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Atlas Shrugged as a Philosophical Novel

Atlas Shrugged as a Philosophical Novel. David Kelley and William Thomas. Summer Seminar 2006. Atlas Shrugged as a Philosophical Novel. A Philosophical Thriller William Thomas. Lecture I. Lecture 1: A Philosophical Thriller. I. The Greatest Philosophical Novel?

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Atlas Shrugged as a Philosophical Novel

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  1. Atlas Shrugged as a Philosophical Novel David Kelley and William Thomas Summer Seminar 2006

  2. Atlas Shrugged as a Philosophical Novel A Philosophical Thriller William Thomas Lecture I

  3. Lecture 1: A Philosophical Thriller I. The Greatest Philosophical Novel? A. Why write a Philosophical novel? B. The Artistic Challenge of the Philosophical Novel C. Ayn Rand’s method in overview II. The Philosophy of Atlas Shrugged-overview A. Objectivism on one foot B. Five ideas distinctive to Rand and Atlas III. Rand’s integration of Plot and Ideas A. Looters, Producers, and Strikers B. Plot overview Part 1. Non-contradiction Part 2. Either-Or Part 3. A is A

  4. Philosophy Philosophy studies the fundamental nature of existence, of man, and of man's relationship to existence. … In the realm of cognition, the special sciences are the trees, but philosophy is the soil which makes the forest possible. —Ayn Rand, Philosophy, Who Needs It(p. 2) • Metaphysics (the theory of reality). • Epistemology (the theory of knowledge) • Ethics (the theory of moral values) • Politics (the theory of legal rights and government) • Aesthetics (the theory of the nature of art)

  5. Philosophy and Art Man's profound need of art lies in the fact that his cognitive faculty is conceptual, i.e., that he acquires knowledge by means of abstractions, and needs the power to bring his widest metaphysical abstractions into his immediate, perceptual awareness. Art fulfills this need: by means of a selective re-creation, it concretizes man's fundamental view of himself and of existence. It tells man, in effect, which aspects of his experience are to be regarded as essential, significant, important. — Ayn Rand, "Art and Cognition" The Romantic Manifesto, p. 45.

  6. Philosophy Provides reasons for basic values Provides general guidance for life Abstract ideas Arguments, theories Stories to test theories Novel Represents a world reshaped by value Provides specific vision of life Concrete narrative Plot, characterization Theories to bring out themes of stories The Philosophical Novel Philosophy times Art Making abstractions real Making the real abstractly meaningful

  7. Ayn Rand’s literary method in overview • “Slanted realism” in characterization and world-building • Structured events and scenes • Integration of plot and theme

  8. Lecture 1: A Philosophical Thriller I. The Greatest Philosophical Novel? A. Why write a Philosophical novel? B. The Artistic Challenge of the Philosophical Novel C. Ayn Rand’s method in overview II. The Philosophy of Atlas Shrugged-overview A. Objectivism on one foot B. Five ideas distinctive to Rand and Atlas III. Rand’s integration of Plot and Ideas A. Looters, Producers, and Strikers B. Plot overview Part 1. Non-contradiction Part 2. Either-Or Part 3. A is A

  9. Ayn Rand’s ideas “on one foot” Metaphysics: Objective Reality “Wishing won’t make it so.” Epistemology: Reason “You can’t have your cake and eat it, too.” Ethics: Self-Interest “Man is an end in himself.” Politics: Laissez-faire Capitalism “Give me liberty or give me death.”

  10. Key Ideas Distinctive to Atlas Shrugged • The opposition between productive, rational people and destructive and irrational ones • Reason vs. anti-reason • The pursuit of one’s happiness as a moral end in itself, as against self-sacrifice and imposed duty • The unity of mind and body • Trade vs. power as two means of interaction

  11. The Plot of Atlas Shrugged Looters Protagonists Strikers Part I Part II Part III

  12. Course Outline • Sunday: A Philosophical Thriller - Thomas • Monday: Producers versus Looters and Parasites - Kelley • Tuesday: Reason versus Anti-reason – Thomas • Wednesday: The Pursuit of Happiness as a Moral End-in-Itself -Kelley • Thursday: The Unity of Mind and Body – Thomas • Friday: Trade versus Power - Kelley

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