Become An Objectivist
Become An Objectivist
Become An Objectivist
Approved by www.ari.org.
Do you want to become an Objectivist but do not have enough time and patience to read
The Fountainhead and Atlas Shrugged? Now you can join the fun in just ten easy steps!
Step 1: Axioms
Step 2: Reason and Logic
Step 3: Identity
Step 4: Concept
Step 5: Context
Step 6: Man as a Rational Animal
Step 7: Egoism
Step 8: Capitalism
Step 9: Art and sthetics
Step 10: Objectivism in Practice
See responses to this document.
Step 1: Axioms
Axioms are the most obvious statements from which everything else follows. The
Objectivist axioms are set up in such a way that they are irrefutable. Anyone trying to
object to them must implicitly assume them even before he or she can formulate a counterargument.
Axiom of Identity:
A is A.
Axiom of Subject:
I am aware of something.
Axiom of Object:
I am aware of something.
The first axiom is pretty much self explanatory. It will be discussed further in the section
about Identity.
It may appear at a first glance that the Axiom of Subject and the Axiom of Object are the
same. However, they are really like two sides of the same coin. The Axiom of Subject puts
emphasis on the word I, whereas the Axiom of Object stresses the word something. Their
apparent similarity reminds me of the fact that I cannot be aware without being aware of
something.
Exercise:
Read out loud the Axioms of Subject and Object with proper emphasis. For extra credit, do
it in front of a mirror.
Exercise:
Give examples of the Axiom of Identity by instantiating the variable A with pieces of
furniture that you see around yourself.
Exercise:
Refute the so-called Universal Refutation of Philosophy invented by Raymond Smullyan:
That's what you say!
Hint: derive the three Objectivist axioms from the Universal Refutation. For extra credit,
derive the Axioms of Subject and Object in essentially different ways.
Exercise:
Use reason to establish the following syllogism, first postulated by Aristotle, the greatest
philosopher of all time:
If all A are B,
and all A are C,
then some B are C.
Step 3: Identity
The Axiom of Identity can be rephrased by saying that things quite simply are what they
are. A chair is a chair, and not a table. In philosophical language we say that a thing has
identity. This also means that a thing is identical with its properties and characteristics. The
most important consequences of this realization are explained through the following
exercises.
Exercise:
Explain in lay terms the following passage from Ayn Rand's unpublished Secret Diary of
Howard Roark:
November 18, 1998
Today was her 21st birthday. We got drunk together and she tried to convince me that I
didn't take our relationship seriously. I kept telling her that relationships had a secondary
epistemological status, anyway, because they were generated by predicates [emphasis
added]. She was shouting that I was a selfish son of a bitch. I tried to explain to her that
that followed logically from A is A, but she wouldn't listen. I don't know anymore what to
do. I love her, but if she does not get her identity straight soon, things could get pretty nasty
between her and me.
Extra credit: Eliminate all relations from the last sentence in the above passage by replacing
them with combinations of predicates.
Exercise:
Fill in the details in the following argument which swiftly dispenses with all forms of
skepticism.
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
Exercise:
Show that relativity theory and quantum mechanics are based on corrupt philosophies
because they violate the principle of identity. In particular, relativity theory denies
objectivity of knowledge (see previous exercise), and quantum theory denies identity itself
(particles do not have definite properties).
Step 4: Concept
Edmund Husserl (1859--1938) derived his own brand of philosophy, called
phenomenology, from Ayn Rand's monumental work "Atlas Shrugged". In many ways
Husserl's philosophy is fundamentally flawed and a true Objectivist cannot accept it
because it denies that A is A. However, by a dumb strike of luck Husserl provided an
excellent analysis of the fundamental concept 'concept'.
We take a modern phenomenological explanation of concepts from an article
[CENSORED] by [CENSORED]. This is one of the best concise explanations of
Objectivist concepts--it is ironic that [CENSORED] himself is very much opposed to
Objectivism.
"
[CENSORED]"
A famous philosopher and admirer of Ayn Rand wrote in his Philosophical Investigations
once that "we see visual sense-data through our eyes, we hear aural sense-data through
our ears, and we grasp concepts through our reason."
A typical example of a concept is what you think of when you are thinking of a chair. Even
though you cannot define a chair, you recognize one when you see it. An example of a more
abstract concept is furniture.
Exercise:
Find the original article [CENSORED] by [CENSORED] and read it. It was published in
[CENSORED], [CENSORED]. Criticize the article from the Objectivist point of view.
Exercise:
Refute the following argument:
Concepts are unnecessary constructs of a suspicious mental nature. It is better to avoid
concepts and talk about language only.
For extra credit, base your refutation on the following passage from "The Fountainhead":
She took off her nightgown, stepped to the window, sighed deeply and said: "The mind is
the origin of all meaning. I mean what I say. Words in themselves are empty." He lit a
cigarette and admired her naked body which was illuminated by silver moonlight.
