NoFreeWill wrote:I'm not trying to attack Nietzsche here. I haven't read enough of his work. I'm trying to understand what he had to say. Though it seems to me that "Beyond Good and Evil" is one of his philosophical major works. I've listened to the audio book a couple of times and now I am reading it.
Ayn Rand believed in free will, so that is a big dent to her credibility, to my mind. But she aware of the recent findings of neuroscience at the time of her major works.
There were obvious conceptual and philosophical problems with free will. LONG before neuroscience was even conceived possible.
Comte de Saint-Germain wrote:Her 'philosophy' is nothing but a counter-reaction to communism.
Yes I think that was a big motivating factor, but that does not make her wrong. She had a big insight into why a big powerful government is dangerous. It is a necessary evil but it just needs to be minimised to mitigate the damage it is inveterately prone to do.
She's resentful. That's all you are going to read in her books. And she can't even do that right. You want to read proper Christian resentment? Read: the jews and their lies, by Martin Luther.
Comte de Saint-Germain wrote:It seeks to restate by idle celebration what she saw as the principle victim of evil, communism, the wealthy man.
Not necessarily wealthy men, the victims are: hard working, intelligent, talented or able men/women.
No, actually, they are not. She doesn't understand intelligence or talent, or hard-working. She understands only wealth, from the absence thereof. She never experienced talent, or intelligence.
Comte de Saint-Germain wrote:Rand's philosophy is at the heart nothing less than 'might is right' - but shaped by resentment -, and we have actually - quite amusingly - seen what it leads to.
No "might is right" is the motto of socialism. Try doing anything a socialist government doesn't want you to do and see what you get. Ayn Rand advocated non-violence and freedom.

Yeah, bub. I think you should take another look at what Rand is propagating. Freedom is in the words, not in the philosophy. If you wish to argue that she inconsistently argues for freedom - sure. Rand's freedom is the freedom of the wealthy to exploit the poor. That's what she propagates in regards to the Middle-East as well.
Comte de Saint-Germain wrote:You may have heard of another fan of hers, Alan Greenspan. That nitwit, like many other nitwits in American politics and economics, actually believed that twits' writing had anything to do with reality.
Greenspan gave up Objectivism.
Yeah, quite publically, after he had demolished the economy by following Rand's teachings. Amusing, because he is actually far more knowledgeable and intelligent than Rand..
Ayn Rand would never have endorsed what Greenspan did. I suggest you spend 5 years working in a government department, then another 5 years trying to run your own business. I think you would then find her ideas somewhat more appealing.
You want to be pedantic? Go play that somewhere else. I'm polite, to a point. I'll burn you to a crisp, bub.
Comte de Saint-Germain wrote:
I would be very surprised if Ayn Rand had read anything beyond 100 pages, let alone Nietzsche.
Oh, and I would keep this:
I'm an Ayn Rand fan
to yourself.

No, at this stage I'm going to lean towards the libertarian ideal.
Oh, Rand LOVED libertarians
It resonates more with me and my observations/experience. Moreover, libertarianism make a lot of sense.
Yeah, Rand HATED libertarians, bub. Go read a fucking book.
The original arrogant bastard.
Quod tanto impendio absconditur etiam solummodo demonstrare destruere est - Tertullian