
Ayn Rand Explained
From Tyranny to Tea Party
By: Ronald E. Merrill, Marsha Familaro Enright (Revised by)
Paperback | 13 November 2012
At a Glance
256 Pages
Revised
22.8 x 15.2 x 1.91
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Merrill and Enright describe Rand's early infatuation with Nietzsche, her first fiction writings, the developments behind her record-breaking blockbuster novels of 1943 and 1957, her increasing involvement in politics in the 1950s and 1960s, including her support for the presidential candidacy of Barry Goldwater.
Rand's Objectivist movement was first promoted through the Nathaniel Branden Institute, headed by her young prot‚g‚ and anointed heir. The Institute advocated a complete worldview, encompassing Rand's views on politics, economics, religion, art, music, epistemology, ethics (?The Virtue of Selfishness"), and sexual relationships. For several years the Institute grew rapidly, though there were ominous signs as some leading members were ?put on trial' for their heretical ideas, and ignominiously drummed out of the movement.
In 1969, Branden was expelled by Rand for ?immorality', the Institute was shut down, and all members who questioned this ruling were themselves excommunicated and shunned by Rand and her disciples. Branden became a best-selling author of psychotherapy books, with a following of Objectivists who had dissociated from the official organization headed by Rand, and after her death in 1982, by Leonard Peikoff. One of Rand's inner circle, Alan Greenspan, later went on to get his hands on the steering wheel of the American economy.
Objectivism offers a comprehensive package of beliefs encompassing the ethics of rational egoism, rejection of all religion and outright atheism, the arts as expressions of good or bad metaphysical and ethical values, personal freedom from political interference, laissez-faire capitalism, and limited government. The last few years have witnessed a resurgence of Objectivism, with a jump in sales of Rand's novels and the influence of Rand's ideas in the Tea Party movement and the Republican primaries. While gaining membership, the Objectivist movement continues to be sharply divided into warring factions, the two major groupings led by the Ayn Rand Institute (Leonard Peikoff) and the Objectivist Center (David Kelley).
Ayn Rand Explained is a completely revised and updated edition of The Ideas of Ayn Rand, by the late Ronald E. Merrill, first published by Open Court in 1991.
Industry Reviews
| Preface | p. ix |
| The Controversial Ayn Rand | p. l |
| Formidable Influence | p. 3 |
| Political Impact | p. 5 |
| Portraits and Memoirs | p. 6 |
| A Muse for Popular Art | p. 9 |
| The New Atlas Shrugged Wave | p. 11 |
| "In the Name of the Best within Us" | p. 12 |
| Against Relativism and Subjectivism | p. 16 |
| The Virtue of Selfishness | p. 17 |
| Who Was Ayn Rand? | p. 19 |
| Rand in Hollywood | p. 20 |
| The Atlas Phenomenon | p. 22 |
| The Objectivist Movement | p. 25 |
| Was Objectivism a Cult? | p. 26 |
| The Great Schism of Objectivism | p. 29 |
| Shrinking of the Movement | p. 31 |
| From Individualism to the Morality of Capitalism | p. 34 |
| Ayn Rand in Person | p. 37 |
| Partisan Accounts | p. 40 |
| Rand and Her Hangers-on | p. 41 |
| The Owner of Objectivism? | p. 43 |
| No One Owns Objectivism | p. 44 |
| Horrified by Hypocrisy | p. 46 |
| From the Political to the Personal and Back | p. 48 |
| Rand's Personality in Context | p. 51 |
| Ayn and Frank | p. 53 |
| The Young Nietzschean | p. 57 |
| Alone Against the World | p. 57 |
| The Evolution of Objectivism | p. 59 |
| The Randian Style | p. 60 |
| Nietzsche's Influence on Rand | p. 62 |
| The Nietzschean Vision | p. 63 |
| Literary Influences | p. 68 |
| Rand's Early Fiction | p. 69 |
| Red Pawn | p. 71 |
