There is a new journal just out that makes for some
of the best reading we have found in recent times. It is
called
The Objective
Standard, and it is edited by
Craig Biddle, whose introduction to the journal follows. The
reason we picked this introduction is because it is one of the best
panoramic introductions to Objectivism, the philosophy of Ayn Rand,
which we have encountered over the years. If you followed our
articles and read About Us on this site, you know that we have
advocated this philosophy as the most effective antidote to today's
culture and as the system of ideas needed to preserve, protect
America while finally correcting all of the horrible contradictions
which have undercut our beloved country since its founding. On
a personal level, this philosophy has made possible an understanding
of the world, people, and above all, ourselves which has not been
possible using any other set of ideas available from the past or the
present. These tall claims are easily backed up just by
referring the interested to Atlas Shrugged, Ayn Rand's
tour de force philosophical novel, and telling people to follow the
yellow brick road from there. It is a thrilling journey.
The Objective Standard in its inaugural issue has
delivered fine thinking, all relevant to living life on earth today,
and is well worth what it costs, which is like ten fancy Starbucks
coffees for a year.
Click this link for subscription information.
Mr. Biddle closes his introduction with the
following information, which we place at the head of this article:
Articles, Events, and a Blog
The lead
article in this, the premiere issue of
The Objective
Standard, “‘Just War Theory’ vs. American
Self-Defense,” by Yaron Brook and Alex Epstein, presents the
principles of “Just War Theory”—the disastrous, altruistic
theory underlying and guiding the Bush administration’s
so-called “War on Terrorism”—and contrasts them with the
principles of a proper, egoistic approach to American
self-defense. In “The Hierarchy of Knowledge: The Most
Neglected Issue in Education,” Lisa VanDamme identifies and
provides the solution to a problem that is endemic in
education—a problem wreaking havoc on Johnny’s ability to
think, understand, and succeed. “Enlightenment Science and
Its Fall,” by David Harriman, examines the profound
philosophical history surrounding the rise and fall of
reason as the recognized method of scientific inquiry in the
18th and 19th centuries. And “Exposing Anti-Muslim
‘Conspiracies,’” by Elan Journo, surveys—and identifies the
fundamental cause of—the widespread conspiracy theories that
plague the Middle East and help convert millions of people
into anti-Western lunatics.
Future
issues of
The Objective
Standard will include articles on subjects
ranging from “intelligent design” to children’s rights, from
philosophy and 19th-century French painting to the case for
universal privatization of education, from the
incompatibility of religion and capitalism to a new morality
for corporate America, from getting the most pleasure from
your favorite works of art to teaching values in the
classroom, from the rise and decline of Israel to the
morality and practicality of Sherman’s March, from the case
against antitrust to the case for open immigration, from a
review of Bernard Siegan’s Economic Liberties and the
Constitution to a moral biography of John Adams.
We value
your thoughts on articles in
The Objective
Standard, and we welcome your letters to the
editor—whether critical, argumentative, or complimentary.
Beginning with our second issue (Summer 2006), we will
publish readers’ letters and, when appropriate, writers’
responses in a “Letters and Responses” section toward the
front of the journal.
In
addition to publishing our quarterly journal, we will
occasionally sponsor events, such as lectures and debates.
Currently scheduled events include: (1) a lecture entitled
“‘Just War Theory’ vs. American Self-Defense,” by Yaron
Brook (Executive Director of the Ayn Rand Institute), on
Tuesday, March 14th, from 1:00 to 3:00 PM, at the National
Press Club in Washington, D.C. and (2) a debate entitled
“Eminent Domain: To Preserve or To Abolish,” between Jeffrey
A. Finkle (President and CEO of the International Economic
Development Council) and Yaron Brook, on Thursday, May 11th,
from 1:00 to 3:00 PM, also at the National Press Club.
(Please visit our
Events page for further details:
www.theobjectivestandard.com.)
Finally,
beginning in April,
The Objective
Standard will maintain a blog featuring
occasional commentary by our writers on current events. The
blog will be accessible from our website and available to
subscribers and non-subscribers alike.
