I've been toying around with this concept for a while now, and since I'm bored, the other good discussions are all stalled out, and I'm a masochist, I'm going to give it a go.
Basically, I want to provide an insight into the mentality of the average run-of-the-mill Objectivist.
I want to do this for two reasons.
1) I don't think, based on my previous discussions here, most people on this forum who comment on Objectivism understand the philosophy. Most make some pretty basic errors and fall for some pretty obvious lies. Basic and obvious, that is, from the internal perspective; I can certainly appreciate why they aren't so obvious from the external. I'd like to clear up those misconceptions.
2) I think this forum can handle discussions of ideas opposing the forum's mainstream in a better way than is typically done--I think folks here are capable of listening to what the other side says. At the very least, I have to try to find out.
I would like to lay a few ground rules for this before we start:
1) We should assume that those identifying with Objectivism understand Objectivism better than those who don't. This may or may not be true, and if evidence to the contrary comes to light we should certainly take that into account. However, I think this should be the default assumption in these kinds of discussions. Statements like "REAL Muslims believe X!" coming from atheists are obviously intended to shut down the conversation and cast the bblame of a small subset onto the whole population; at minimum, it is an attempt to dictate what the other side believes. And that's simply not something I'm interested in engaging with. We all choose our own beliefs, and I think it only fair to allow each of us to state our beliefs ourselves.
2) I don't have a huge amount of time to devote to this project. I have work, a kid, another on the way, etc. I'll do what I can, but for the most part I'm posting in scraps of time (lunch break, after the hatchling goes to bed, etc). What that means is that I may not answer every question, respond to every statement, or fully flesh out every idea. I'll try, but time is one constraint I've never found a way to work around. In particular, I'm not going to bother giving page number citations; if I have a link I'll provide it, but I'm not going to spend a huge amount of time digging through the literature. I don't expect anyone else to, either. This is a casual conversation, not a research paper.
3) Objectivists often disagree. I'm in the Dr. Hsieh camp, myself; I've found her to be consistently rational and thoughtful, far more so than other Objectivist thinkers. Still, I am not obliged to agree with something merely because Dr. Piekoff says it. For that matter, I disagree with Dr. Hsieh on a few issues. What you're getting is MY understanding of the philosophy. There are broad areas in which we all must agree, obviously; otherwise, categorizing ourselves under the same term would be a contradiction! However, the specifics can get interesting. This is in keeping with Rand's own view of the philosophy; most people in Galt's Gulch disagreed with what Ragnar did, for example. There are some issues I'm not sure about, such as open vs. closed Objectivism; there are some that I strongly disagree with people on, such as aesthetics (I'm a metal head; that does not go over well in some circles!). And folks like Premise Checkers are the Objectivist equivalent of Free Thought Blogs--merely including yourself in that group excludes you from being taken seriously by any sane person.
Okay, that out of the way............
Why do I consider myself an Objectivist? Mostly, Rand put words to what I've always believed. I've never understood why anyone else had a say in what I did with my life--I always took the view that I don't tell you what to do, you don't tell me what to do. There are obvious social necessities; it would be chaos if we drove wherever we wanted, for example! But beyond those, as long as we don't directly interfere with each other's lives, we have no say in each other's lives. I had more or less worked out a fair bit of Objectivist philosophy myself before I even heard of Rand.
When I read Rand, my reaction was "Finally, someone else gets it!" There was some new stuff, though, such as the Objectivist epistemology. I've looked into those, and found them to be more or less consistent with what I've seen in science. Ideas must have a real-world basis, meaning they must be testable; induction or deduction alone are dangerous, and proper thinking is the use of both of them at the same time; proper identification is the foundation of rational thought. That sort of thing.
I know little enough about Rand's life, and care less. I don't care what Enya looks like, I enjoy her for her music. Similarly, I don't care if Rand lived her philosophy, I care whether or not her philosophy makes sense. Her afffair with Nethanial Brandon is incomprehensible to me (his professional work is decent, from what I've seen, but his personal life is a mess). Her acceptance of welfair makes perfect sense to me, though I do wish she had taken a stronger stance (she viewed taxation as theft, and the welfair checks as a pitance returned to her--a person is not inconsistent if they decry theft and get their property back!). Still, I'm not a biographer, nor do I have much interest in studying her life. I'm interested in the philosophy, not the philosophper. That said, that's a personal thing, and I can understand those interested in her life.
Do I think it's time to "Go Galt"? No. I think those who do think so have a very shallow understanding of history. Yes, there are trends I see as dangerous--for example, I'm in the environmental field, and have seen exactly what state controls on the environment do (the Endangered Species Act has killed more endangered animals than pretty much anything else). Still, there's a lot of good in the culture, and a lot of potential for change for the better. I'm not going to give up on it just yet!
