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Liar said:3.141592653589793238462643
And that was from my head.
The amount of useless stuff I store in there....
The threadstarter has, in many many posts, identified himself as one of those the Rand, in her fiction, describes as 'parasites' and 'second handers' those who believe that 'society' owes them an existence.
Nothing wrong with them at all. But like any other fiction, there are good ones...and there are bad ones. The problem with Utopias is that it's really easy to create one as a propaganda. For example, I could create a utopia with a Royal family and caste system, and write it up in such a way as to prove that so long as there is a blooded aristocracy, passing on it's rulership father to son, and so long as everyone stays in their place and doesn't try to be anything more, everyone will be happy. I'd create mean, awful characters who try to leave their caste and horrible things happen, while those who stick to their caste are happy and rewarded.SEVERUSMAX said:Personally, I don't see what is so bad about such sci-fi. Utopias and dystopias (particularly the latter, I admit) are fascinating scenarios to me. They show a lot of imagination, to dream of a world that isn't.
3113 said:Nothing wrong with them at all. But like any other fiction, there are good ones...and there are bad ones. The problem with Utopias is that it's really easy to create one as a propaganda. For example, I could create a utopia with a Royal family and caste system, and write it up in such a way as to prove that so long as there is a blooded aristocracy, passing on it's rulership father to son, and so long as everyone stays in their place and doesn't try to be anything more, everyone will be happy. I'd create mean, awful characters who try to leave their caste and horrible things happen, while those who stick to their caste are happy and rewarded.
This fantasy of mine has nothing to do with the truth of such a society, where, historically speaking, having aristocratic blood is no guarantee of that you'll be a good leader, and forcing people to ignore their talents/potential and stay in their caste rarely benefits society.
Similarly, I can write up a dystopia that makes whatever system of government I dislike look really evil...ignoring anything in it that's positive.
Science Fiction writers, at their best, take a situation and really explore all it's possiblities with as little bias as possible. Like, if we would plug our brains into computers what would that mean? Or, if America became a Christian theocracy, what would that mean? And if done right, these can really explore and even predict the positives, negative and pitfalls of such a senario.
But what I'm talking about is how very easy it is for these things to be misused, abused and badly written. The Klansman, notable for being the story used in Birth of a Nation is a form of Dystopian fiction. It shows the KKK saving the U.S. from the post-civil war chaos (Dystopia), by putting blacks back in their place and restoring peace between north/south. I hardly think it imagnative or "good" as a story of how to transform a Dystopia into a Utopia.
There's nothing bad about the genre of Utopias/Dystopias...what bad is when a poorly written one becomes a Bible for a movement--when the people reading it believe that this fiction/fantasy/flight of the writer's imagination can be made into a reality if only its teaching are taken to heart.
All I got out of Rand was...
Again. There are GOOD and well-written utopias and there are BAD ones. I happen to think that George is pretty darn good for two reasons:SEVERUSMAX said:I understand your concerns, but many Communists would make such an attack on George Orwell's dystopia 1984, when it was clearly a chillingly accurate reflection of what life under Marxist-Leninism would be like in a world where capitalism and democracy were destroyed.
Roxanne Appleby said:Let me suggest something, not just for this thread, but for all political threads. It's called "the presumption of good will." You presume that those you disagree with have the same motivation that you do: They want good things for all humans; they want everyone to have the opportunity to live the good life.
If one presumes good will, when a person espouses an idea that you disagree with, your are forced to think, to ask yourself why a person who wants good things for others would think that way. You can't just dismiss the person as nihilistic, or selfish, or unwilling to see the links that connect all humanity, or incapable of wisdom. You can't dismiss their ideas as the product of psychological dysfunction, or malice, or greed. Instead, you are forced to truly engage the ideas, and to "enter the head" of the other person.
In the process you usually discover some basic axiom, premise or precept upon which you and your intellectual opponent fundamentally disagree. Neither of you is likely to change the other's mind, but having narrowed the disagreement to a matter of fact, you set about to marshal evidence and logic to buttress your position. You present your evidence to the world. Over time, in the free marketplace of ideas, one idea or another may prevail because it more accurately describes reality.
With this approach, the starting point here would not be that Rand was "the Marxist equivalent of a Satanist," or was unhinged by the events of her youth, or was "an extreme submissive." Even if you believe those things are true, there's really no way to respond to them, and no way to have a constructive discussion about the actual ideas. In resorting to such assertions you evade actually having to engage the ideas.
Under the presumption of good will, one would instead start with something like, "I wonder why Ayn Rand, who presumably cared about mankind just as deeply as I do, was as smart as me, and as capable of using logic, came to conclusions that were so different from those that I have arrived at? She must have begun with very different axioms, precepts and premises. What were they, and in what ways are they different from the ones that I begin with? Do we disagree about human nature, or maybe about what constitutes the good life? What are the specifics of those disagreements? Is there any room for agreement on derivative ideas?
Do you see how different that process is, and how much more interesting and educational it can be?
Hey sweetie - thanks for the welcome. I've been doing fluffy things that don't take up any time in places like GB, like sharing enjoyment of the Olympics and stuff. I really don't have time to dive into any heavy political or philosophical debates these days, notwithstanding my post here. I did not see this thread until tonight.Colleen Thomas said:Hey roxanne
*HUGS*
good to see you posting again![]()
Roxanne Appleby said:Let me suggest something, not just for this thread, but for all political threads. It's called "the presumption of good will." You presume that those you disagree with have the same motivation that you do: They want good things for all humans; they want everyone to have the opportunity to live the good life.
