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![]() The story of people finding the moral conviction to live their own lives, and of a man who stops the motor of the world to pave the way. This is Ayn Rand's magnum opus. It is her comprehensive philosophical novel, dealing with each of the major categories of philosophy. This book lays down the basis of her entire philosophy in a compelling story. ... (Added by Joseph Rowlands on 3/01/2004, 9:28pm)Discuss this Book (0 messages) ![]() This is Ayn Rand's first popular novel which brought her fame and a large following. "It is the story of a gifted young architect, his violent battle against conventional standards, and his explosive love affair with a beautiful woman who struggled to defeat him." (back cover) It shows man as a heroic being: Howard Roark, the perfect Egoist. (Added by Joseph Rowlands on 3/01/2004, 9:47pm)Discuss this Book (6 messages) ![]() A short novella about a man trapped in a future society that has taken collectivism to its full and natural course. He struggles against that society and eventually breaks free and discovers the most glorious word in the english language, "I". (Added by Joseph Rowlands on 3/01/2004, 9:51pm)Discuss this Book (0 messages) ![]() As a bookstore employee, I've often wondered about the space dedicated to the many useless books on self-help, many of them by the same authors. If each has the answer, why do they need to keep writing books? Obviously it's the failure of the reader to achieve his potential. More likely the need of the author to make more money at the expense of t... (See the whole review) (Added by Joe Maurone on 9/24, 6:14pm)Discuss this Book (60 messages) Years ago, when I began engaging others in Internet discussion forums, I found myself groping for tools to analyze arguments. As a sad statement of my college education, the logic course I took as a freshman only focused on "truth table" construction and never discussed the powerful body of informal fallacies compiled over the centuries. A trip t... (See the whole review) (Added by Luke Setzer on 9/29, 6:14am)Discuss this Book (19 messages) ![]() This book is a fantastic introduction to economics. It explains a simple but important idea, and the entire rest of the book is an elaboration on the idea. The "one lesson" is the need to look beyond the first order effect of an action or policy, and see the many different consequences. Each subsequent chapter goes on to apply that lesson to diffe... (See the whole review) (Added by Jeff Landauer on 2/26/2004, 11:54pm)Discuss this Book (0 messages) ![]() 1984 is a dystopian story set in the future of a statist world. The main character, Winston Smith, struggles to live in a world where there is no privacy, and the government controls every aspect of your life. The symbol of the government is Big Brother, a fictitious leader who is said to benevolently watch over his people. In practice, the citizen... (See the whole review) (Added by Joseph Rowlands on 3/01/2004, 9:54pm)Discuss this Book (7 messages) ![]() This Hugo and Nebula award winning masterpiece captures the world from a small child's point of view amazingly well. Ender is a little boy who is smaller than everyone else his age and smarter than most everyone else of any age. His very existence is due solely to the hope that he might one day save the world. He is persecuted by his jealous cla... (See the whole review) (Added by Jeff Landauer on 3/16/2004, 2:25am)Discuss this Book (0 messages) ![]() This is my favorite Ayn Rand novel. Not as overtly philosophical nor as monumental in scope as her later works, strictly as a novel qua novel, it excels those later works. And compared to the work of other authors, it is monumental. Rand tells us a love story set against the background of communist Russia in the 1920's. In part two, chapter 8, s... (See the whole review) (Added by Bob Palin on 8/12/2004, 6:49pm)Discuss this Book (0 messages) ![]() http://www.larryelder.com/larrysbooks.html I highly recommend this book by libertarian author, Larry Elder. He has courage and confronts racists of all colors. (See the whole review) (Added by Marty Lewinter on 10/10, 12:14am)Discuss this Book (0 messages) ![]() In this book, Bastiat defends free markets by crushing the arguments for intervention. He goes through one economic fallacy after another, demolishing them with logic and especially wit. Bastiat explains his ideas through stories and examples, always showing the absurdity of these bad ideas. The style is funny and light-hearted, and he makes the... (See the whole review) (Added by Joseph Rowlands on 4/12/2004, 11:44am)Discuss this Book (0 messages) ![]() Roger Dawson delineates the attributes of a successful negotiation and explains in detail how to make the people with whom you negotiate feel good about the deal you want to make. When he overhears a person accuse him of wanting to snatch the gold fillings from people's teeth, he explains that such an action would amount to stealing, not power neg... (See the whole review) (Added by Luke Setzer on 7/03, 5:20pm)Discuss this Book (12 messages) ![]() The newest Harry Potter book went on sale this morning at midnight. My daughter was one of those silly people lining up to buy a copy at midnight and she stayed up all night