Step 5: Context
It is clear that different people perceive different sense-data. For example, if a group of
people is watching a statue they will perceive slightly different images of it, depending on
where they stand. Nobody would argue that each of them must be perceiving a different,
personal copy of the statue. The differences in perception are accounted for in the
differences in their positions.
Similarly, people grasp the same concept differently. For example, a group of people will
mostly agree on what a chair is, but they will disagree in a small proportion of cases. This is
because their minds grasp the concept of a chair from different contexts.
It should not be argued that every mind somehow grasps its personal copy of a concept.
Instead, the differences are accounted for in the differences of contexts. Neither is it correct
to say that when the context changes the concepts change with it, but rather that the same
concepts are understood in a different way.
Exercise:
Find a friend and discuss with him or her the differences in your understanding of the
following concepts: set, cricket, glass, cricket, poker, down.
You have now completed the first part of your Objectivist training in which you learned the
basics of Objectivist epistemology and metaphysics. The second part is concerned with
Objectivist ethics, which is a logical consequence of Objectivist epistemology.
First we contemplate on the nature of man. What makes a man a man (the technical
expression is "man qua man")? In accordance with the method of integration and
differentiation, a proper definition of man identifies man as a member of a larger category
by differentiating it from other members of that category. Clearly, the larger category is
animal, and the distinguishing characteristic of man is reason. Thus, we arrive at the
conclusion that
Man qua man is a rational animal.
Exercise:
Demonstrate that there are no rational ants. Argue as follows:
1. A rational consciousness has identity.
2. Identity of a rational consciousness manifests itself in its ability to reason
independently of other consciousnesses. In other words, rational consciousness
cannot have identity without being independent of other consciousnesses.
3. An independent consciousness cannot exist in a society in which its existence
depends vitally on the actions of other consciousnesses.
4. The defining characteristic of an ant hill is the existential inter-dependence of its
members.
Extra credit: Does it follow that Darwin's theory of evolution is flawed, since his theory in
principle allows existence of rational ants?
Exercise:
Use the ideas from the previous exercise to show that the definition of man as rational
social animal is unacceptable because freedom is an essential characteristic of a rational
consciousness.
Step 7: Egoism
A moral value is that which one believes and acts upon. The question arises, what are the
moral values of a man?
We quote Rand's proof of her famous theorem "Egoism as rational moral value of identity"
from Formal Objectivism:
(1)
(2)
(3)
(4)
||||-
[definition]
[hypothesis]
[by Axiom of Identity]
[by (1) and (2)]
Note: the Rational Value Theorem asserts that whatever values a rational consciousness
holds, they are true, because a consciousness which holds false values is not rational.
Observe that in step (7) egoism is defined as holding ones own identity as moral value. The
Ayn Rand Institute explains the Objectivist moral values as follows:
Ethics
"Reason is man's only proper judge of values and his only proper guide to action. The
proper standard of ethics is: man's survival qua man--i.e., that which is required by man's
nature for his survival as a rational being (not his momentary physical survival as a
mindless brute). Rationality is man's basic virtue, and his three fundamental values are:
reason, purpose, self-esteem. Man--every man--is an end in himself, not a means to the
ends of others; he must live for his own sake, neither sacrificing himself to others nor
sacrificing others to himself; he must work for his rational self-interest, with the
achievement of his own happiness as the highest moral purpose of his life." Thus
Objectivism rejects any form of altruism-- the claim that morality consists in living for
others or for society.
Exercise:
Explain Rand's proof in ordinary language.
Exercise:
Scientists are puzzled over step (5) in Rand's proof since it never gets used. Speculate on a
reason why Rand might have included it in her proof. Was it only her Italian heritage which
spurred a superstitious belief in the lucky number 13?
Step 8: Capitalism
Initiation of force against man by man to achieve goals denies the rational side of man.
Thus, the proper political and sociological establishment of human society is one which
never uses force to achieve its goals and protects the freedom of men qua men.
This means that the government must not limit activities of men for any reason other than
to protect their freedom. This is the basic principle of capitalism.
Exercise:
Socialist ideology characterizes capitalism as the system which institutionalizes
exploitation of man by man. Show that this is false, and that in capitalism the roles of
exploiter and exploitee are actually reversed.
Exercise:
Demonstrate superiority of Objectivist understanding of economic and political forces by
becoming rich. (Hint: take an 8x8 sheet of gold and cut it into pieces as in Figure 2.
You have now profited 1x1 square of gold. This method was suggested by epistemological
research of L. Peikoff and perfected by A. Greenspan.)
Exercise:
Surf the web and visit Essentials of Objectivism at the Ayn Rand Institute. Read the part
about Esthetics and discuss it with your friends.
Exercise:
Andy Warhol, the notorious founder of pop art, made a portrait of Ayn Rand, but she
denounced him after she realized that he did not respect her Objectivist principles of art and
sthetics. Criticize Andy Warhol's painting "A Sixpack of Ayns" from the Objectivist point
of view.