If one presumes good will, when a person espouses an idea that you disagree with, your are forced to think, to ask yourself why a person who wants good things for others would think that way. You can't just dismiss the person as nihilistic, or selfish, or unwilling to see the links that connect all humanity, or incapable of wisdom. You can't dismiss their ideas as the product of psychological dysfunction, or malice, or greed. Instead, you are forced to truly engage the ideas, and to "enter the head" of the other person.
In the process you usually discover some basic axiom, premise or precept upon which you and your intellectual opponent fundamentally disagree. Neither of you is likely to change the other's mind, but having narrowed the disagreement to a matter of fact, you set about to marshal evidence and logic to buttress your position. You present your evidence to the world. Over time, in the free marketplace of ideas, one idea or another may prevail because it more accurately describes reality.
With this approach, the starting point here would not be that Rand was "the Marxist equivalent of a Satanist," or was unhinged by the events of her youth, or was "an extreme submissive." Even if you believe those things are true, there's really no way to respond to them, and no way to have a constructive discussion about the actual ideas. In resorting to such assertions you evade actually having to engage the ideas.
Under the presumption of good will, one would instead start with something like, "I wonder why Ayn Rand, who presumably cared about mankind just as deeply as I do, was as smart as me, and as capable of using logic, came to conclusions that were so different from those that I have arrived at? She must have begun with very different axioms, precepts and premises. What were they, and in what ways are they different from the ones that I begin with? Do we disagree about human nature, or maybe about what constitutes the good life? What are the specifics of those disagreements? Is there any room for agreement on derivative ideas?
Do you see how different that process is, and how much more interesting and educational it can be?
Rope, it would be impolite to not respond, but I'm rather stressed by deadlines and undone tasks back in the real world, so I probably can't give this discussion the attention it deserves. Also, I am neither a "Rand scholar" nor a "Randroid," but apparently I'm all we gotRope64 said:90% of people consider themselves above average, and Rand proposed to free superior individuals from the chains imposed upon them by the mediocre: 90% of people would imagine that this would benefit them, but nearly half of them would be mistaken, at least if only first order effects are considered.
3113 said:Again. There are GOOD and well-written utopias and there are BAD ones. I happen to think that George is pretty darn good for two reasons:
1) What was really happening at the time...not, as with some fantasy authors, what he wished or feared would happen but had no evidence of it happening. That's the really bad ones, there. The ones that scare the reader with fictions...not with truths. Like "give black people freedom and they'll rape white women."
Some of what happens to 1984's protagonist really did happen to a number of people under the oppressive governement of the U.S.S.R. at the time.
2) 1984 is anti-Marxist propaganda. However, it transends this. It isn't JUST propaganda.
George may have been accurate about the U.S.S.R., but he's completely wrong when it comes to several socialist countries now thriving that have their economic roots in Marxist theory. These places have democracy and freedom of the press, etc. Our own capitalistic government, on the other hand, is filled with Orwellian speak and in some ways seems to be heading toward 1984
Thus, what makes 1984 a good piece of Utopian fiction is that it predicts how any government run under "big brother" can end up a scary place. And it doesn't matter who big-brother is--Stalin...or the Patriot Act. That makes it "literature" and worth reading...not just propaganda or one person's badly written wishful thinking/paranoia.
And, frankly, since no one ever started a religious or political movement based on 1984 (although it did inspire one of the best commericals of all time--if you'd just take a gander at my Avatar), your point is moot. My concern is for those utopias that become "bibles"--not ones that end up becoming homework assignments in high school.
Regarding the cartoons: Newspapers HERE are censoring those cartoons, not running them, for fear of retaliation, and we're certainly not socialist; it's not our government who's telling those newspapers not to run the cartoons, it's the owners of the newspapers who don't want their businesses targeted by militants. So curtailment of free speech is not due to socialism in this case--it's due to an extreme circumstance that has created a climate of fear.SEVERUSMAX said:Given this cartoon business, I wouldn't be so sure about free speech in socialist Europe anymore. Cite an example of a dystopia becoming a "bible", aside from the Turner Diaries, that is.
While there may be some flaws in Rand's theories, that would be true of any theories.
Amazing post, Rope! Very succiently argued. I especially like the above. You're right in that the main problem is that people tend to recognize the benefits they provide rather than what they are given.Rope64 said:I doubt very many people are drawn to Rand's ideology on the basis of, "If superior people had more freedom, my mediocre self would have a lot of neat new toys;" rather, the attraction is, "I would be able to do so much more with my superior abilities were it not for all the constraints put on me by society." People naturally are more inclined to recognize the benefits that they provide for others than they are to recognize the benefits that others provide for them.
3113 said:Regarding the cartoons: Newspapers HERE are censoring those cartoons, not running them, for fear of retaliation, and we're certainly not socialist; it's not our government who's telling those newspapers not to run the cartoons, it's the owners of the newspapers who don't want their businesses targeted by militants. So curtailment of free speech is not due to socialism in this case--it's due to an extreme circumstance that has created a climate of fear.