The Miami Herald: Ayn Rand's Influence

The Miami Herald has printed an article by Phil Kloer (“Many hearts still held captive by Ayn Rand“) examining Rand’s influence among her readers. It begins:

Fay Stephenson’s old copy of Atlas Shrugged was turned into soggy mush when her basement flooded and ruined a bunch of stored books. Bill Fallin keeps his copy of the novel in his desk and re-reads sections occasionally. Ron Mahre read The Fountainhead in college and plans to give his battered copy to his daughter Bethany, 17.
Like a first rock concert or a first slow dance, some people never forget their first encounter with Ayn Rand, the passionate, controversial author of Atlas Shrugged and The Fountainhead, creator of the philosophy called objectivism, patron saint of libertarians (both capital “L” and small “l”) and galvanizer of several generations of intellectually inclined teenagers.

See the full article for more information.

Ayn Rand and the Atlasphere in San Fran Chronicle

Alan Saracevic has written a somewhat-goofy article for the San Francisco Chronicle, discussing Ayn Rand’s 100th birthday and the fact that there’s even ? get this ? a DATING SERVICE for admirers of her novels.
Here’s an excerpt from the article (“Objectifying online dating among Ayn Rand fans“):

Her books have sold more than 30 million copies, with hundreds of thousands still flying off the shelves every year. Her philosophies have influenced some of the most powerful business figures of this generation, including Fed Chairman Alan Greenspan and CNN founder Ted Turner.
At her centennial, she is as relevant to societal discourse as any author of the 20th century.
So I set off on the path of research and discovery only to be waylaid, yet again, by the lowest possible common denominator, while a copy of “Atlas” sat forlornly on my nightstand.
Get this: There’s a dating service for Ayn Rand followers. On the Internet, of course. It’s tied to the Atlasphere, an online site where Rand followers post philosophical essays and links to related material.
The site is fascinating, the essays intriguing, but the dating service got me going.
So lemme get this straight — a society dedicated to rugged individualism and self-interest also tries to set people up on dates?
Makes sense on a certain level. Who better to discuss the burden of welfare with than a like-minded colleague, eh?
Apparently it works. Atlasphere boasted 5,597 members as of Friday, with 2,157 of them posting dating profiles.
Actually, I’m not sure whether the relatively high percentage of Rand- ites seeking dates proves that the service works or that it doesn’t work, but that’s beside the point. Just picturing the dates is a full breakfast, so to speak.
Joe: It’s a pleasure to meet you, Jane. I thought we’d go to a little Thai place I know up the coast.
Jane: I prefer Chinese, Joe. Goodbye.

And the article ends with this:

OK, OK. I’ve had my fun. And before all you randy Randovians pick up the pen and start sending the evil my way, lemme say this:
You guys won. The world is yours. People talk about capitalism, and communism, and existentialism and evangelism.
But it was objectivism all along — and with a capital “O” — that carried through the century and won over the hearts and minds.
Most of us just didn’t realize it.

For more details (and bad Objectivism jokes) see the full article.

Peggy Noonan: Ayn Rand's Sister Comes to America

In an Op-Ed in The Wall Street Journal, Peggy Noonan discusses the favorability of President Bush’s proposed Social Security Reforms to young people because of their eagerness towards having options, and is reminded of the story of when Ayn Rand’s sister came to America:

She walked into an American supermarket for the first time and was overwhelmed: too much choice, a thousand kinds of cereal, doesn’t it all give you a headache? Rand was impatient; her sister came from the land of No Choice, and wasn’t up to the battle. A young person of course would not be overwhelmed by options but revel in them.

Read the full article if you’d like.

Chris Sciabarra on the Ayn Rand Centenary

Did you know that illustrated versions were made of both The Fountainhead and Anthem, with Ayn Rand’s approval and involvement?
Chris Sciabarra has posted links on his blog to a number of his different essays on the Ayn Rand Centenary, including the PDF version of his article “The Illustrated Rand,” from The Journal of Ayn Rand Studies.
See the latter for full details about the illustrated versions of Anthem and The Fountainhead.

New Ayn Rand Centenary Web Site, from ARI

From the Ayn Rand Institute:
Ayn Rand, one of the most inspiring and controversial writers, was born on February 2, 1905. To celebrate her life and achievements, the Ayn Rand Institute (ARI) is inaugurating a special centenary Web site.
The new Web site will be updated with audio and video of the events that will take place throughout 2005. In addition, the site will soon feature materials from the collections of the Ayn Rand Archives, as well as other special content.
We hope you will enjoy visiting aynrand100.org and that you will join us in celebrating the Ayn Rand Centenary.

