Ayn Rand — "Never think that a man who is too busy for you has time for you."
Never think that a man who is too busy for you has time for you.
Never think that a man who is too busy for you has time for you.
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"An honest man is one who knows that he can’t consume more than he has produced."
"A man without a purpose is a ship without a rudder."
"Happiness is a state of non-contradictory joy."
"The only thing that can save the world is the independent, non-sacrificing, self-respecting, self-sufficient, and self-confident individual."
"The ideal man is the man of reason, the man who is guided by his mind and is not swayed by his emotions."
Russian-American novelist (The Fountainhead, 1943; Atlas Shrugged, 1957) and Objectivist philosopher whose ethical egoism and capitalism-as-virtue shaped American libertarianism. Closely associated with Nathaniel Branden (her early Objectivist-movement collaborator and lover). For an intellectual contrast, see John Rawls, Harvard political philosopher (1921-2002) — Rawls's A Theory of Justice (1971) systematized exactly the egalitarian-redistributive liberalism Rand's Atlas Shrugged was structured to attack. Rand's 'sanction of the victim' and Rawls's 'veil of ignorance' are the two opposite founding intuitions of American political philosophy — selfish-flourishing-as-virtue vs fairness-from-original-position.
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