Welcome
to The Objective Standard: philosophical
journalism as it might and ought to be.
~~~~~
Volume One, Number One
Introducing The Objective
Standard
by
Craig Biddle
It is widely believed
today that our cultural and political alternatives are limited either to
the ideas of the secular, relativistic left—or to those of the
religious, absolutist right—or to some compromised mixture of the two.
In other words, one’s ideas are supposedly either extremely liberal or
extremely conservative or somewhere in-between. We at The Objective
Standard reject this false alternative and embrace an entirely different
view of the world.
Our view is fully
secular and absolutist; it is neither liberal nor conservative nor
anywhere in-between. Our philosophy uncompromisingly recognizes and
upholds the natural (this-worldly), factual, moral foundations of a
fully free, civilized society.
Culturally, we
advocate scientific advancement, productive achievement, objective (as
opposed to “progressive” or faith-based) education, romantic art—and,
above all, reverence for the faculty that makes all such values
possible: reason. Politically, we advocate pure, laissez-faire
capitalism—the social system of individual rights and strictly limited
government—along with the whole moral and philosophical structure on
which it depends. In a word, we advocate Objectivism, the philosophy of
Ayn Rand, and apply its principles to the cultural and political issues
of the day.
Ayn Rand described
Objectivism as “a philosophy for living on earth.” The reason why it is
a philosophy for living on earth is that its every principle is derived
from the observable facts of reality and the demonstrable requirements
of human life and happiness.
As a philosophical
system, Objectivism includes a view of the nature of reality, of man’s
means of knowledge, of man’s nature and means of survival, of a proper
morality, of a proper social system, and of the nature and value of art.
Ayn Rand presented her philosophy in her many fiction and nonfiction
books, such as The Fountainhead, Atlas Shrugged, Philosophy: Who Needs
It?, The Virtue of Selfishness, Capitalism: The Unknown Ideal, and The
Romantic Manifesto.
There is a great deal
to the philosophy of Objectivism, much more than can be addressed in a
book, let alone an introduction to a journal. Moreover, neither I nor
the other writers for The Objective Standard speak for Objectivism; Ayn
Rand’s works alone do that. At the outset of this publication, however,
for the purpose of establishing some context, it is necessary to say a
few words about the philosophy on which it is based.
The Nature of
Reality
We hold that reality
is an absolute—that facts are facts, regardless of anyone’s hopes,
fears, or desires. There is a world independent of our minds to which
our thinking must correspond if our ideas are to be true and therefore
of practical use in living our lives, pursuing our values, and
protecting our rights.
Thus, we reject the
idea that reality is ultimately determined by personal opinion or social
convention or “divine decree.” An individual’s ideas or beliefs do not
make reality what it is, nor can they directly change anything about it;
they either correspond to the facts of reality, or they do not. A person
might think that the Sun revolves around the Earth (as some people do);
that does not make it so.
Likewise, the
accepted ideas or norms of a society or culture have no effect on the
nature of reality; they either comport with the facts of reality, or
they do not. Some cultures maintain that the Earth is flat, that slavery
is good, and that women are mentally inferior to men. Such beliefs do
not alter the nature of what is; they contradict it; they are false.
As to the alleged
existence of a “supernatural” being who creates and controls reality,
there is no evidence or rational argument in support of such a thing.
Things in nature can be evidence only for the existence of things in
nature (as, for instance, the fossil record is evidence for evolution);
they cannot be evidence for the existence of things “outside of nature”
or “above nature” or “beyond nature.” Nature is all there is; it is the
sum of what exists; something “outside of nature” would be “outside of
existence”—that is: non-existent. Nature is not evidence for the
existence of “super-nature.” There is no evidence for the existence of a
“supernatural” being; there are only books, traditions, and people that
say he exists. Evidence-free assertions, appeals to tradition, and
appeals to authority are not rational arguments; they are textbook
logical fallacies.
