Greed is good (for the shoulders)
I’ve got to finish listing all the books I read last year before I can start writing about this year’s books, and this one has been a tough one to write about. I’m very deeply ambivalent about *Atlas Shrugged*, more so than about *[The Fountainhead]([canonical-url:2008/07/05/second-handers-news])*. *Atlas Shrugged* is Rand’s later work, written and published almost a decade and a half after *The Fountainhead*, and the scope is far grander. Whatever virtues and faults can be found with The Fountainhead will be seen to have multiplied for *Atlas Shrugged*.
As with *The Fountainhead*, I read *Atlas Shrugged* for the first time half my lifetime ago. The ideas contained in these books stuck sideways in my mind for years as I tried to reconcile Rand’s ideals with those of other sources. It’s almost not worth bothering to reconcile Rand’s philosophy with that of any of the world’s religions; she dismisses all religion and mysticism as a tool of oppression, and perhaps with excellent reason.
There is a billboard on Ninth Street I pass at least a couple of times a week, which reads «Imagine No Religion,» and each time I see it I feel a similar ambivalence. This billboard promotes an organization called the [Freedom From Religion Foundation](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Freedom_From_Religion_Foundation). If you click on the link you’ll know more about the organization than I do; I’m not all that interested in their agenda perhaps for the sole reason that I don’t believe that in order to be free from religion one needs be free of religion. Here perhaps Ms Rand and I disagree. There may be places in the world where it is still true, but I don’t think the United States is one of them, and even if it is San Francisco isn’t. This, after all, is a town where those of us who don’t care much about organized religion have to [fight to keep an historic landmark](http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2000/01/05/MN81784.DTL) because someone might be reminded of a religion.
Indulge me this digression: clothing is a human invention, unnecessary to our survival in temperate climes. But our use of clothing allows us to survive cold weather, so it takes on a further meaning. As motorcyclists wear jackets and boots even when not on their bikes, people wear their shirts and pants even when it is not cold because something basic about our humanity is represented there. Furthermore, the people of religion have instructed us to wear clothing, ostensibly to keep us from checking each other out all the time and getting distracted from tithing and so forth. So something that is both useful and symbolic has been used as a tool of political control, at some times and in some places in downright oppressive ways.
I can relate to people who experience a sense of freedom in nudity. I’ve done that at Burning Man and yes, letting go of the purely social convention is freeing. True freedom, however, means choosing by one’s own sense and reason when to use or discard a practice. It means experiencing that first blush of freedom and then getting dressed again, not because one has to but because one wants to for the myriad reasons that may present themselves.
Religion, it seems, is like clothing. It is a human invention (yes, it is. God may not be man’s invention, but man’s rituals and belief systems most certainly are) with both benefits and detriments, that some cling to blindly and others reject with the intoxication of the first-timer at the nude beach deciding never to dress again.
Back on point then, Ayn and I will have to disagree about religion. I take her point about it being a tool of oppression, but I’m not willing to discard the good along with the bad when I can as easily discard just the bad.
I am therefore left with the task of either reconciling these opposing sets of beliefs or rejecting one. Rand wrote repeatedly that if one is presented with contradiction to check one’s premises. Both cannot be true.
So we have Buddhist thought claiming universal interconnectedness, Jesus’ saying that the love of money is the root of evil, Lao Tzu’s writing that self-fulfillment comes from lack of self-interest, Kant’s ever-so-convincing insistence that we must found our logic upon *a priori* truths, all stacked against Ayn Rand’s philosophy: that there is no connection between individuals, that fulfillment comes only from self-interest, and that there is no place in logic for things that cannot be proven.
Gödel burned down the idea that a consistent system can be defined entirely in its own terms, something Rand was certainly aware of when she wrote John Galt’s words, «No concept man forms is valid unless he integrates it without contradiction into the total sum of his knowledge.» It sounds good, but the simple foundation of her philosophy — the absolute of existence — coupled with the absolute of causality — gives it away. It’s an old question hardly worth pursuing, but how can existence come to be without a suspension of the law of causality? Nothing does not transform itself into something. Neither the Bible’s answer to this (it was God) nor Hawking’s (it’s OK as long as eventually everything gets destroyed at the end so that the math evens out) are satisfactory.