reading the entire book. She told me that the books are getting darker and Hogwarts isn't the fun escape it used to be. Someone very important dies in this book. (She told ... (See the whole review) (Added by katdaddy on 7/16, 11:03am)Discuss this Book (23 messages) ![]() I have found this book to be more beneficial as an introduction to "Objectivist Thought" for the layman than any of her other writings. I have tried to talk to people at the ARI and TOC, but the minute I mention this title the subject is changed or the communication terminated. "For the New Intellectual", "A Time For Truth" by William E. ... (See the whole review) (Added by James Taylor on 9/02, 3:51pm)Discuss this Book (15 messages) ![]() This is the magnum opus of Ludwig von Mises. Being one of the best books on economics ever written, its philosophical content is often ignored. This is applied philosophy at its best, and a careful analysis will show a variety of ideas useful outside of this particular field. (Added by Barry Kayton on 3/01/2004, 1:52pm)Discuss this Book (1 message) ![]() In 1958, Ayn Rand, already the world-famous author of such bestselling books as "Atlas Shrugged" and "The Fountainhead", gave a private series of extemporaneous lectures in her own living room on the art of fiction. Tore Boeckmann and Leonard Peikoff for the first time now bring readers the edited transcript of these exciting personal statements. "... (See the whole review) (Added by Barry Kayton on 3/01/2004, 2:19pm)Discuss this Book (0 messages) ![]() This book critically examines the Objectivist position on such major thinkers as Plato, Augustine, Hume, Kant and Nietzsche and finds them wanting. It includes 3 appendixes; one that provides an overview of Objectivism. (Added by Fred Seddon on 8/06/2004, 10:31am)Discuss this Book (6 messages) ![]() I've just finished reading this wonderful collection of writing exercises, previously unpublished stories and plays and unpublished excerpts from We the Living and The Fountainhead. It is delightful to witness Rand's progress, both as writer and philosopher, in these works written between 1926 and 1938. One of the things I find amazing about... (See the whole review) (Added by Bob Palin on 11/21/2004, 5:47am)Discuss this Book (5 messages) ![]() To my knowledge, I am the first SOLOist to change my mind about the war in Iraq. My unease with my anti-war position had been going on for some time and a discussion with SOLOist Joe Rowlands when he last visited New Zealand was crucial. But I have to say, this book was what really did it. If you thought Lindsay Perigo hated Saddam and the anti-war... (See the whole review) (Added by Cameron Pritchard on 1/09, 11:43pm)Discuss this Book (83 messages) ![]() A fascinating portrait of the minds that have shaped the modern world. In an intriguing series of case studies, Rousseau, Shelley, Marx, Ibsen, Tolstoy, Hemingway, Bertrand Russell, Brecht, Sarte, Edmund Wilson, Victor Gollancz, Lillan Hellman, Cyril Connolly, Norman Mailer, James Baldwin, Kenneth Tyan, Noam Chomsky, and others are revealed as inte... (See the whole review) (Added by Barry Kayton on 3/01/2004, 1:28pm)Discuss this Book (0 messages) ![]() The classic world history of the events, ideas and personalities of the twentieth century. While you are unlikely to agree with Johnson all of the time, his understanding of statism and capitalism make this book a refreshing departure from Marxist interpretations of history. (Added by Barry Kayton on 3/01/2004, 1:38pm)Discuss this Book (0 messages) ![]() Based on interviews with Rand and discussions with those close to her, this biography describes her life from her youth in Russia, to her stint in Hollywood as a screenwriter, and through her marriage, the publication of her novels, and the evolution of her philosophy. (Added by Barry Kayton on 3/01/2004, 1:41pm)Discuss this Book (46 messages) ![]() If you like John Stossel, you'll like this book. It's the story of his intellectual and professional development. He explains what evidence he ran into that made him a strong advocate of free-markets. He reviews the major ideas and issues he's dealt with, going over many of his television specials. ... (See the whole review) (Added by Joseph Rowlands on 3/25/2004, 8:32pm)Discuss this Book (0 messages) ![]() This is the first novel in Goodkind's Sword of Truth series, comprised so far of eight books following the life of Richard, The Seeker of Truth. Wizard's First Rule begins with Richard as a simple woods-guide, but quickly transforms into a face-paced action/fantasy read that spans a massive continent made up of three realms of varying magical qual... (See the whole review) (Added by Jeremy on 5/30/2004, 11:08am)Discuss this Book (11 messages) ![]() Whether you love him or hate him, Leonard Peikoff has written a definitive, bottom to top, tour de force treatment of Objectivism in this publication. Newcomers to the ideas of Ayn Rand will appreciate this systematic, integrated, "big picture" overview of her philosophy for living on Earth. Detractors will complain that this book merely uncritic... (See the whole review) (Added by Luke Setzer on 6/06, 12:49pm)Discuss this Book (8 messages) ![]() Objectivists with children eventually want to discuss with them the right of an individual to his