Ayn Rand — "The man who does not value himself, cannot value anything or anyone."
The man who does not value himself, cannot value anything or anyone.
The man who does not value himself, cannot value anything or anyone.
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"The moral purpose of a man's life is the achievement of his own happiness."
"The government is not a babysitter."
"Reason is the only absolute."
"The man who damns money has obtained it dishonorably; the man who respects it has earned it."
"Every man is an end in himself, not the means to the ends of others."
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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