A Companion to Ayn RandAllan Gotthelf, Gregory Salmieri John Wiley & Sons, 23. veebr 2016 - 544 pages The first volume to offer a comprehensive scholarly treatment of Rand’s entire corpus (including her novels, her philosophical essays, and her analysis of the events of her times), this Companion provides vital orientation and context for scholars and educated readers grappling with a controversial and understudied thinker whose enduring influence on American (and world) culture is increasingly recognized.
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Contents
An Introduction to the Study of Ayn Rand | 3 |
Writing Reading and Related Life Events | 22 |
The Act of Valuing and the Objectivity of Values | 49 |
The Morality of Life | 73 |
A Being of SelfMade Soul | 105 |
Selfishness and Sacrifice | 130 |
Rands Social Philosophy | 159 |
A Radical for Capitalism | 187 |
The Objectivist Epistemology | 272 |
Ayn Rands Approach to | 321 |
Ayn Rands Evolving View of Friedrich Nietzsche | 343 |
Ayn Rands Political and Cultural Commentary | 351 |
Art and the Needs of a Conceptual Consciousness | 405 |
Rands Literary Romanticism | 426 |
The Benevolent Universe Premise and the Heroic | 453 |
Annotated Bibliography of Primary and QuasiPrimary Sources | 463 |
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Common terms and phrases
abstract according achieve actions activity American answer argues Atlas Atlas Shrugged awareness Ayn Rand basic Branden called capitalism Chapter character choice claim concept consciousness consider consistent context course culture define definition describes determined discussion distinction economic edited emotions essays Ethics example existence fact force freedom function fundamental give given goal happiness holds human ideas identify important individual integration intellectual interests issues John knowledge Letters living man’s material means metaphysical mind moral nature notes novel objective Objectivist one’s particular perception person philosophy physical political position possible premises present Press principle productive protection published question Rand’s view rational reality reason reference regard relation requires respect Roark role rules sense social society specific standard theory things thought understand University values virtue writes York