Neither individual
beliefs nor widespread agreement nor a “supernatural” being’s will has
any effect on the actual nature of the world. Reality is not created or
controlled by consciousness. Reality just is. Existence just exists—and
everything in it is something specific; everything is what it is and can
act only in accordance with its identity. A rose is a rose; it can
bloom; it cannot speak. A dictatorship is a dictatorship; it destroys
life; it cannot promote life. Faith is faith (i.e., the acceptance of
ideas in the absence of evidence); it leads to baseless beliefs; it
cannot provide knowledge.
The practical
significance of this point is that if people want to achieve their
goals—such as gaining knowledge, amassing wealth, achieving happiness,
establishing and maintaining liberty—they must recognize and embrace the
nature of reality. Reality does not bend to our desires; we must conform
to its laws. If we want knowledge, we must observe reality and think; if
we want wealth, we must produce it; if we want to enjoy life, we must
think, plan, and act accordingly; if we want liberty, we must identify
and enact its cause. We cannot achieve such goals by wishing, voting, or
praying.
Man’s Means of
Knowledge
We hold that
reason—the faculty that operates by way of observation and logic—is
man’s means of knowledge. Man gains knowledge by perceiving reality with
his five senses, forming concepts and principles on the basis of what he
perceives, checking his ideas for consistency with reality, and
correcting any contradictions he discovers in his thinking. This is how
scientists discover facts in their various fields, from the principles
of agriculture to the existence of atoms to the structure of DNA; it is
how inventors and engineers design life-enhancing machines and devices,
from automobiles to heart pumps to mp3 players; it is how businessmen
establish ways to produce and deliver goods and services, from
refrigerators to movies to wireless Internet access; it is how doctors
diagnose and cure (or treat) diseases, from polio to sickle cell anemia
to breast cancer; it is how children learn language, math, and manners;
it is how philosophers discover the nature of the universe, the nature
of man, and the proper principles of morality, politics, and esthetics.
Reason is the means by which everyone learns about the world, himself,
and his needs. Human knowledge—all human knowledge—is a product of
perceptual observation and logical inference therefrom.
Thus, we reject all
forms of mysticism—the idea that knowledge can be acquired by
non-sensory, non-rational means (such as faith, intuition, ESP, or any
other form of “just knowing”). We equally reject skepticism—the idea
that knowledge is impossible, that it cannot be acquired by any means.
Man clearly can acquire knowledge, has done so, and continues to do so;
this is evident in the fact that he has accomplished all that he has.
In short, man has a
means of knowledge; it is reason—and reason alone. If people want to
know what is true or good or right, they must observe reality and use
logic.
Man’s Nature and
Means of Survival
We hold that man has
free will—the ability to think or not to think, to use reason or not to
use it, to go by facts or to go by feelings. A person does not have to
use reason; the choice is his to make. Whatever an individual’s choice,
however, the fact remains that man is the rational animal; reason is his
only means of knowledge and therefore his basic means of survival. A
person who refuses to use reason cannot live and flourish.
Man survives by
observing reality, identifying the nature of things, discovering causal
relationships, and making the logical connections necessary to produce
the things he needs in order to live. Insofar as a person chooses to use
reason, he is able to identify and pursue the things he needs for
survival and happiness—things such as knowledge, food, shelter, medical
care, art, recreation, romance, and freedom. Insofar as a person does
not choose to use reason, he is unable to identify or pursue these
requirements; he either dies or survives parasitically on the minds of
those who do choose to use reason. In any case, reason is man’s basic
means of survival, and free will—the choice to use reason or not—is the
essence of his nature.
Thus, we reject the
notion that man’s nature is inherently corrupt (i.e., the idea of
“original sin,” or the Hobbesian view of man as a brute), making his
character necessarily depraved or barbaric. We also reject the idea that
man has no nature at all (i.e., the twisted, modern interpretation of
man as a “blank slate”), making his character the consequence of social
forces, such as upbringing or economic conditions. A person’s character
is neither inherently bad nor the product of social forces; rather, it
is a consequence of his choices. If an individual chooses to face facts,
to think rationally, to be productive, and so on—and thereby develops a
good character—that is his achievement. If an individual chooses not to
face facts, not to think, not to produce, and so on—and thus develops a
bad character—that is his fault.