own mind, body and property -- regardless of "majority vote." Such parents can use this book to their advantage. The author's acid wit burns to the end when he serves to the antagonists large helpings of their "just deserts." The book centers ... (See the whole review) (Added by Luke Setzer on 6/20, 10:04am)Discuss this Book (7 messages) ![]() This is a recent collection in the Marvel Visionaries series (others include Stan Lee and Jim Steranko). ... (See the whole review) (Added by Landon Erp on 10/09, 5:04pm)Discuss this Book (1 message) ![]() While Unrugged Individualism is only 65 pages long, the information inside is so succinct and essential that this is one of the best books around. This book explores the topic of benevolence -- why it's a virtue and what it consists of. But it is not just about benevolence. In order to discuss such things as the difference between benevolence and a... (See the whole review) (Added by Jeff Landauer on 3/01/2004, 12:14pm)Discuss this Book (0 messages) ![]() In "Philosophy in a New Key", Suzanne Langer developed a theory of symbolism, there applied to music, which she felt could be developed to embrace all the arts. In "Feeling and Form" she did just that. It offers the reader nothing less than a systematic, comprehensive theory of art, applied in turn to painting, sculpture, architecture, literature, ... (See the whole review) (Added by Barry Kayton on 3/01/2004, 12:56pm)Discuss this Book (0 messages) ![]() Literally encyclopedic -- almost the length of a volume of the Britannica in terms both of number of pages and content per page --" Capitalism: A Treatise on Economics" is regarded by some as philosophically and intellectually the strongest and most comprehensive book in the defense of laissez-faire capitalism that can be found anywhere in the worl... (See the whole review) (Added by Barry Kayton on 3/01/2004, 1:48pm)Discuss this Book (0 messages) ![]() The complete text of several of Aristotle's most important and influential works, in the famous and authoritative Oxford translations by W. Rhys Roberts and Ingram Bywater. Complete texts include: "Categories," "On Interpretation," "The Posterior Analytics," "On the Soul," "Metaphysics," "Nicomachean Ethics," "Politics" and "Poetics." It also has t... (See the whole review) (Added by Barry Kayton on 3/01/2004, 1:59pm)Discuss this Book (0 messages) ![]() A remarkable series of lectures on the art of creating effective nonfiction by one of the 20th century's most profound writers and thinkers-now available for the first time in print. Culled from sixteen informal lectures Ayn Rand delivered to a select audience in the late 1960s, this remarkable work offers indispensable guidance to the aspi... (See the whole review) (Added by Barry Kayton on 3/01/2004, 2:21pm)Discuss this Book (0 messages) ![]() Jefferson's theory and practice have often been seen as inconsistent or contradictory. Mayer attempts to show that much of Jefferson's views and actions are consistent with a contextual view of the Constitution. The contextual view, as explained in this book, provides an interesting way of understanding the purpose and structure of the Constitution... (See the whole review) (Added by Joseph Rowlands on 3/01/2004, 9:59pm)Discuss this Book (0 messages) ![]() This is one of the milestone comic stories of this era. Written by Frank Miller, the story shows a brooding, old and retired Bruce Wayne. The world is in chaos and Bruce Wayne decides to take back the world by donning the mantel of the Bat. But his second coming is met with opposition from all classes, the mutant gangs and its leader, the Gotham Ci... (See the whole review) (Added by Orion Reasoner on 6/16/2004, 11:50pm)Discuss this Book (4 messages) ![]() Capitalism and Commerce provides an outstanding and accessible introduction to the best philosophical , moral, and economic arguments for capitalism. This excellent and interesting work makes a convincing case that capitalism is the only moral social system because it protects a man's mind, his primary means of survival and flourishing.Younkins tho... (See the whole review) (Added by Karen Marie Phillips on 8/10/2004, 6:21pm)Discuss this Book (1 message) ![]() Frank Miller made his start as a writer on Daredevil, so it was fitting that he returned to the character that made him famous to do the definitive origin. ... (See the whole review) (Added by Landon Erp on 5/23, 6:26pm)Discuss this Book (6 messages) ![]() Book Description After the publication of Atlas Shrugged in 1957, Ayn Rand occasionally lectured in order bring her philosophy of Objectivism to a wider audience and apply it to current cultural and political issues. These taped lectures and the question-and-answer sessions that followed not only added an eloquent new dimension to Ayn Rand's ide... (See the whole review) (Added by Joe Maurone on 9/24, 10:08pm)Discuss this Book (21 messages) ![]() This book annihilates the false notion that natural resources are limited and diminishing. In fact, the market price of every raw material has steadily decreased over the years. Why? Because people are the true ultimate resource. On average, each person produces more than he consumes. The more people, the more abundant the production and the cheape... (See the whole review) (Added by Jeff