{"id":148675,"date":"2016-07-01T21:53:42","date_gmt":"2016-07-02T01:53:42","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.designerchildren.com\/atlas-shrugged-cliffsnotes-com\/"},"modified":"2016-07-01T21:53:42","modified_gmt":"2016-07-02T01:53:42","slug":"atlas-shrugged-cliffsnotes-com-2","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/atlas-shrugged\/atlas-shrugged-cliffsnotes-com-2\/","title":{"rendered":"Atlas Shrugged &#8211; cliffsnotes.com"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><p>    The story of Atlas Shrugged takes place in the United    States at an unspecified future time. Dagny Taggart, vice    president in charge of operations for Taggart Transcontinental    Railroad, seeks to rebuild the crumbling track of the Rio Norte    Line that serves Ellis Wyatt's oil fields and the booming    industrial areas of Colorado. The country is in a downward    economic spiral with businesses closing and men out of work.    Other countries in the world have become socialist Peoples'    States and are destitute. Colorado, based on Wyatt's innovative    method of extracting oil from shale, is the last great    industrial center on earth. Dagny intends to provide Colorado    the train service it requires, but her brother James Taggart,    president of Taggart Transcontinental, tries to block her from    getting new rails from Rearden Steel, the last reliable steel    manufacturer. James wants to do business with the inefficient    Associated Steel, which is run by his friend Orren Boyle. Dagny    wants the new rail to be made of Rearden Metal, a new alloy    that Hank Rearden developed after ten years of experiment.    Because the metal has never been tried and has been denounced    by metallurgists, James won't accept responsibility for using    it. Dagny, who studied engineering in college, has seen the    results of Rearden's tests. She accepts the responsibility and    orders the rails made of Rearden Metal.  <\/p>\n<p>    Worsening the economic depression in the U.S. is the    unexplained phenomenon of talented men retiring and    disappearing. For example, Owen Kellogg, a bright young Taggart    employee for whom Dagny had great hopes, tells her that he is    leaving the railroad. McNamara, a contractor who was supposed    to rebuild the Rio Norte Line, retires unexpectedly. As more    great men disappear, the American people become increasingly    pessimistic. Dagny dislikes the new phrase that has crept into    the language and signifies people's sense of futility and    despair. Nobody knows the origin or exact meaning of the    question \"Who is John Galt?,\" but people use the unanswerable    question to express their sense of hopelessness. Dagny rejects    the widespread pessimism and finds a new contractor for the Rio    Norte Line.  <\/p>\n<p>    The crisis for Taggart Transcontinental worsens when the    railroad's San Sebastian Line proves to be worthless and is    nationalized by the Mexican government. The line, which cost    millions of dollars, was supposed to provide freight service    for the San Sebastian Mines, a new venture by Francisco    d'Anconia, the wealthiest copper industrialist in the world.    Francisco was Dagny's childhood friend and her former lover,    but she now regards him as a worthless playboy. In this latest    venture, d'Anconia has steered investors completely wrong,    causing huge financial losses and a general sense of unrest.  <\/p>\n<p>    James Taggart, in an attempt to recover the railroad's losses    on the San Sebastian Line, uses his political friendships to    influence the vote of the National Alliance of Railroads. The    Alliance passes what's known as the \"Anti-dog-eat-dog rule,\"    prohibiting \"cutthroat\" competition. The rule puts the superb    Phoenix-Durango Railroad, Taggart Transcontinental's competitor    for the Colorado freight traffic, out of business. With the    Phoenix-Durango line gone, Dagny must rebuild the Rio Norte    Line quickly.  <\/p>\n<p>    Dagny asks Francisco, who is in New York, what his purpose was    in building the worthless Mexican mines. He tells her that it    was to damage d'Anconia Copper and Taggart Transcontinental, as    well as to cause secondary destructive consequences. Dagny is    dumbfounded, unable to reconcile such a destructive purpose    from the brilliant, productive industrialist Francisco was just    ten years earlier. Not long after this conversation, Francisco    appears at a celebration for Hank Rearden's wedding    anniversary. Rearden's wife Lillian, his mother, and his    brother are nonproductive freeloaders who believe that the    strong are morally obliged to support the weak. Rearden no    longer loves and cannot respect them, but he pities their    weakness and carries them on his back. Francisco meets Rearden    for the first time and warns him that the freeloaders have a    weapon that they are using against him. Rearden questions why    Francisco has come to the party, but Francisco says that he    merely wished to become acquainted with Rearden. He won't    explain his presence any further.  <\/p>\n<p>    Although public opinion and an incompetent contractor are    working against them, Dagny and Rearden build the Rio Norte    Line. Rearden designs an innovative bridge for the line that    takes advantage of the properties that his new metal possesses.    The State Science Institute, a government research    organization, tries to bribe and threaten Rearden to keep his    metal off the market, but he won't give in. The Institute then    issues a statement devoid of factual evidence that alleges    possible weaknesses in the structure of Rearden Metal. Taggart    stock crashes, the contractor quits, and the railroad union    forbids its employees to work on the Rio Norte Line. When Dr.    Robert Stadler, a brilliant theoretical scientist in whose name    the State Science Institute was founded, refuses to publicly    defend Rearden Metal even though he knows its value, Dagny    makes a decision. She tells her brother that she will take a    leave of absence, form her own company, and build the Rio Norte    Line on her own. She signs a contract saying that when the line    is successfully completed, she'll turn it back over to Taggart    Transcontinental. Dagny chooses to name it the John Galt Line    in defiance of the general pessimism that surrounds her.  <\/p>\n<p>    Rearden and the leading businessmen of Colorado invest in the    John Galt Line. Rearden feels a strong sexual attraction to    Dagny but, because he regards sex as a demeaning impulse,    doesn't act on his attraction. The government passes the    Equalization of Opportunity Bill that prevents an individual    from owning companies in different fields. The bill prohibits    Rearden from owning the mines that supply him with the raw    materials he needs to make Rearden Metal. However, Rearden    creates a new design for the John Galt Line's Rearden Metal    Bridge, realizing that if he combines a truss with an arch, it    will enable him to maximize the best qualities of the new    metal.  <\/p>\n<p>    Dagny completes construction of the Line ahead of schedule. She    and Rearden ride in the engine cab on the Line's first train    run, which is a resounding success. Rearden and Dagny have    dinner at Ellis Wyatt's home to celebrate. After dinner, Dagny    and Rearden make love for the first time. The next day, Rearden    is contemptuous of them both for what he considers their low    urges, but Dagny is radiantly happy. She rejects Rearden's    estimate, knowing that their sexual attraction is based on    mutual admiration for each other's noblest qualities.  <\/p>\n<p>    Dagny and Rearden go on vacation together, driving around the    country looking at abandoned factories. At the ruins of the    Twentieth Century Motor Company's factory in Wisconsin, they    find the remnant of a motor with the potential to change the    world. The motor was able to draw static electricity from the    atmosphere and convert it to usable energy, but now it is    destroyed.  <\/p>\n<p>    Realizing how much the motor would benefit the transportation    industry, Dagny vows to find the inventor. At the same time,    she must fight against new proposed legislation. Various    economic pressure groups, seeking to cash in on the industrial    success of Colorado, want the government to force the    successful companies to share their profits. Dagny knows that    the legislation would put Wyatt Oil and the other Colorado    companies out of business, destroy the Rio Norte Line, and    remove the profit she needs to rebuild the rest of the    transc<br \/>\nontinental rail system, but she's powerless to prevent    the legislation.  <\/p>\n<p>    Dagny continues her nationwide quest to find the inventor of    the motor, and she finally finds the widow of the engineer who    ran the automobile company's research department. The widow    tells Dagny that a young scientist working for her husband    invented the motor. She doesn't know his name, but she provides    a clue that leads Dagny to a cook in an isolated Wyoming diner.    The cook tells Dagny to forget the inventor of the motor    because he won't be found until he chooses. Dagny is shocked to    discover that the cook is Hugh Akston, the world's greatest    living philosopher. She goes to Cheyenne and discovers that    Wesley Mouch, the new economic coordinator of the country, has    issued a series of directives that will result in the    strangling of Colorado's industrial success. Dagny rushes to    Colorado but arrives too late. Ellis Wyatt, in defiance of the    government's edict, set fire to his oil wells and retired.  <\/p>\n<p>    Months later, the situation in Colorado continues to    deteriorate. With the Wyatt oil wells out of business, the    economy struggles. Several of the other major industrialists    have retired and disappeared; nobody knows where they've gone.    Dagny is forced to cut trains on the Colorado schedule. The one    bright spot of her work is her continued search for the    inventor of the motor. She speaks to Robert Stadler who    recommends a young scientist, Quentin Daniels of the Utah    Institute of Technology, as a man capable of undertaking the    motor's reconstruction.  <\/p>\n<p>    The State Science Institute orders 10,000 tons of Rearden Metal    for a top-secret project, but Rearden refuses to sell it to    them. Rearden sells to Ken Danagger, the country's best    producer of coal, an amount of Rearden Metal that the law deems    illegal. Meanwhile, at the reception for James Taggart's    wedding, Francisco d'Anconia publicly defends the morality of    producing wealth. Rearden overhears what Francisco says and    finds himself increasingly drawn to this supposedly worthless    playboy. The day following the reception, Rearden's wife    discovers that he's having an affair, but she doesn't know with    whom. A manipulator who seeks control over her husband, Lillian    uses guilt as a weapon against him.  <\/p>\n<p>    Dr. Ferris of the State Science Institute tells Rearden that he    knows of the illegal sale to Ken Danagger and will take Rearden    to trial if he refuses to sell the Institute the metal it    needs. Rearden refuses, and the government brings charges    against himself and Danagger. Dagny, in the meantime, has    become convinced that a destroyer is loose in the world  some    evil creature that is deliberately luring away the brains of    the world for a purpose she cannot understand. Her diligent    assistant, Eddie Willers, knows that Dagny's fears are    justified. He eats his meals in the workers' cafeteria, where    he has befriended a nameless worker. Eddie tells the worker    about Dagny's fear that Danagger is next in line for the    destroyer  that he'll be the next to retire and disappear.    Dagny races to Pittsburgh to meet with Danagger to convince him    to stay, but she's too late. Someone has already met with    Danagger and convinced him to retire. In a mood of joyous    serenity, Danagger tells Dagny that nothing could convince him    to remain. The next day, he disappears.  <\/p>\n<p>    Francisco visits Rearden and empathizes with the pain he has    endured because of the invention of Rearden Metal. Francisco    begins to ask Rearden what could make such suffering worthwhile    when an accident strikes one of Rearden's furnaces. Francisco    and Rearden race to the scene and work arduously to make the    necessary repairs. Afterward, when Rearden asks him to finish    his question, Francisco says that he knows the answer and    departs.  <\/p>\n<p>    At his trial, Rearden states that he doesn't recognize his deal    with Danagger as a criminal action and, consequently, doesn't    recognize the court's right to try him. He says that a man has    the right to own the product of his effort and to trade it    voluntarily with others. The government has no moral basis for    outlawing the voluntary exchange of goods and services. The    government, he says, has the power to seize his metal by force,    and they have the power to compel him at the point of a gun.    But he won't cooperate with their demands, and he won't pretend    that the process is civil. If the government wishes to deal    with men by compulsion, it must do so openly. Rearden states    that he won't help the government pretend that his trial is    anything but the initiation of a forced seizure of his metal.    He says that he's proud of his metal, he's proud of his mills,    he's proud of every penny that he's earned by his own hard    work, and he'll not cooperate by voluntarily yielding one cent    that is his. Rearden says that the government will have to    seize his money and products by force, just like the robber it    is. At this point, the crowd bursts into applause. The judges    recognize the truth of what Rearden says and refuse to stand    before the American people as open thieves. In the end, they    fine Rearden and suspend the sentence.  <\/p>\n<p>    Because of the new economic restrictions, the major Colorado    industrialists have all retired and disappeared. Freight    traffic has dwindled, and Taggart Transcontinental has been    forced to shut down the Rio Norte Line. The railroad is in    terrible condition: It is losing money, the government has    convinced James Taggart to grant wage raises, and there is    ominous talk that the railroad will be forced to cut shipping    rates. At the same time, Wesley Mouch is desperate for Rearden    to cooperate with the increasingly dictatorial government.    Because Rearden came to Taggart's wedding celebration, Mouch    believes that Taggart can influence Rearden. Mouch implies that    a trade is possible: If Taggart can convince Rearden to    cooperate, Mouch will prevent the government from forcing a cut    in shipping rates. Taggart appeals to Lillian for help, and    Lillian discovers that Dagny Taggart is her husband's lover.  <\/p>\n<p>    In response to devastating economic conditions, the government    passes the radical Directive 10-289, which requires that all    workers stay at their current jobs, all businesses remain open,    and all patents and inventions be voluntarily turned over to    the government. When she hears the news, Dagny resigns from the    railroad. Rearden doesn't resign from Rearden Steel, however,    because he has two weeks to sign the certificate turning his    metal over to the government, and he wants to be there to    refuse when the time is up. Dr. Floyd Ferris of the State    Science Institute comes to Rearden and says that the government    has evidence of his affair with Dagny Taggart and will make it    public  dragging Dagny's name through the gutter  if he    refuses to sign over his metal. Rearden now knows that his    desire for Dagny is the highest virtue he possesses and is free    of all guilt regarding it, but he's a man who pays his own way.    He knows that he should have divorced Lillian long ago and    openly declared his love for Dagny. His guilt and error gave    his enemies this weapon. He must pay for his own error and not    allow Dagny to suffer, so he signs.  <\/p>\n<p>    Dagny has retreated to a hunting lodge in the mountains that    she inherited from her father. She's trying to decide what to    do with the rest of her life when word reaches her that a train    wreck of enormous proportions has destroyed the famed Taggart    Tunnel through the heart of the Rockies, making all    transcontinental traffic impossible on the main track. She    rushes back to New York to resume her duties, and she reroutes    all transcontinental traffic. She receives a letter from    Quentin Daniels telling her that, because of Directive 10-289,    he's quitting. Dagny plans to go west to inspect the t<br \/>\nrack and    to talk to Daniels.  <\/p>\n<p>    On the train ride west, Dagny rescues a hobo who is riding the    rails. He used to work for the Twentieth Century Motor Company.    He tells her that the company put into practice the communist    slogan, \"From each according to his ability, to each according    to his need,\" a scheme that resulted in enslaving the able to    the unable. The first man to quit was a young engineer, who    walked out of a mass meeting saying that he would put an end to    this once and for all by \"stopping the motor of the world.\" The    bum tells her that as the years passed and they saw factories    close, production drop, and great minds retire and disappear,    they began to wonder if the young engineer, whose name was John    Galt, succeeded.  <\/p>\n<p>    On her trip west, Dagny's train is stalled when the crew    abandons it. She finds an airplane and continues on to Utah to    find Daniels, but she learns at the airport that Daniels left    with a visitor in a beautiful plane. Realizing that the visitor    is the \"destroyer,\" she gives chase, flying among the most    inaccessible peaks of the Rockies. Her plane crashes.  <\/p>\n<p>    Dagny finds herself in Atlantis, the hidden valley to which the    great minds have gone to escape the persecution of a    dictatorial government. She finds that John Galt does exist and    that he's the man she's been seeking in two ways: He is both    the inventor of the motor and the \"destroyer,\" the man draining    the brains of the world. All the great men she admires are here     inventors, industrialists, philosophers, scientists, and    artists. Dagny learns that the brains are on strike. They    refuse to think, create, and work in a world that forces them    to sacrifice themselves to society. They're on strike against    the creed of self-sacrifice, in favor of a man's right to his    own life.  <\/p>\n<p>    Dagny falls in love with Galt, who has loved and watched her    for years. But Dagny is a scab, the most dangerous enemy of the    strike, and Galt won't touch her  yet. Dagny has the choice to    join the strike and remain in the valley or go back to her    railroad and the collapsing outside world. She is torn, but she    refuses to give up the railroad and returns. Although Galt's    friends don't want him to expose himself to the danger, he    returns as well, so he can be near at hand when Dagny decides    she's had enough.  <\/p>\n<p>    When she returns, Dagny finds that the government has    nationalized the railroad industry and controls it under a    Railroad Unification Plan. Dagny can no longer make business    decisions based on matters of production and profit; she is    subject to the arbitrary whims of the dictators. The government    wants Dagny to make a reassuring speech to the public on the    radio and threatens her with the revelation of her affair with    Rearden. On the air, Dagny proudly states that she was    Rearden's lover and that he signed his metal over to the    government only because of a blackmail threat. Before being cut    off the air, Dagny succeeds in warning the American people    about the ruthless dictatorship that the United States    government is becoming.  <\/p>\n<p>    Because of the government's socialist policies, the collapse of    the U. S. economy is imminent. Francisco d'Anconia destroys his    holdings and disappears because his properties worldwide are    about to be nationalized. He leaves the \"looters\"  the    parasites who feed off the producers  nothing, wiping out    millions of dollars belonging to corrupt American investors    like James Taggart. Meanwhile, politicians use their economic    power to create their own personal empires. In one such scheme,    the Taggart freight cars needed to haul the Minnesota wheat    harvest to market are diverted to a project run by the    relatives of powerful politicians. The wheat rots at the    Taggart stations, the farmers riot, farms shut down (as do many    of the companies providing them with equipment), people lose    their jobs, and severe food shortages result.  <\/p>\n<p>    During an emergency breakdown at the Taggart Terminal in New    York City, Dagny finds that John Galt is one of the railroad's    unskilled laborers. She sees him in the crowd of men ready to    carry out her commands. After completing her task, Dagny walks    into the abandoned tunnels, knowing that Galt will follow. They    make love for the first time, and he then returns to his    mindless labor.  <\/p>\n<p>    The government smuggles its men into Rearden's mills,    pretending that they're steelworkers. The union of steelworkers    asks for a raise, but the government refuses, making it sound    as if the refusal comes from Rearden. When Rearden rejects the    Steel Unification Plan the government wants to spring on him,    they use the thugs they've slipped into his mills to start a    riot. The pretense of protecting Rearden is the government's    excuse for taking over his mills. But Francisco d'Anconia,    under an assumed name, has taken a job at Rearden's mills. He    organizes the workers, and they successfully defend the mills    against the government's thugs. Afterward, Francisco tells    Rearden the rest of the things he wants him to know. Rearden    retires, disappears, and joins the strike.  <\/p>\n<p>    Mr. Thompson, the head of state, is set to address the nation    regarding its dire economic conditions. But before he begins to    speak, he is preempted, cut off the air by a motor of    incalculable power. John Galt addresses the nation instead.    Galt informs citizens that the men of the mind are on strike,    that they require freedom of thought and action, and that they    refuse to work under the dictatorship in power. The thinkers    won't return, Galt says, until human society recognizes an    individual's right to live his own life. Only when the moral    code of self-sacrifice is rejected will the thinkers be free to    create, and only then will they return.  <\/p>\n<p>    The government rulers are desperate. Frantically, they seek    John Galt. They want him to become economic dictator of the    country so the men of the mind will come back and save the    government, but Galt refuses. Realizing that Dagny thinks the    same way that Galt does, the government has her followed. Mr.    Thompson makes clear to Dagny that certain members of the    government fear and hate Galt, and that if they find him first,    they may kill him. Terrified, Dagny goes to Galt's apartment to    see if he's still alive. The government's men follow her and    take Galt into custody, and the rulers attempt to convince Galt    to take charge of the country's economy. He refuses. They    torture him, yet still he refuses. In the end, the strikers    come to his rescue. Francisco and Rearden, joined now by Dagny,    assault the grounds of the State Science Institute where Galt    is held captive. They kill some guards and incapacitate others,    release Galt, and return to the valley. Dagny and Galt are    united. Shortly after, the final collapse of the looters'    regime occurs, and the men of the mind are free to return to    the world.  <\/p>\n<p>        Next About        Atlas Shrugged      <\/p>\n<p><!-- Auto Generated --><\/p>\n<p>Go here to see the original:<\/p>\n<p><a target=\"_blank\" rel=\"nofollow\" href=\"https:\/\/cliffsnotes.com\/literature\/a\/atlas-shrugged\/book-summary\" title=\"Atlas Shrugged - cliffsnotes.com\">Atlas Shrugged - cliffsnotes.com<\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p> The story of Atlas Shrugged takes place in the United States at an unspecified future time. Dagny Taggart, vice president in charge of operations for Taggart Transcontinental Railroad, seeks to rebuild the crumbling track of the Rio Norte Line that serves Ellis Wyatt's oil fields and the booming industrial areas of Colorado. The country is in a downward economic spiral with businesses closing and men out of work.  <a href=\"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/atlas-shrugged\/atlas-shrugged-cliffsnotes-com-2\/\">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":[187827],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-148675","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-atlas-shrugged"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/148675"}],"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=148675"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/148675\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=148675"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=148675"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=148675"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}