Man has free will,
and this fact is what gives rise to his need of morality: a code of
values to guide his choices and actions.
A Proper Morality
We hold that the
purpose of morality is to provide people with principled guidance for
living and achieving happiness on earth. The proper standard of moral
value is man’s life—meaning: the factual requirements of his life as set
by his nature. And since human beings are individuals, each with his own
body, his own mind, his own life, this standard pertains to human beings
as individuals (not as cogs in a utilitarian collective). According to
this principle, the good is that which supports or promotes an
individual’s life; the evil is that which retards or destroys it. Being
moral consists in taking the actions necessary to sustain and further
one’s life—actions such as thinking rationally and planning for the
future, being honest and having integrity, producing goods or services
and trading them with others, judging people rationally (according to
the relevant facts) and treating them accordingly, and so on. In a word,
we hold that being moral consists in being rationally selfish or
egoistic.
Rational egoism, the
centerpiece of Objectivism, holds that each individual should act in his
own best interest and is the proper beneficiary of his own moral action.
This principle is the recognition of the fact that in order to live,
people must take self-interested action and reap the benefits thereof.
Human life requires egoism.*
Thus, we reject the
morality of altruism—the idea that being moral consists in
self-sacrificially serving others (whether the poor, the “common good,”
“mother nature,” or “God”). We also reject the idea that predation—the
sacrificing of others for one’s own alleged benefit—can promote one’s
life and happiness. And we reject hedonism—the idea that being moral
consists in acting in whatever manner gives one pleasure (or doing
whatever one feels like doing).
Let us take altruism
first.
Altruism, contrary to
widespread misconception, is not the morality of “being nice to people”
or “doing things for others”; rather, it is the morality of
self-sacrifice—that is, of serving others at the expense of one’s own
life-serving values. The basic principle of altruism is that to be
moral, an action must be selfless: Insofar as a person acts selflessly,
he is moral; insofar as he does not, he is not. If he gives up a value
for no gain whatsoever, he is being moral; if he gains something from an
action, he is not being moral. For instance, if a volunteer social
worker gives away his time and effort in exchange for nothing at all, he
is being moral. If a software developer creates a product that people
love and trades it with them for a profit, he is not being moral. So
says altruism. Not so says egoism.
Egoism, which also is
widely misconstrued, is not the morality of “stabbing people in the back
to get what one wants” or “acting on one’s unfettered desires.” These
are caricatures of egoism perpetrated by pushers of altruism who want
people to believe that the only alternatives are: sacrifice yourself or
sacrifice others. These, thank goodness, are not the only alternatives.
Egoism is the
morality of non-sacrifice; it rejects all forms of human sacrifice—both
self-sacrifice and the sacrifice of others—as a matter of principle. It
holds that being moral consists in rationally pursuing one’s
life-promoting values, neither sacrificing oneself to others nor
sacrificing others to oneself.
Egoism upholds the
principle of non-sacrifice—the idea that one should never surrender a
greater value for the sake of a lesser value. This principle is the
recognition of the fact that giving up the requirements of one’s life
and happiness is inimical to one’s life and happiness. Of course, life
requires that people regularly forgo lesser values for the sake of
greater ones; however, these are gains, not sacrifices. A sacrifice is
the giving up of something that is more important to one’s life and
happiness for the sake of something that is less important to one’s life
and happiness; thus, it results in a net loss.
To live, people must
pursue values, not give them up. According to egoism, therefore, insofar
as a person pursues his life-serving values and refuses to sacrifice
them, he is acting morally; insofar as he does not, he is not acting
morally. If he produces values and trades them with others for a profit
(whether material or spiritual), he is thereby being moral; he is
gaining values on which his life and happiness depend. If he gives his
values away for no gain whatsoever (neither material nor spiritual), he
is thereby being immoral; he is relinquishing values on which his life
and happiness depend.
On this view, a
software developer who trades his product with others for a profit is
thereby being moral. A volunteer social worker who gives away his time
and effort for nothing at all is thereby being immoral. Likewise, a
parent who values his child’s education more than he values a new sports
car, and who forgoes the car in order to pay for the education, is being
moral; a parent who values the education more than the car, but forgoes
paying for the education in order to purchase the car, is being immoral.
