April 24th, 2008, 12:49 PM
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#20 (permalink)
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Elite Member
Join Date: Feb 2007
Location: New York
Posts: 4,868
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Dixie Normos
Ok, someone explain to me what was so awesome about The Fountainhead? I read it after a friend of mine told me it was his absolute favourite book (he's an English major, and very intelligent besides) and it was too analytical to move me. While I understood what Ayn was getting at (lowing the bar to make every day people feel better, hurts us socially by making truly wonderous things less special) I don't really agree, or put much importance in superficial social structure anyhow. Who the eff bases beauty or worth on anything save their own perspective anyhow? To me her whole notion was moot.
Did I miss the point of the book somewhere?
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Snarker
I don't think you missed the point Dixie. I read half of Atlas Shrugged and reached the same conclusion as you did.I didn't finish the book because I couldn't stand any of the main characters: egotistical, judgmental and too impress with themselves - not a jot of insight that (like you said) beauty/worth often depends on perspective. I thought Rand was very one-sided in her depictions; characters that were vehicles for her philosophy were all strong, brave, intelligent etc. and everybody else were portrayed as useless cowards. This is probably why I didn't like the book - instead of an enquiry into this idea, Rand is ordering the readers to accept her philosophy as correct.
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Between these two posts, you have the best review of Atlas Shrugged as any I have ever read.....
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Darling, if you want to talk bollocks and discover the meaning of life, you're better off downing a bottle of whiskey. At least that way, you're unconscious by the time you start to take yourself seriously
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