Landauer on 3/01/2004, 12:10pm)Discuss this Book (0 messages) ![]() In The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People, author Stephen R. Covey presents a holistic, integrated, principle-centered approach for solving personal and professional problems. With penetrating insights and pointed anecdotes, Covey reveals a step-by-step pathway for living with fairness, integrity, honesty, and human dignity -- principles that give... (See the whole review) (Added by Orion Reasoner on 6/17/2004, 1:16am)Discuss this Book (3 messages) ![]() This "children's" book is probably the single most horrifying and depressing thing I've ever read... even more so than George Orwell's 1984. It revolves around a falsely utopian nightmare society that provides its wonders at a chilling cost. Although Lowry does employ a bit of fantasy in just a few places, her story is still a very effect... (See the whole review) (Added by Orion Reasoner on 6/18/2004, 10:07am)Discuss this Book (0 messages) ![]() Inspired by the life of Paul Gauguin, the Moon and Sixpence is an unforgettable study of a man possessed by the need to create — regardless of the cost to himself, and to others. Excerpts: "And man, subservient to interests he has persuaded himself are greater than his own, makes himself a slave to his taskmaster. He sits him on a sea... (See the whole review) (Added by Sam Erica on 6/30/2004, 3:50pm)Discuss this Book (5 messages) ![]() With all the talk of failing schools these days, we forget that schools can fail their brightest students, too. We pledge to "leave no child behind," but in American schools today, thousands of gifted and talented students fall short of their potential. In Genius Denied, Jan and Bob Davidson describe the "quiet crisis" in education: gifted students... (See the whole review) (Added by Orion Reasoner on 7/02/2004, 5:53pm)Discuss this Book (6 messages) ![]() This is a book for those who take their punctuation seriously : and I do mean seriously! "Punctuation really does matter, even if it is only occasionally a matter of life or death." So says the author! Who, after all, would want to get shot by a panda? -- and if you don't get the panda joke* after which this book is titled, then this book .... (See the whole review) (Added by Peter Cresswell on 8/19/2004, 2:49pm)Discuss this Book (17 messages) ![]() I first read this years ago while in graduate school. It was one of the few I carried around with me in my backpack. Today, Classical Individualism is one of only a handful that I re-read every now and then, to refresh my mind and spirit. I say refresh, because in an age where communitarianist and socialist denial of true human liberty and flourish... (See the whole review) (Added by John Newnham on 10/22/2004, 1:09pm)Discuss this Book (0 messages) ![]() The late millionaire Charles Givens gained fame, fortune and notoriety as the leading American financial advice author in the 1990s. His first book, Wealth without Risk, remained for many weeks on the bestseller list. His follow-up book, Financial Self-Defense, also became a bestseller. He later revised and updated his first book and published i... (See the whole review) (Added by Luke Setzer on 10/06, 7:28am)Discuss this Book (0 messages) ![]() Marvellous teleological defence of individual rights. Smith is an Objectivist (ARI) although she comes over as more generally Aristotelian here. (Added by Matthew Humphreys on 4/22/2004, 4:51am)Discuss this Book (0 messages) ![]() This book lists a number of factual errors in the works of Michael Moore from the beginning of his career up to but not including his 9-11 movie. It shows his lack of integrity as a documentarian and dangerously creative skill as a propagandist. Moore commands a frightening but small portion of society with his populist propaganda, so it is no wond... (See the whole review) (Added by Eric J. Tower on 7/09/2004, 1:09pm)Discuss this Book (2 messages) ![]() A perspective on the science of cosmology that I found to be interesting from the viewpoint of Objectivism. The scientific content of the book consists of a discussion of the flaws in the Big Bang Theory (some of which may be dated, since this was published in 1991) and a presentation of an alternative theory based on the physics of plasma. But t... (See the whole review) (Added by Nature Leseul on 7/31/2004, 4:32pm)Discuss this Book (6 messages) ![]() Standard quantum mechanics offers some widely accepted "primacy of consciousness" interpretations at odds with Objectivism. By contrast, this book of "classical quantum mechanics" attempts to explain experimental observations using a "primacy of existence" premise. In late 1999, I wrote an article for The Daily Objectivist about this book and its... (See the whole review) (Added by Luther Setzer on 8/01/2004, 5:23pm)Discuss this Book (15 messages) ![]() The late Harold Schonberg's third and final edition of this perennial favourite includes updated accounts of all the serialists, tonalists, minimalists, and other -ists who have bored and bewildered audiences during the last 50 years or so. (For such music to change, he quotes musicologist Robert P. Morgan as saying, "the world will have to change.... (See the whole review) (Added by Derek McGovern on 8/22/2004, 7:45am)Discuss this Book (0 messages) |