Similarly, a soldier who fights for freedom on the grounds that life
without liberty is not worth living (“Give me liberty, or give me
death!”) is being moral; one who fights in obedience to an alleged
“supernatural” being’s commands is not. And so forth.
There is a
black-and-white difference between trading values for gains and giving
up values for nothing. Egoism calls for the first; altruism calls for
the second.
Egoism is based on
and derived from the requirements of human life on earth; thus, people
can practice it consistently and must do so—if they want to live and
make the most of their lives. Altruism cannot be practiced consistently.
A person who accepts the morality of altruism has to cheat on it just to
stay alive; for instance, he must selfishly earn a paycheck so that he
can buy food.
Given the many values
on which human life and happiness depend—from material values, such as
food, shelter, clothing, medical care, automobiles, and computers—to
spiritual values, such as knowledge, self-esteem, art, friendship,
romantic love, and liberty—people need a great deal of guidance in
making choices and taking actions. They need moral principles that are
conducive to the goal of living fully and happily. In answer to this
need, egoism provides a whole system of integrated, non-contradictory
principles, the sole purpose of which is to teach man how to live and
enjoy himself. In answer to this same need, altruism says: Don’t be
selfish; sacrifice your values; give up your needs. If people want to
live and be happy, only one of these moralities will do.
Altruism is not good
for one’s life. If accepted and practiced consistently, it leads to
death. This is what Jesus did. If accepted and practiced inconsistently,
it retards one’s life and leads to guilt. This is what most altruists
do. An altruist might not die from his morality—so long as he cheats on
it—but nor will he live fully. Insofar as a person acts against the
requirements of his life and happiness, he will not make the most of his
life; he will not achieve the kind of happiness possible to man.
Egoism is good for
one’s life. If accepted and practiced consistently, it leads to a life
of happiness. If accepted and practiced inconsistently—well, there is no
reason to be inconsistent here. Why not live a life of happiness? Why
sacrifice at all? What reason is there to do so? In the entire history
of philosophy, the number of answers to this question is exactly zero.
There is no reason to
act in a self-sacrificial manner, which is why no one has ever provided
one. Nor is there any rational justification for sacrificing others,
which is why no one has ever provided one of these, either.
Predation (the
sacrificing of others for one’s own alleged benefit) is no more in one’s
best interest than is altruism. Happiness, like everything in the world,
is something specific; it has a nature. Happiness is the state of mind
that follows from the successful pursuit of rational, life-serving
values. Genuine happiness comes from achieving values, not from stealing
them; from thinking rationally and being productive, not from
relinquishing one’s mind and becoming a parasite on the thought and
effort of others; from earning romance and making passionate love, not
from raping people. To willfully become a parasite on the minds,
efforts, and bodies of other people—to deliberately reduce oneself to
the status of a subhuman creature—is the most selfless thing a person
can do. That predators choose to ignore or deny this fact does not
exempt them from it. Just as the Sun does not revolve around the Earth
(regardless of what one believes), so too a person cannot achieve
happiness by sacrificing other people (regardless of what he claims).
The assertions of
predators to the effect that they can achieve happiness by sacrificing
others are just that: assertions. They are not based on evidence (a
criminal’s makeshift smile and stolen money are not evidence of his
happiness). They do not prove anything (proof is logical inference on
the basis of evidence). Moreover, such claims flatly contradict the
demonstrable fact that rational thought, productive achievement, genuine
(earned) self-esteem, and certainty of one’s moral worth are
requirements of happiness.
Ultimately, however,
in a rational society, the evasions and assertions of predators are of
little concern to good people. As I will indicate in the section on
politics, a rational society has an efficient means of dealing
appropriately with such creatures.
Finally, as to the
morality of hedonism, just because someone gets pleasure from or feels
like doing something does not mean that it is in his best interest to do
it. This is why rational parents encourage their children to think
before they act, to recognize that choices have consequences beyond the
immediate moment, to learn and embrace the actual, long-range
requirements of human life and happiness. It is also why rational adults
do not act on their every urge or desire, and why bums and drug addicts
are not happy people.
