The Objective Standard Blog
Archive for September 2010
Monday, September 27, 2010
Six Clarifying Quotes on Honesty
In Ayn Rand’s Normative Ethics: The Virtuous Egoist, Tara Smith dives deep into the virtues on which life depends, showing why they are requirements and what they demand. Here are six quotes I particularly liked, from Smith’s chapter on honesty:
- “As the refusal to fake reality, honesty consists in a deliberate, principled renunciation of any evasion, distortion, misrepresentation, or artifice. In essence, honesty means not pretending.” (p. 78)
- “Dishonesty is self-defeating insofar as pretending that facts are other than they are only diverts a person from identifying and pursuing rational strategies for achieving the objective values that will advance his life. The propriety of honesty is not a concession granted out of deference to some authority other than self-interest. Honesty is the only practical means of surviving qua human.” (p. 87)
- “Because reality sets the ultimate terms of a person’s survival, reality—rather than one’s own or others’ beliefs or wishes—must command a person’s paramount allegiance. Faking reality is futile. Dishonesty only diverts a person from facing the facts that he must face, in order to act in ways that can achieve his objective flourishing.” (p. 88)
- “Honesty demands taking cognition seriously. This requires that a person develop an active mind, seek knowledge in order to act on that knowledge, and refuse to fake any item in his mind.” (p. 89)
- “Misrepresenting facts does not change them. However successfully one might fool another person, faking is ultimately futile. For it does not alter the underlying facts.” (p. 105)
- “Facing reality is in a person’s self-interest, even when certain aspects of reality are threatening, because it allows him to proceed rationally—realistically—and thus with the chance of overcoming threats and achieving happiness. The case for honesty is completely egoistic. Whatever positive effects for others may result from a person’s honesty, a person should be honest because his happiness depends on it.” (p. 105)
For more on Ayn Rand’s Normative Ethics, see Diana Hsieh’s review in the Spring 2007 issue of TOS—or buy the book. It has helped to concretize, clarify, and integrate Rand’s ethics in my mind, and I recommend it highly.
Posted in: Ayn Rand and Objectivism, Philosophy
Thursday, September 16, 2010
Contents of the Fall Issue of TOS
The print edition of the Fall issue is at press and will be mailed shortly; the online version will be accessible to subscribers beginning September 20. For promotional purposes, we are making my article “The Ground Zero Mosque, the Spread of Islam, and How America Should Deal with Such Efforts” available on our website early and for free.
The contents of the Fall issue are:
ARTICLES
The Ground Zero Mosque, the Spread of Islam, and How America Should Deal with Such Efforts
by Craig BiddleA Prescription for America’s Health Care Ills
by Stella Daily ZawistowskiAn Interview with John Allison about Pro-Capitalism Programs in American Universities
The British Industrial Revolution: A Tribute to Freedom and Human Potential
by Michael DahlenThe Curious Life of Richard Feynman
by Daniel WahlHerman Boerhaave: The Nearly Forgotten Father of Modern Medicine
by Richard G. ParkerA Civilized Society: The Necessary Conditions
by Craig BiddleBOOKS REVIEWED
Nothing Less than Victory: Decisive Wars and the Lessons of History, by John David Lewis
Reviewed by Daniel WahlNeoconservatism: An Obituary for an Idea, by C. Bradley Thompson with Yaron Brook
Reviewed by Burgess LaughlinThe Passion of Ayn Rand’s Critics: The Case Against the Brandens, by James Valliant
Reviewed by Roderick FittsHow an Economy Grows and Why It Crashes, by Peter D. Schiff and Andrew J. Schiff
Reviewed by Daniel WahlThe Flaw of Averages: Why We Underestimate Risk in the Face of Uncertainty, by Sam L. Savage
Reviewed by David H. Mirman
If you have not yet subscribed to TOS, why not do so today? Subscriptions start as low as $29 (8 ¢ a day!) and are now available in six formats: print, online (i.e., HTML), Kindle, audio, e-book, and premium. Full descriptions and pricing for all these options can be found on the subscriptions page of our website.
Enjoy!
Posted in: Announcements, Ayn Rand and Objectivism, Business and Economics, Education, Foreign Policy and War, Health Care, History, Individual Rights and Law, Philosophy, Religion, Science and Technology
Saturday, September 4, 2010
Jean Meslier on the Dearth of Knowledge Resulting from the Acceptance of Religion
Here’s a beautiful (albeit harrowing) passage from Meslier’s Superstition in All Ages:
What light could have been thrown into the minds of many famous thinkers, if, instead of occupying themselves with a useless theology, and its impertinent disputes, they had turned their attention upon intelligible and truly important objects. Half of the efforts that it cost the genius that was able to forge their religious opinions, half of the expense which their frivolous worship cost the nations, would have sufficed to enlighten them perfectly upon morality, politics, philosophy, medicine, agriculture, etc. Superstition nearly always absorbs the attention, the admiration, and the treasures of the people; they have a very expensive religion; but they have for their money, neither light, virtue, nor happiness.
Photo credit: Wikimedia Commons: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Meslier.jpg
Posted in: Philosophy, Religion
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