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The Influence of Atlas Shrugged

2007-10-04
By

On the 50th anniversary of its publication, Atlas Shrugged, Ayn Rand’s epic about a group of businessmen who rebel against a society that shackles and condemns them, is everywhere. Hardly a day goes by without a mention of the novel in the media or by some prominent celebrity or businessman as the most significant book he’s read. Meanwhile, Ayn Rand’s novels, including Atlas Shrugged, are being taught in tens of thousands of high schools. And last year sales of the novel in bookstores topped an astonishing 130,000 copies–more than when it was first published.

As executive director of the Ayn Rand Institute, I see the impact of Atlas Shrugged on a daily basis. I’m continually amazed by how many people, from every walk of life and every part of the planet, from high school students to political activists in countries from Hong Kong to Belarus to Ghana, eagerly tell me: “Atlas Shrugged changed my life.”

Scores of business leaders, from CEOs of Fortune 500 companies to young entrepreneurs in Silicon Valley, say they have derived great spiritual fuel from Atlas Shrugged. Many tell me that the novel has motivated them to make the most of their lives, inspiring them to be more ambitious, more productive, and more successful in their work. And many of America’s politicians and intellectuals who claim to fight for economic freedom name Atlas Shrugged as the book that has most inspired them. I have no doubt that the novel has played a considerable role in discrediting socialism as an ideal and in making discussion of capitalism intellectually legitimate.

If you have read Atlas Shrugged and entered the universe of Dagny Taggart, Hank Rearden, and John Galt, you can understand why the novel has inspired so many in this way. Atlas Shrugged portrays great businessmen as heroic, productive thinkers, and it venerates capitalism as the only social system that leaves such minds free to create and produce the material values on which all of our lives depend. It gives philosophic and esthetic expression to the uniquely American spirit of individualism, of self-reliance, of entrepreneurship, of free markets.

But while many people appreciate these elements of Atlas Shrugged on a personal, emotional level, they are often uncomfortable on a moral level with the novel’s arguments in support of business and capitalism.

Ayn Rand’s ethical philosophy of rational selfishness–on which her admiration for successful businessmen and her impassioned defense of capitalism rest–constitutes a radical challenge to the dominant beliefs of our culture. Rejecting the prevailing ideas that morality comes from a supernatural being or from a societal decree, Rand holds that morality is a science that can be proved by reason. Rejecting the altruistic idea that morality consists of selflessly serving something “higher”–whether the Judeo-Christian God or a collectivist society–she maintains that the height of moral virtue is to rationally pursue your own selfish ends.

Socialism as a political ideal is dead. But the morality that spawned it–from each according to his ability, to each according to his need–still haunts us. So long as need and the “public interest” are regarded as moral claim checks on the ability of the productive, the continued growth of the government’s control over the economy and our lives is inevitable.

Those who have read Atlas Shrugged are often struck by the similarity of the events in the novel to the disastrous events reported in the daily news–from the government’s attempt to take over medicine to decaying infrastructure and collapsing bridges to the shackles on businessmen inflicted by Sarbanes-Oxley. The similarity is no accident: the justification for these government programs is the needs of the uninsured, the so-called public interest, and the necessity to curb the selfishness of businessmen. Without a moral revolution, we cannot win true economic or political freedom.

So while Atlas Shrugged has provided millions with inspiration and with some level of appreciation for the virtues of capitalism and the evils of statism, it has not had nearly the influence it could have had, had its underlying ideas gained wider understanding. Though it has changed individual lives, it has not changed the world. But I believe it could–and should.

Imagine a future America guided by the principles found in Atlas Shrugged–a culture of reason, where science is cherished and respected, not banished from biology classrooms and stem-cell research labs–a culture of individualism, in which government is the protector of individual rights, not its primary violator–a culture in which markets are not just regarded as the most effective option of an imperfect lot, but in which laissez-faire capitalism is recognized and venerated as the only moral social system–a culture in which business innovators understand that ambition, productive effort, and wealth creation are not just practical necessities, but moral virtues–a culture in which such innovators, proudly asserting their right to their work, are fully liberated and their productive genius fully applied to the generation of unimaginable economic progress.

This is the world that Atlas Shrugged challenges us to strive for. But in order to get there, the novel’s full philosophic meaning must be grasped. This is precisely why the Ayn Rand Institute exists: to convey Rand’s profound message. And her message is getting out, all the way to professional intellectuals, on campuses and elsewhere across America, who are taking up Ayn Rand’s ideas with a seriousness that they never have shown before.

With more and more thinkers giving it the attention it merits, I am confident that the real influence of Atlas Shrugged has yet to be felt.

Yaron Brook is executive director of the Ayn Rand Institute (http://www.aynrand.org/) in Irvine, CA. The Institute promotes Objectivism, the philosophy of Ayn Rand. Contact the writer at media@aynrand.org.