Genuine happiness
comes from identifying and pursuing the long-range material and
spiritual requirements of one’s life as set by one’s nature. For
guidance in understanding and achieving these highly complex needs,
while egoism provides an entire system of rational explanations and
principles, hedonism says: Pay no attention to your nature or needs; do
whatever gives you pleasure; do whatever you feel like doing. Hedonism,
in other words, under the guise of self-interest, counsels
self-destruction.
It all comes down to
standards. The standard of value according to altruism is
self-sacrifice. The standard of value according to a predator is his
whim. The standard of value according to hedonism is pleasure or
feelings. The standard of value according to rational egoism is the
requirements of man’s life.
By the standard of
man’s life, each individual should live his own life for his own sake.
He should think rationally and pursue his own life-promoting goals, such
as a wonderful career, a passionate romantic relationship, enjoyable
recreational activities, great friendships, a rational culture, and a
social system that protects his right to do so.
Human life does not
require human sacrifice; people can live without giving up their minds,
their values, their lives; people can live without murdering,
assaulting, or defrauding one another. Nor can human sacrifice promote
human life or happiness; it can lead only to suffering and death. If
people want to live and be happy, they must neither sacrifice themselves
nor sacrifice others; rather, they must pursue life-serving values and
respect the rights of others to do the same. This is the basic principle
of rational egoism—and the moral foundation for a proper social system.
A Proper Social
System
In the realm of
politics, we recognize that in order to take life-promoting action, a
person must be free to do so; he must be free to act on the judgment of
his mind, his basic means of living. The only thing that can stop him
from doing so is other people, and the only way they can stop him is by
means of physical force. Thus, in order to live peacefully together in a
society—in order to live together as civilized beings, rather than as
barbarians—people must refrain from using physical force against one
another. This fact gives rise to the principle of individual rights,
which is the principle of egoism applied to politics.
The principle of
individual rights is the recognition of the fact that each person is
morally an end in himself, not a means to the ends of others; therefore,
he morally must be left free to act on his own judgment for his own
sake, so long as he does not violate that same right of others. This
principle is not a matter of personal opinion or social convention or
“divine revelation”; it is a matter of the factual requirements of human
life in a social context.
A moral society—a
civilized society—is one in which the initiation of physical force
against human beings is prohibited by law. And the only social system in
which such force is so prohibited—consistently and on principle—is pure,
laissez-faire capitalism.
Capitalism—which,
contrary to widespread mis-education, is not merely an economic
system—is the social system of individual rights, including property
rights, protected by a strictly limited government. In a laissez-faire
society, if people want to deal with one another, they may do so only on
voluntary terms, by uncoerced agreement. If they want to receive goods
or services from others, they may offer to exchange value for value to
mutual benefit; however, they may not seek to gain any value from others
by means of physical force. People are fully free to act on their own
judgment and thus to produce, keep, use, and dispose of their own
property as they see fit; the only thing they are not “free” to do is to
violate the rights of others. In a capitalist society, individual rights
cannot legally be violated by anyone—including the government.
The sole purpose of
the government in such a system is to protect the individual rights of
its citizens by means of the police (to deal with domestic criminals),
the military (to deal with foreign aggressors), and the courts of law
(to adjudicate disputes). While the government holds a monopoly on the
legal use of force, it is constitutionally forbidden to use initiatory
force in any way whatsoever—and constitutionally required to use
retaliatory force as necessary to protect the rights of its citizens.
For instance, the
government is forbidden to seize the property of innocent people (e.g.,
eminent domain), to forcibly redistribute wealth (e.g., welfare), to
dictate the terms of private contracts (e.g., minimum wage and antitrust
laws), to restrict freedom of speech (e.g., campaign finance “reform”),
to mandate motherhood (e.g., anti-abortion laws), to block scientific
advancement (e.g., embryonic stem-cell research), to force citizens to
fund religious organizations (e.g., faith-based initiatives), and to
mandate “community” or “national” service (e.g., mandatory
“volunteerism”). Simultaneously, the government is required to enforce
laws against murder, assault, rape, child abuse, fraud, extortion,
copyright infringement, slander, and the like. The government is also
required to summarily dispose of foreign aggressors who initiate or
threaten to initiate force against its citizens or their interests.
