M
migueltojose
Guest
I think we can read and discern. Separate the wheat from the chaff. Marx, Rand, whoever… I never read ‘Atlas Shrugged’ but I liked the Fountainhead. I read it when I was about 30 and had, oddly enough, never heard of Ayn Rand, so I had no preconceived ideas. I liked it. I thought it was refreshing. Of course, I was (am) impressionable.
I think there is value in reading her books. Do I believe in her philosophy? No. I wouldn’t even call it a philosophy. I’d call it a simplistic train of thought that has been expounded upon to make it look like a philosophy.
I still liked the book and am glad I read it.
Again, if everyone maximized and or optimized their time talent and treasure, virtuously, for the sake of glorifying the Father Son and Holy Spirit, for the sake of fulfilling God’s Will on Earth as it is in Heaven, that would be great. That’s my takeaway from Rand. Maybe not what she intended (unintended consequences?) but, that’s my takeaway.
I think there is value in reading her books. Do I believe in her philosophy? No. I wouldn’t even call it a philosophy. I’d call it a simplistic train of thought that has been expounded upon to make it look like a philosophy.
I still liked the book and am glad I read it.
Again, if everyone maximized and or optimized their time talent and treasure, virtuously, for the sake of glorifying the Father Son and Holy Spirit, for the sake of fulfilling God’s Will on Earth as it is in Heaven, that would be great. That’s my takeaway from Rand. Maybe not what she intended (unintended consequences?) but, that’s my takeaway.