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  • Squiggy

    There are “adverts” on these pages? I forgot. I run Firefox and use adblock plus.

  • college activist

    It’s good to see all the scholars checking in on this one!!!

  • Willis

    The flash adverts on this page are making my head spin…

  • conservativation

    There is no such thing as a “societal right”. Or at least there shouldn’t be. That is where feminism grows from, that is where all kinds of preferential treatment comes from.
    The libertarian notion of natural rights and associated private property rights takes care of this, and no, it would look nothing like a Mad Max landscape.
    No one advocated a complete lack of oversight to business. Under natural and property rights, business could not violate your person or your property, for greed or any other reason.
    Beyond those protections, adding more stratifies us and creates “classes” based on race and gender.

  • GreatMRNI

    I find her philosophy rather simplistic, in that she tries to apply an “algebraic” solution to a “geometrical” issue (social issues). That is not to say that it is without merit, just incomplete. Social issues are complex and linear thinking rarely solves the equation. I do agree that her teachings are far from being main stream and any effort to educate the public in her philosophy of rational selfishness would be somewhat beneficial.

  • roadkill1965

    Personally, I believe there needs to be a BALANCE between societal rights and individual rights. The society you just described probably wouldn’t be a paradise, but instead, would likely be a lawless, hellish place, similar to that in the movie Road Warrior, or in present day Somalia. There DOES need to be oversight and regulation of business to some degree. Pure, unrestrained greed does not equal morality. I like the truism: trust, but verify.

  • http://www.mensdefense.org Lloyd Selberg

    After reviewing the http://www.aynrand.org web site for a short course in objectivism, and finding a the ultimate basis of objectivism lies in reason and logic and the belief that natural facts must control our lives, I must concluded that Atlas Shrugged has had no significant influence on modern Western civilization.

    I find it interesting that of all the essays on the site, non deal with the radical feminist views that ultimately contradict objectivism. Is it not ironic that a great female philosopher has noting to say about the sisterhood that defies her very philosophy?

    Western civilization has clearly followed the path of George Orwell’s 1984 novel that was equally pervasive in the education of the fifties and sixties. It foretold the defying of reason and logic and nature itself.

    Little question that Orwell correctly predicted: “Not merely the validity of experience, but the very existence of external reality was tacitly denied by their philosophy. The heresy of heresies was common sense.”

  • conservativation

    “””where science is cherished and respected, not banished from biology classrooms”””

    I wonder what classrooms you speak of sir. I understand the frustration indicated in the next sentence, that to do with stem cell research, but I’ve utterly no idea what you are on about saying the above.

    The Libertarianism contained within Atlas Shrugged is indeed a worthy goal, but to elevate same to a pseudo religious level as so many have is counterproductive. Why do I say so? Well, not for the reason you may think.

    As one post states, the corporate set-up in the U.S. has a way of taking a solid, individualist message and methodology and dumbing it down until it is not recognizable, creating hoards of hurried but dependent employees that no more have an idea what fundamental capitalism is than they understand relativity.

    An attempt to internalize Rand and really “teach” it at the corporate level would yield little more than another cottage industry of business self help gurus who speak eloquently and say nothing, but they are entertaining, and to the weak they, they are embraced with religiosity. The principles must be rationalized down to lowest common denominators, forced into banal 3 bullet point PowerPoint slides, and described in step by menial step at the intellectual equivalent of the molecular level. The result is a whole bunch of people that can run around spouting coined Rand phrases and jargon and know absolutely nothing of entrepreneurialism or self sufficiency.

    They come to the office, and lacking either a meeting to attend or some emails to answer, have no original idea of what they can do that day, and even while doing something would have a very difficult time relating that to the overall reason the company exists in the first place…that being usually to make something, make it inexpensively and well, add a margin, and sell it, then account for the costs and profits.

    If her concepts were embraced, there would be lots more companies and they would be smaller, because every employee (with a few exceptions) should either be working to make the company money, save the company money, or account for the companies money…period.

    Why otherwise do companies spend so much time stating their simple intentions in mission statements? If we were so corporately singular minded and simplistic in our “Randian” pursuit of moral capitalism we should not need to be dictated to as a school child is on a syllabus.

  • Denis

    There needs to be a follow up novel: Atlas Pissed in His Pants.

    Today, Big Business is in bed with the Marxists. Big Business is no more about rugged individualism than Hillary Clinton is. They both want to own the world and control every man, woman, and child in it. Globalism = Totalitarianism.

  • S Baker

    The Titans are out there but the chains of oppression continue to get stronger and the RAT party is running the forge at full force and temperature.

  • tonysprout

    Cringing and cowering before the great feminist machine that controls if and when their products are purchased.

  • college activist

    Where are the titan’s of free enterprise as our society is being flushed down the toilet??







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