So, I open the floor to any questions. What can I clarify? What issues would you like me to address?
Basically, I want to provide an insight into the mentality of the average run-of-the-mill Objectivist.
I want to do this for two reasons.
1) I don't think, based on my previous discussions here, most people on this forum who comment on Objectivism understand the philosophy. Most make some pretty basic errors and fall for some pretty obvious lies. Basic and obvious, that is, from the internal perspective; I can certainly appreciate why they aren't so obvious from the external. I'd like to clear up those misconceptions.
2) I think this forum can handle discussions of ideas opposing the forum's mainstream in a better way than is typically done--I think folks here are capable of listening to what the other side says. At the very least, I have to try to find out.
I would like to lay a few ground rules for this before we start:
1) We should assume that those identifying with Objectivism understand Objectivism better than those who don't. This may or may not be true, and if evidence to the contrary comes to light we should certainly take that into account. However, I think this should be the default assumption in these kinds of discussions. Statements like "REAL Muslims believe X!" coming from atheists are obviously intended to shut down the conversation and cast the bblame of a small subset onto the whole population; at minimum, it is an attempt to dictate what the other side believes. And that's simply not something I'm interested in engaging with. We all choose our own beliefs, and I think it only fair to allow each of us to state our beliefs ourselves.
2) I don't have a huge amount of time to devote to this project. I have work, a kid, another on the way, etc. I'll do what I can, but for the most part I'm posting in scraps of time (lunch break, after the hatchling goes to bed, etc). What that means is that I may not answer every question, respond to every statement, or fully flesh out every idea. I'll try, but time is one constraint I've never found a way to work around. In particular, I'm not going to bother giving page number citations; if I have a link I'll provide it, but I'm not going to spend a huge amount of time digging through the literature. I don't expect anyone else to, either. This is a casual conversation, not a research paper.
3) Objectivists often disagree. I'm in the Dr. Hsieh camp, myself; I've found her to be consistently rational and thoughtful, far more so than other Objectivist thinkers. Still, I am not obliged to agree with something merely because Dr. Piekoff says it. For that matter, I disagree with Dr. Hsieh on a few issues. What you're getting is MY understanding of the philosophy. There are broad areas in which we all must agree, obviously; otherwise, categorizing ourselves under the same term would be a contradiction! However, the specifics can get interesting. This is in keeping with Rand's own view of the philosophy; most people in Galt's Gulch disagreed with what Ragnar did, for example. There are some issues I'm not sure about, such as open vs. closed Objectivism; there are some that I strongly disagree with people on, such as aesthetics (I'm a metal head; that does not go over well in some circles!). And folks like Premise Checkers are the Objectivist equivalent of Free Thought Blogs--merely including yourself in that group excludes you from being taken seriously by any sane person.
Okay, that out of the way............
Why do I consider myself an Objectivist? Mostly, Rand put words to what I've always believed. I've never understood why anyone else had a say in what I did with my life--I always took the view that I don't tell you what to do, you don't tell me what to do. There are obvious social necessities; it would be chaos if we drove wherever we wanted, for example! But beyond those, as long as we don't directly interfere with each other's lives, we have no say in each other's lives. I had more or less worked out a fair bit of Objectivist philosophy myself before I even heard of Rand.
When I read Rand, my reaction was "Finally, someone else gets it!" There was some new stuff, though, such as the Objectivist epistemology. I've looked into those, and found them to be more or less consistent with what I've seen in science. Ideas must have a real-world basis, meaning they must be testable; induction or deduction alone are dangerous, and proper thinking is the use of both of them at the same time; proper identification is the foundation of rational thought. That sort of thing.
I know little enough about Rand's life, and care less. I don't care what Enya looks like, I enjoy her for her music. Similarly, I don't care if Rand lived her philosophy, I care whether or not her philosophy makes sense. Her afffair with Nethanial Brandon is incomprehensible to me (his professional work is decent, from what I've seen, but his personal life is a mess). Her acceptance of welfair makes perfect sense to me, though I do wish she had taken a stronger stance (she viewed taxation as theft, and the welfair checks as a pitance returned to her--a person is not inconsistent if they decry theft and get their property back!). Still, I'm not a biographer, nor do I have much interest in studying her life. I'm interested in the philosophy, not the philosophper. That said, that's a personal thing, and I can understand those interested in her life.
Do I think it's time to "Go Galt"? No. I think those who do think so have a very shallow understanding of history. Yes, there are trends I see as dangerous--for example, I'm in the environmental field, and have seen exactly what state controls on the environment do (the Endangered Species Act has killed more endangered animals than pretty much anything else). Still, there's a lot of good in the culture, and a lot of potential for change for the better. I'm not going to give up on it just yet!
So, I open the floor to any questions. What can I clarify? What issues would you like me to address?