Capitalism—not the
mongrel system of the United States today, but genuine capitalism—is the
only social system that consistently prohibits anyone, including the
government, from assaulting people or stealing their property. It is the
only system that respects and protects individual rights as a matter of
unwavering principle. In other words, capitalism is the only system that
institutionalizes the requirements of human life in a social context. No
other social system on earth does this. Thus, if man’s life is the
standard of moral value, capitalism is the only moral social system.
As advocates of
laissez-faire capitalism, we oppose the politics of conservatism—such as
the notion that we are our “brothers’ keepers” and therefore must
sacrificially serve strangers (e.g., Republican welfare programs); the
notion that successful businessmen should be regulated (i.e., coerced)
“at least to some extent” for the sake of the “little guy” (as if the
so-called little guy cannot succeed in life by his own rational
thinking); the notion that students in government-run schools should be
indoctrinated with “intelligent design” theory or required to pray; the
notion that scientists should be forbidden to engage in embryonic
stem-cell research, while men, women, and children suffer from agonizing
diseases that might otherwise be cured (“We mustn’t play God”)—and that
those suffering from such diseases should be forced to “live” when they
desperately want to die (“We mustn’t play God”); the notion that
homosexuals should be prohibited from experiencing the joy of sex (“God
disapproves”); and the notion that America’s military should
sacrificially spread “freedom” (“God’s gift to mankind”) much less
“democracy” (i.e., unlimited majority rule) to savages rather than
selfishly and swiftly destroy America’s major enemies (“Love your
enemies”).
We equally oppose the
politics of liberalism—such as the notion that people have a “right” to
be given goods or services (which obviously requires that someone be
forced to provide them); the notion that government agencies, private
businesses, and schools should be required to implement racist policies,
such as “affirmative action” and “diversity training”; the notion that
students in government-run schools should be indoctrinated with the
relativism known as “multiculturalism” or the religion known as
“environmentalism”; the notion that people should be forced to fund
ideas or art of which they disapprove (e.g., via “public” radio or
“public” grants); and the notion that America has no right to “interfere
with” or “impose Western values on” (let alone destroy) regimes that are
responsible for the slaughter of Americans.
Finally, we
emphatically oppose the politics of libertarianism—the anti-intellectual
movement that claims to advocate “liberty,” while flagrantly ignoring or
denying the moral and philosophical foundations on which liberty
depends. Liberty cannot even be defined, let alone defended, apart from
answers to questions such as: What is the nature of reality? What is
man’s means of knowledge? What is the nature of the good? What are
rights, and where do they come from? To say, as libertarians do, that
the “non-initiation-of-force principle” is an “axiom” or that liberty
can be defended on any old philosophical base—whether Christian, Jewish,
Muslim, Buddhist, atheist, altruist, egoistic, subjectivist, relativist,
postmodernist—or on no base at all—is simply absurd.
Contrary to
conservatism, liberalism, and libertarianism, the politics of freedom
depends on the ethics of egoism—which depends on the philosophy of
reason—which is grounded in the basic nature of reality: the fact that
things (including human beings) are what they are and can act (and live)
only in accordance with their identities. The politics of freedom is the
politics of self-interest; it cannot be defended with the ethics of
self-sacrifice—or with a philosophy of unreason, unreality, or
“super-nature”—or with no philosophy at all.
We at The Objective
Standard are not conservatives, but, as Ayn Rand put it, “radicals for
capitalism” (i.e., advocates of its root or foundation). We are not
liberals, but absolutists for freedom. We are not libertarians, but
fundamentalists for liberty. This is because we are radicals for
reason—the foundation of which is: reality.
Let us turn now to
our final philosophic subject, art, which, like ethics and politics,
rests on a rational, objective foundation and serves a specific
life-promoting purpose.