On Point: Life and Legacy of Ayn Rand

Ayn Rand makes an appearance on another NPR show: “On Point”. In this hour long show aired on February 1, several guests discuss Rand’s life and her legacy on American culture and politics. Guests listed as appearing:
–Scott McLemmee, freelance writer
–Edward Hudgins of The Objectivist Center
–James Sterba, professor of philosophy, University of Notre Dame
–Barbara Branden, biographer and former friend and colleague
–Jack Beatty, senior editor at The Atlantic Monthly
Listen to the show

Ayn Rand's Contribution to the Cause of Freedom

Writing for the Ludwig von Mises Institute, Roderick T. Long discusses Rand’s positive influence and contributions to the pro-freedom movement. Long also elaborates on Rand’s relationship with Mises and with academic philosophy. Though the Mises Institute is sometimes critical of Objectivism and Objectivists, this piece is generally laudatory. Long notes that since Rand began writing:

the philosophical mainstream has moved in Rand’s direction. Professional philosophers are far more likely today than they were in the 1960s to agree with Rand about the directness of sense-perception, the relation between meaning and reference, the incompatibility of utilitarianism with individual rights, or the prospects for a neo-Aristotelean ethical theory (or indeed a neo-Aristotelean philosophical approach generally)

Read the full article

Ayn Rand & the Atlasphere in the Orange Co. Register

The promised article in the Orange County Register (“Rhymes with ‘mine’“) has just been published, and includes information from an interview with Atlasphere member Dan Edge.
It begins:

When Michael Berliner was a grad student in the 1960s, followers of Ayn Rand’s philosophy of rational self-interest were routinely ridiculed, denounced or shunned.
“If people found out that you were an objectivist, it was like you were some religious cultist,” says Berliner, former director of the Ayn Rand Institute in Irvine, about the philosophy she created.
“No, it was worse than that. Professors would sneer at me in class and make nasty comments on papers when I mentioned her.”
Fast-forward to present-day Stanford University, where Francisco LePort, 19, of Newport Beach, is a Ph.D. student in physics.
When a fellow student recognized the name of the hero of Rand’s “Atlas Shrugged” on the license plate of LePort’s 2002 Subaru sedan, he left a note under the windshield wiper, and the two became friends. LePort met his girlfriend at a Rand conference two years ago. And all three of his roommates in the Stanford dorms happened to be Rand fans, much to his surprise.
These days, fans of Ayn (rhymes with “mine”) Rand are no longer alone. That’s right, 100 years after her birth, followers of Rand – the advocate of radical individualism, the”morality of selfishness,”laissez-faire capitalism and atheism – are winning friends and influencing people.
There are dozens of Internet chat rooms devoted to Rand, where fans discuss how her ideas play out in such mainstream Hollywood movies as “The Incredibles” and “The Aviator.” There’s even an online Ayn Rand dating service, the Atlasphere, to match up admirers of “The Fountainhead” and “Atlas Shrugged” – her best- known novels – with their soul mates.
“Objectivists date other objectivists. It’s the essential thing,” says Dan Edge, 26, a computer broker and salesperson, from Charlotte, N.C., one of the Web site’s more than 2,000 paying members.

This is a slight misquote; there are over 2,000 members in the dating service, and over 5,000 in the member directory, but not all of our members are paid subscribers.
And the article ends on this note:

While she went on to write serious philosophical works, she didn’t aim to be an academic philosopher.
“Her focus was, as she called it, man in the world, not ideas separated from physical realm,” Berliner says. “When she thought about characters, they were always people who were active and doing things in the world. Her philosophy was consistent with that. She was always much, much more popular with the general run of people than with intellectuals.”
Rand scholars believe that since her death in 1982, her influence has been building for a range of reasons, from the political to the social to the technological.
Joshua Zader, who founded the Atlasphere two years ago after meeting his wife at an Ayn Rand conference in 1999, credited the growth of the Internet.
“It’s a technology and a medium that fosters the spread of ideas. Ayn Rand worshipped ideas and knowledge. The Internet provides a way for people who admire Ayn Rand to share their excitement with each other and others who have never heard of her,” Zader says.
Brook points to the collapse of the Soviet Union and the demise of communism.
“Generally, the global trend is toward more capitalism, and more freedom than we’ve seen. In very collectivist cultures like Japan and China we’re seeing more individualism come out,” he says, adding that new translations of Rand’s novels are due out in both countries.
But he’s not stopping there. He’s looking toward the next 100 years.
“This is just going to be a long process,” he says. “It could be decades. I hope it’s not a century, but it could be before we have a real impact on the culture.”

The full article (registration required) is available on the OCRegister.com web site.

CATO on Ayn Rand at 100

David Boaz, executive vice president of the Cato Institute, pens a thoughtful tribute to Rand’s influence on libertarianism and the pro-freedom movement. After highlighting how Rand stood up to the culture of her times by vigorously promoting a principled freedom, Boaz sums up Rand’s importance:

She infused her novels with the ideas of individualism, liberty, and limited government in ways that often changed the lives of her readers. The cultural values she championed—reason, science, individualism, achievement, and happiness—are spreading across the world.

Read the full article