I agree with Ms Rand about the necessity of accepting reality as it is and the importance not to deny causality. But given these two things there must be something beyond our rational understanding or else contradictions must exist. which, if you think about it, are the same thing.
Yet this is dangerous because Rand has rested her entire argument on the faulty (as absolute) triad of existence, causality, and non-contradiction. If this breaks down, then the mystics (as she calls them) can come back and use my argument to deny existence and causality, which would be wrong.
(Even if the absolute truth is found in the denial of existence, on a *practical* level, the awareness that life is an illusion cannot be an excuse to run away from life. The illusion is all that we’ve got. It is only by accepting the illusion as it is presented that we can hope to transcend it. So even if Rand is wrong, and there is no existence, Rand is right, and we have to accept it as it is and strive to apprehend it as clearly as we can. I’m not claiming there is no existence; I just mean to show that belief in truth beyond what is known fails to invalidate what is known. The «lesser» truth we’re exposed to has to be a manifestation of the «greater» truth. So the mystic argument against Rand fails. Quite simply, even if there is no meaning, it doesn’t mean anything that there’s no meaning, and we might as well get back to work.)
Forgive me for an overfine parsing of Ms Rand’s statements, but she insists on it. If «feeling» that she «must be» wrong does not suffice, then we have to get to the source of that feeling. Rand calls it mysticism and scoffs at intuition; I respectfully disagree. Being in touch with intuition is often the best way to listen to logic. Granted, if an intuition fails to be borne out by reason it should be discarded, but intuition is the voice of our implicit assumptions. Pursuing intuition either brings us to truth or brings our faulty assumptions to light. Either way is a win, but especially when dealing with Rand there is the need to pursue any intuitive opinion to its source.
Is it clear that «deeply ambivalent» is perhaps an understatement?
In the end, I believe Rand is right about all of it as far as it goes, but there is more to the picture than she lets on. There is a voluntary social contract we live in, and yes, it is voluntary in a place where we have a voice and a vote. For this reason I can’t accept that any and all actions of government or even that any and all appropriation of funds by government is automatically a coercive act. The police will show up with guns if you refuse to pay taxes, but by refusing to pay taxes, doesn’t one implicitly reject the protections and services of the government? Gotta pay to play, right? As citizens do we not have the responsibility to pay for those things we have demanded our elected representatives do on our behalf?
Voting is a bit of a gamble that way. By voting we also accept the authority of the voice of the majority. Rand rejects this authority in favor of that of a set of mythic figures (Francisco D’Anconia, who invented calculus as a teenager with no prior exposure to higher math and who hit a baseball out of the field the first time he tried, is one example, but most of the other protagonists had a similarly effortless claim to genius) who know best how to go about their business and are thwarted my the majority at every turn. She believed in meritocracy — or perhaps what is now called [doöcracy](http://www.communitywiki.org/en/DoOcracy) and that unfettered, the people of talent would naturally create interdependent relationships which would result in great achievement.
It’s a great ideal, and its absence in a moral code is unthinkable. I’m the last to say that people should not profit off of their own work and their own genius. I’m certainly looking forward to profiting off my own work and genius. To an extent I have my whole adult life, but I fully intend to increase that profit by increasing the benefit I provide. However, I cannot claim that my successes are totally independent of the infrastructure that others put in place before me, and neither can I claim my successes are or ever will be independent of the supporting work of contemporaries in other fields.
Rand puts these factors into a subservient role — or worse a detrimental one — rather than a supporting and interdependent role. She’s right, but there’s so much more to the picture than she shows.
Anyone who hasn’t read this book should. When I was flipping through *Atlas Shrugged* to check my citations, a twenty dollar bill fell from between the pages. Maybe if you read it the same thing will happen.