The Nature and
Value of Art
We hold that art is a
requirement of human life and happiness. Art is a selective recreation
of reality according to an artist’s deepest, most fundamental
convictions—such as his views of the nature of the universe, the nature
of man, what is knowable, what matters most, what is possible. The
purpose of art is to give physical form to such profound abstractions,
to make them concrete and observable, and thereby to provide people with
a perceptual representation of a particular idea or worldview. This
enables people to examine the idea as a physical reality and thus to
better understand what it means in practice. In this way, art provides
spiritual guidance and fuel for living and achieving one’s goals.
Whether a sculpture of a ballerina depicting the skill and grace
possible to man—or a novel about great industrialists showing the
productive achievement possible to man—or a landscape of a countryside
portraying the world as open to man’s investigation and enjoyment—or a
painting of a dismal, psychedelic pool hall portraying the world as
unstable and inhospitable to man—art brings highly abstract convictions
to the perceptual level.
Like everything in
the world, art is something specific; thus, it is both knowable and
definable. And, like everything man-made, it is properly judged as good
or bad by the standard of the requirements of human life on earth.
Thus, we reject the
idea that art is whatever any self-proclaimed or allegedly
“accomplished” artist happens to slap together or place in a gallery.
Neither paint randomly splattered on a canvas, nor a bicycle wheel
“cleverly” fastened to a stool, nor a word salad neatly printed on a
page is art. Such things are not “bad” art; they are not art at all. Art
is not the emotional spewing of irrational impulses, but the selective
recreation of reality. Since man grasps reality only by means of reason,
the creation of art requires the intense use of this faculty; it
requires thought, concentration, mental connections, and the
transformation of highly abstract concepts and values into the material
of perceptual reality. This is not the province of buffoonery; it is the
province of genius—and should be recognized and guarded as such.
We also reject the
idea that, within the range of what is art, there are no objective
criteria for judging certain works as better than others. Like every
legitimate value, a work of art—whether a painting, sculpture, novel,
movie, symphony—is a value precisely to the extent that it serves some
requirement of a rational being’s life. While there is plenty of room
for different tastes within the range of genuine art, there are also
within that range objectively better and worse works of art—better and
worse by the standards of rationality and man’s spiritual needs.
For instance, since
the essence of man’s nature is that he possesses free will, the best
art—romantic art—reflects this fact; it depicts man as in control of his
life, as capable of reshaping his world according to his values, as the
self-made soul that he actually is. For the sake of example here, let us
isolate a particular aspect of a work of art: its subject matter. All
else being equal (style, composition, technique, etc.), a painting of a
hideous woman screaming in terror on the deck of a sinking ship says one
thing; a painting of a beautiful woman masterfully handling a catamaran
on a windy day says another. Objectively speaking, two such paintings do
not have “equal” value; they do not “equally” serve the purpose of art;
and they are not “equally” enjoyed by rational people.
Good art—like
everything else on which human life and happiness depend—is a product of
rational thought and creative effort. This is yet another reason to
embrace and advocate capitalism—and the entire philosophy of reason on
which it is based. In a rational, capitalist society, artists are fully
free to think and to create as they see fit; nothing stands in their
way; the right to freedom of expression is recognized as an absolute.
Since the guiding social principle in such a society is that of
trade—and since there is no “public” funding of the arts—artists who
produce works that rational people value tend to thrive; those who
produce works that rational people do not value tend to find other
professions.
Reality, reason, free
will, egoism, capitalism, and romantic art—these are the ideas on which
this journal is based. Our goal is to advance a culture of reverence for
man’s mind, man’s life, man’s liberty, man’s property, and man’s pursuit
of happiness. Toward this end, we have much in store.
* I
use “rational egoism” and “egoism” interchangeably.
About the Author
Craig Biddle is the
editor and publisher of
The Objective Standard
and the author of Loving Life: The Morality of Self-Interest and
the Facts that Support It. He is currently writing a book on the
principles of rational thinking and the fallacies that are violations of
those principles. |