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Previous comments... You are currently on page 8.
When there is time to sit down and study out a philosophy, an author has much more time to lay out their thoughts, order them, and back them up as you would in a scientific paper or a court case. Speeches don't work that way, however (which may explain why politicians are so universally short-sighted).
Consider the following examples: Paul Ryan's budget explanation and Barack Obama's "Fundamental Transformation" speech. Ryan's budget explanation was fantastically presented - if you are an accountant at a board/bored meeting. To most Americans who watched that speech, it left them unmoved. Without passion, the speech gets forgotten and the speech quickly fades into the forgotten. Obama's speech is a conglomeration of liberal thinking and nonsense. The content is shoddy and so full of holes in reason and logic it's astounding. But it accomplished its goal: it got him elected. It stirred the passions of its listeners and galvanized them to action.
Want a few examples of absolutely brilliant speeches? Lincoln's Gettysburg Address is one of them. It is one of the shortest public speeches in history (less than two pages long), yet it's simple language and structure have a depth of meaning and purpose rarely matched in any contemporary writing. Shakespeare's soliloquys (such as those by Hamlet, MacBeth, Juliet, etc.) are similarly remarkable for the same reasons. All that aside, however, there was a very good reason none of Shakespeare's speeches went on for 40+ pages: he knew his audience and the capacity of the human mind was best engaged by profound topics, simply explained.
Galt's speech may work as a philosophy text, but it fails as a "speech". That's my only point. Speeches are short, sweet, and to the point. They engage the listener and impel them to action. Effective speeches are a maximum of 10-15 minutes long. Galt's speech goes on for nearly 40 _pages_ in the book. (A basic rule of thumb is that it takes about one minute to read one page of text.) That's an awfully long time to try and hold an audience's attention (and it's one of the reasons Obama's State of the Union speeches are such a disaster). Having sat through an average of three speeches per week for more than 30 years of my life, I can tell you that the biggest impediment to success in a speech is length and Galt's speech is certainly no exception.
My interpretation was Gulch residents had to take the Oath, but did not have to have high quantifiable production, although the main characters did.
Two years ago I stopped at a McDonald's. A middle-aged woman sweeping the floors went out of her way to help me. Everything she did exuded alacrity. I told her I really appreciated her help. She said she was glad, and she was doing it because she wanted to. Something bad happened in her life, she said, and now she gets joy out of doing good honest job helping people in simple ways for honest money. I got the idea she living at the top echelon of her own life, creating a little value, and not asking for anyone else's value, so many people like her would populate the Gulch.
Personally, I think there is other life and I wonder what the knowledge will do to our society and culture when/if such is discovered.
http://www.phrases.org.uk/meanings/give-...
Jesus did promise that his disciples would be fishers of men.
Happy Easter
Hubris.
You can't even count on our own kids growing up to agree with us, for instance, despite our teaching them our values. I think this is one of the most salient points of Robert Gore's The Golden Pinnacle in the character of one of the Durand sons.
Objectivism does have an inherent issue that makes it rather challenging, but far from impossible, from a governing standpoint. Even people who agree on almost everything are constantly running into disagreements at a much higher rate than do other governing styles.
Robbie's argument about there being too many of the evil ones is a reasonable one against an "open borders" Atlantis. His argument is a variant of Rush Limbaugh's famous "undeniable truth of life": "Ours is a world governed by the aggressive use of force." In general, other than perhaps for a couple of very brief periods in American history and probably nowhere else in world history, Rush's statement is correct. This is the primary reason why it is entirely reasonable to shrug and start a relatively exclusive Atlantis microsociety now. It is also why people came to America in the first place as well.
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