state, whether military or civilian. She criticizes both    conservatives and liberals (as these terms are understood in    American politics) for wanting government to control the realm    they regard as important: the spiritual or moral realm in the    case of conservatives, and the material or economic realm in    the case of liberals (1981b). Both sides thus betray a lack of    understanding of the fact that human beings need to be free in    both realms to be free in either.  <\/p>\n<p>    There is much that is of great value here, especially Rands    insight that we would not have rights if we did not need them    for our survival and happiness (Miller & Mossoff    forthcoming; Badhwar forthcoming-a). But critics point out that    grounding all rights in the right to take the actions necessary    for proper survival entails that one has no right to take    actions that are contrary to proper survival: blindly    following a guru instead of thinking for oneself, living off    others because one prefers the life of a couch potato to    fending for oneself, wasting ones property instead of using it    wisely, or, most obviously, committing suicide (Mack 1984;    Zwolinski forthcoming; Badhwar forthcoming-a). Yet the freedom    to do only that which is morally good or rational is not a    freedom at all. But this is not Rands consistent position. For    example, she also says that, as fallible creatures, human    beings  <\/p>\n<p>      must be free to agree or disagree, to cooperate or to pursue      their own independent course, each according to his own      rational judgment. (1965: 17)    <\/p>\n<p>    Some commentators rely on this statement to argue that Rand is    not restricting rights to actions that are necessary for proper    survival (Miller & Mossoff forthcoming). But it would be    more accurate to say that, while this position is the one that    is compatible with her deep-seated commitment to liberty and a    minimal government, she also often makes statements that entail    the opposite.  <\/p>\n<p>    Rand argues that the only just social-political system, the    only system compatible with our rational nature and with the    right of individuals to live for their own sakes, is capitalism    (1965, 1967b), that is,  <\/p>\n<p>      laissez-faire capitalismwith a separation of state      and economics, in the same way and for the same reasons as      the separation of state and church. (1961b, 1964a)    <\/p>\n<p>    State regulation of the market, she argues, is responsible for    corrupting both state and market institutions, just as    political regulation of religion (or religious regulation of    politics), wherever it exists, corrupts both state and    religious institutions. Regulation creates the opportunity for    the trading of favors between politicians and religious    leaders, and politicians and businesses. Atlas    Shrugged offers a complex and compelling depiction of the    economic, political, and moral corruption spawned by cronyism    between government and business. Laissez-faire    capitalism is the only [social] system that bans force from    social relationships domestically and abroad, because the    trader and the warrior are antagonists (Rand 1966a). Rands    conception of capitalism is, thus, more radical than the    mainstream conception, and her defense of it significantly    different both from the utilitarian defenses given by most    economists, and the religious defenses given by many    conservatives (see Den Uyl & Rasmussen 1984b; Machan 1984).    She does, of course, praise capitalism (or semi-capitalism) for    creating widespread prosperity, but this feature is itself    explained only by the fact that it leaves individuals free to    produce in peace. In Atlas Shrugged, Rand    distinguishes between the few business people who earn their    money through honest effort, without seeking favors from the    gover<br \/>\nnment, and the vast majority who are members of the    aristocracy of pull (crony capitalists, in contemporary    terminology) and get rich only through such favors, a situation    that she thinks prevails, and has always prevailed, in the real    world (Rand 1964c). She holds that for a short period in the    nineteenth-century America came closer to a    laissez-faire system than any other society before or    since, but that capitalism remains an unknown ideal. Some    critics complain, however, that in her non-fiction (1961c) Rand    does not always recognize the aristocrats of pull in the real    worldbusiness leaders who lobby politicians for subsidies for    themselves and restrictions on their competitors (Rothbard    1968; Johnson 2006).  <\/p>\n<p>    Rand rejects the criticism that unregulated,    laissez-faire capitalism would lead to a concentration    of power in a few hands and undermine equality of opportunity    because laissez-faire capitalism requires the rule of    law, a well-defined system of property rights, freedom of    contract, and, as a corollary, a government that abstains from    all favoritism.  <\/p>\n<p>    Rand holds that there is no conflict between one persons    rational interests and anothers, hence that respecting other    peoples rights is perfectly compatible with advancing or    preserving ones own interests. Is it true, however, that    rational interests cannot conflict? It seems that whenever two    people have an interest in one good, for example, a job, and    are equally qualified to have it, their rational interests    conflict, Perhaps what Rand has in mind is that rational    interests dont necessarily conflict, that is, that it    is not in their nature to conflict. Their conflict is due to    external factors, such as only one job for two qualified    people. But is such conflict compatible with rights in an    egoistic framework? And can rights be defended within an    egoistic framework? Critics object that respect for others    rights cannot be justified only as a means to ones ultimate    value, whether this be survival or happiness (Mack 1984; Flew    1984). For under perfectly realistic scenarios, ones ultimate    value can require one to violate anothers right to life or    property. In her justification of rights we see the same    unresolved tension between the instrumentalist strand and the    deontic strand that we do in her justification of morality in    general (Mack 1984, 2003). The eudaimonist strand in Rands    justification, however, allows her to respond that respect for    others rights expresses our recognition of the fact that    others are ends in themselves, a recognition that is required    by justice, and that justice, along with the other virtues, is    necessary for leading a happy life.  <\/p>\n<p>    Rand defines government as  <\/p>\n<p>      an institution that holds the exclusive power to      enforce certain rules of social conduct in a given      geographical area. (1963a: 125)    <\/p>\n<p><!-- Auto Generated --><\/p>\n<p>Here is the original post:<\/p>\n<p><a target=\"_blank\" rel=\"nofollow\" href=\"http:\/\/plato.stanford.edu\/entries\/ayn-rand\/\" title=\"Ayn Rand (Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy)\">Ayn Rand (Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy)<\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p> 1. Introduction 1.1 Ayn Rand and Philosophy In Rands own words, her first and greatest love, her life purpose, was the creation of the kind of world that represents human perfection, while her interest in philosophical knowledge was only for the sake of this purpose (Journal entry for 4 May 1946; in 1997: 479).[1] Nevertheless, her interest in philosophical knowledge continued long after she had created this world in her magnum opus, Atlas Shrugged, her last work of fiction.  <a href=\"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/ayn-rand\/ayn-rand-stanford-encyclopedia-of-philosophy\/\">Continue reading <span class=\"meta-nav\">&rarr;<\/span><\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[187828],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-148460","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-ayn-rand"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/148460"}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=148460"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/148460\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=148460"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=148460"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=148460"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}