Wednesday, March 13, 2013

Ayn Rand on Love

11 comments:

  1. She was a remarkably clear thinker--perhaps too cold and too certain of her own rightness, but not someone to dismiss easily. Your point here is to say that she was not a Christian, I suppose. Indeed, she was not, and that changes nothing in my assessment of her.

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    1. You're divining what my point was? You, who continually complains about my fleshing out the stories.

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    2. Just trying to help you out. You so often need it.

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  2. DG reminds me of her and her writing style, write 1,500 words to say what could be said in a single, simple sentence.

    I tried reading her books but I found that when I put them down, I couldn't pick them back up.

    orlin sellers

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    1. Her books do make remarkable book ends--once set in place, they never need moving again.

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    2. You can take the novelist out of Russia, but you can't take Russia out of the Novelist.

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    3. I've read her two most famous books. It took perseverance but it was worth the effort.

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  3. Sadly, her ability to think clearly seems to have been accompanied by a relative inflexibility. I don't know that she could accept that others could look at the same data and honestly draw different conclusions.

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    1. The expression of a conclusion to a perceived situation is of no utility and of no consequence, if such a conclusion is incorrect and therefore moot. To draw upon incorrect conclusions would be to mire oneself in the Charybdis of futility.

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    2. I always thought there was a bit of the con-artist in her.

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    3. Anonymous, "The expression of a conclusion to a perceived situation is of no utility and of no consequence, if such a conclusion is incorrect and therefore moot. To draw upon incorrect conclusions would be to mire oneself in the Charybdis of futility." Really? And MikeB says I can be tedious...

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