| Penthouse Legend | p. 72 |
| We the Living | p. 74 |
| The Theme | p. 75 |
| Trio for Heroes | p. 75 |
| A Cinematic Style | p. 77 |
| Textual Changes in We the Living | p. 79 |
| The Failure of Nietzsche | p. 81 |
| Scourge of the Second-Handers | p. 83 |
| The Enigma of Ideal | p. 83 |
| Think Twice | p. 86 |
| The Fountainhead | p. 87 |
| The Break with Nietzsche | p. 89 |
| A Traditional Antithesis | p. 93 |
| The Impossible Villain | p. 94 |
| Intellectual Snobbery | p. 95 |
| A Seamless Patchwork | p. 96 |
| Acquittal Unsatisfactory | p. 97 |
| The Embryo of Objectivism | p. 98 |
| Anthem | p. 98 |
| 'The Simplest Thing in the World' | p. 100 |
| The Book that Changed the World | p. 101 |
| A Departure in Style | p. 101 |
| Plot, Plot, and Plot | p. 103 |
| The Technique of Philosophical Integration | p. 104 |
| Rand's Heroes: The Roots | p. 107 |
| Dagny Taggart and the Randian Woman | p. 109 |
| Francisco d'Anconia | p. 112 |
| Hank Rearden | p. 112 |
| Who If John Gait? | p. 113 |
| Bit-Part Heroes | p. 114 |
| The Villains | p. 114 |
| The Secondary Heroes | p. 116 |
| Thirty-Six Just Men? | p. 118 |
| Nathaniel Branden's Critique | p. 120 |
| Rand and Repression | p. 121 |
| The Randian Lovers | p. 123 |
| Paradox Resolved | p. 125 |
| Beyond the Taggart Terminal | p. 126 |
| Rand the Philosopher | p. 127 |
| Objectivism Versus Academia | p. 128 |
| Metaphysical Roots | p. 130 |
| An Epistemological Radical | p. 132 |
| Rand's Theory of Concepts | p. 133 |
| The Analytic-Synthetic Dichotomy | p. 136 |
| Epistemology in Practice | p. 137 |
| The Objectivist Ethics | p. 139 |
| Ethics and Values: Two Lines of Argument | p. 140 |
| The Randian Argument | p. 142 |
| Ends and Ends in Themselves | p. 143 |
| The Means Test | p. 145 |
| Rand and the Aristotelian Legacy | p. 146 |
| From Is to Ought: Is There Aught or Is All for Nought? | p. 147 |
| What Is the Meaning of 'Life' Anyway? | p. 150 |
| Some Objections to Objectivist Ethics | p. 154 |
| From Leaking Lifeboats to the Asteroid Test | p. 155 |
| The Gait-like Golfer | p. 158 |
| Robert Nozick Versus the Count of Monte Cristo | p. 159 |
| Human Nature and Its Consequences | p. 160 |
| The Ethics of the Future | p. 161 |
| From Theory to How-to | p. 163 |
| Objectivist Esthetics | p. 163 |
| Esthetic Difficulties and Definitions | p. 165 |
| Rand's Politics | p. 167 |
| A Political Odyssey | p. 167 |
| The Radical for Capitalism | p. 169 |
| The Goldwater Debacle | p. 170 |
| Roots of the New Conservatism | p. 172 |
| Rand's Critique of Conservatism | p. 173 |
| The Evolution of Libertarianism | p. 175 |
| The Essence of Libertarianism | p. 175 |
| Roots of the Political Conflict | p. 176 |
| Objectivism versus Libertarianism: The Case for the Plaintiff | p. 178 |
| Objectivism versus Libertarianism: The Case for the Defendant | p. 181 |
| Objectivism and the Theory of Government | p. 182 |
| Rand's View of Man and Society | p. 184 |
| The Final Decline | p. 188 |
| The Path Less Traveled | p. 189 |
| Ayn Rand's Revolution | p. 193 |
| A Second Crusade? | p. 193 |
| Or the Ivory Tower? | p. 195 |
| The Schoolroom or the Polling Booth | p. 197 |
| Back to the Future | p. 199 |
| What Is to Be Done? | p. 200 |
| Life Support Systems | p. 201 |
| The Tactics of Sanction | p. 202 |
| The First of Their Return… | p. 203 |
| Bibliography | p. 205 |
| Index | p. 213 |
| Table of Contents provided by Ingram. All Rights Reserved. |
ISBN: 9780812697988
ISBN-10: 0812697987
Series: Ideas Explained
Published: 13th November 2012
Format: Paperback
Language: English
Number of Pages: 256
Audience: General Adult
Publisher: Open Court
Country of Publication: US
Edition Type: Revised
Dimensions (cm): 22.8 x 15.2 x 1.91
Weight (kg): 0.38
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