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Yamori wrote:Eziekial wrote: In general, woman can be smarter .
I have to disagree.
Name 15 major geniuses that were female. From any discipline: Physics, Music, Philosophy, Psychology, Inventing, anything.
Can you?
Ayn Rand is the only example I can think of. There are more I'm sure, but there aren't a lot.
I'm not going to say women can't be geniuses, because Ayn is a shining example that they can be, but I think it is much harder for women to be ultra-smart for some reason.
Rust wrote:
Ayn Rand? I think you could find someone who was a bit more of a coherent thinker. Marie Curie for example? Mary Wollestonecraft. Lise Meitner. Rosalyn Franklin. Picking 'Ayn Rand' as a genius female is like picking L. Ron Hubbard for 'genius male'.
--R.
Harrison wrote:Is it wrong to believe that Men and Women are different?
It's been beaten and thrown down our throats that it is so far...and it's sad that common sense is thrown out in favor for bullshit.
lyion wrote:I think bringing up an Ayn Rand thread could start a Holy War that would dwarf any political, religious, or science discussions we've previously had. Sounds good.
Her philosophies are superficial, weak, and smouldering with anger. The best comparison I can give to her points, is they are like a shiny fake coin with no value, but they 'appear' good to those who don't understand the difference between real and fake wealth.
Atlas Shrugged is a narcissitic piece of shit. All her novels have the same premise based on her 'view' that life will be good once the evil peoples are gone.
Her philosophies are based on her life. As her life is a pretty good example of how not to live, it's kinda hard to take what she represents seriously.
She wasn't the first to say "Your happiness is more important than leading a mediocre life for the sake of pleasing others."
I'd tack that one up to common sense.
Yamori wrote:-The primary rule of human conduct is not to initiate the use of force or fraud against rational beings. (this alone is worth the title of genius, imo, its the TRUE golden rule)
-The senses are accurate, and we can know about things.
-Economic rights are just as important as social rights, as any economic infringement can be reduced to sending men with guns after non cooperating individuals.
-Your happiness is more important than leading a mediocre life for the sake of pleasing others.
She is really the first person to have said these things (ok, except for the senses one, but she is the first modern thinker to truly reinforce it), I think its worthy of praise in spite of all her flaws that tainted her life and philosphy.
Yamori wrote:She was the first philospher, asides from Nietzche (whose "selfishness" was an insane predatorial kind of one - he thought power was more important, as it would lead to happiness) and Aristotle (whose happiness wasn't really the same thing, his was more like a state of balance) to really say anything about it.
Yamori wrote:lyion wrote:I think bringing up an Ayn Rand thread could start a Holy War that would dwarf any political, religious, or science discussions we've previously had. Sounds good.
Her philosophies are superficial, weak, and smouldering with anger. The best comparison I can give to her points, is they are like a shiny fake coin with no value, but they 'appear' good to those who don't understand the difference between real and fake wealth.
Atlas Shrugged is a narcissitic piece of shit. All her novels have the same premise based on her 'view' that life will be good once the evil peoples are gone.
Her philosophies are based on her life. As her life is a pretty good example of how not to live, it's kinda hard to take what she represents seriously.
There are a lot of details of her philosophy that do fit the description. I won't argue that her philosphy is flawless, because it has a lot of mistakes. Atlas shrugged was unrealistic and too simplistic in its attitude towards good and evil, and had a basically philosophy spewing super robot for a hero.
However, I'm curious as to how you see the following as superficial, weak, and smoldering with anger...
-The primary rule of human conduct is not to initiate the use of force or fraud against rational beings. (this alone is worth the title of genius, imo, its the TRUE golden rule)
-One should always treat rational beings as an end in themselves.
In his Groundwork of the Metaphysic of Morals, Kant formulates the Categorical Imperative in three different ways:
* The first (Universal Law formulation): "Act only according to that maxim by which you can at the same time will that it should become a universal law."
* The second (Humanity or End in Itself formulation): "Act in such a way that you always treat humanity, whether in your own person or in the person of any other, never simply as a means, but always at the same time as an end."
* The third (Kingdom of Ends formulation) combines the two: "All maxims as proceeding from our own [hypothetical] making of law ought to harmonise with a possible kingdom of ends."
-The senses are accurate, and we can know about things.
-Economic rights are just as important as social rights, as any economic infringement can be reduced to sending men with guns after non cooperating individuals.
-Your happiness is more important than leading a mediocre life for the sake of pleasing others.
-Businessmen are under appreciated, considering they provide us with all our basic necessitites, and make work far more efficient and productive than old fashioned working for mere survivial.
She is really the first person to have said these things (ok, except for the senses one, but she is the first modern thinker to truly reinforce it), I think its worthy of praise in spite of all her flaws that tainted her life and philosphy.
Yamori wrote:The two major original contributions Ayn made was her theory of concepts rendered from the senses being the key component of knowledge, and her "golden rule" of not initiating force and fraud.
She didn't invent empiricism, but she is not a traditional empiricist either - her theory of concepts is what seperates her from dorky empiricists like Hume (who basically say we can't know anything about anything).
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