SOURCE MATERIAL FOR THE STUDY OF OBJECTIVISM * General Philosophy * Epistemology * Psychology * Morality * Ethics * Politics * Economics * Esthetics * Books and Movies in the Romantic Art Form * Miscellaneous good stuff Caveat Lector: Some of the authors cited here are not Objectivists, nonetheless many of their ideas are excellent expressions of Objectivist principles. There is a plethora of books, many of which are trash, on the subjects which I mention in my writings. You should beware the reviews in the Laissez Faire catalog, as they present many books as libertarian which are in fact the writings of political conservatives. If you're not careful you could waste a lot of money buying things which do not tell you what you want to learn. The books included in this BOOKLIST are the best I have found for a good presentation of Objectivism and libertarianism. Most of the stuff in this BOOKLIST can be purchased from: Laissez Faire Bookstore And take a look in the world's largest bookstore: Amazon Consider also: The Objectivism Research CD-ROM This contains all of Rand's works and two of Leonard Peikoff's (The Ominous Parallels and Objectivism: The Philosophy Of Ayn Rand). Writings by the Brandens and other authors are not included, nor is THE OBJECTIVIST FORUM. The search engine for this material is outstanding! And the text is in easily readable format. I find it to be well worth the price of $150. For more info, and to order it, see: Objectivism.Net * General Philosophy THE VIRTUE OF SELFISHNESS - Ayn Rand & Nathaniel Branden (Signet book #AE2931) ATLAS SHRUGGED - Ayn Rand - Random House THE OBJECTIVIST NEWSLETTER, THE OBJECTIVIST, THE AYN RAND LETTER, THE OBJECTIVIST FORUM A series of monthly journals published from 1962 to 1985 by Rand et al. BASIC PRINCIPLES OF OBJECTIVISM - 20 lectures by N. Branden FOR A NEW LIBERTY - Murray Rothbard - Libertarian Review Foundation An excellent application of libertarianism to all aspects of social existence. Everything is nicely explained by detailed reference to the non- aggression principle. * Epistemology PRINCIPLES OF EFFICIENT THINKING - 10 lectures by Barbara Branden 1984 - George Orwell - New American Library (Signet) 451 CY688 This is the most prophetic book of the 20th century. Orwell's concepts of Newspeak and Prolefeed are indispensable to an understanding of the development of American culture during the last half of that century. A thorough knowledge of Newspeak, as it has been implemented in America, is the best means by which one can avoid an immense quagmire of faulty thinking. INTRODUCTION TO OBJECTIVIST EPISTEMOLOGY - Rand - Edited by Binswanger and Peikoff - Penguin 452-01030-6 THE ART OF REASONING, EVIDENCE OF THE SENSES, TRUTH AND TOLERATION These three excellent books by David Kelley are available from The Institute for Objectivist Studies, 82 Washington St #207, Poughkeepsie NY 12601-9768 Institute for Objectivist Studies * Psychology PSYCHOLOGY OF SELF-ESTEEM - Nathaniel Branden - Bantam 23449 If you haven't read this book, you don't really know what psychology is. In this work Psychology has found an Aristotle to organize its material, systematize its problems and define its fundamental principles. THE DISOWNED SELF - N. Branden - Bantan 22794 THE PSYCHOLOGY OF ROMANTIC LOVE - 16 lectures by N. Branden Nathaniel Branden's WebPage ROBIN AND MARIAN - James Goldman - Bantam T2772 Is the screenplay for the movie starring Sean Connery and Audrey Hepburn (the story of how Robin Hood died). The introductory essay, on the subject of heroes, is magnificent. * Morality HOW I FOUND FREEDOM IN AN UNFREE WORLD - Harry Browne - Macmillan Practical procedures for achieving as much personal freedom as possible in an authoritarian society. * Ethics LIBERTARIANISM - John Hospers - Nash, 1971 (out of print) LIBERTARIANISM IN ONE LESSON - David Bergland - Orpheus Publications Clearly shows the fundamental differences among the Liberal, Conservative, and Libertarian ethical views. EVOLUTION OF COOPERATION - Robert Axelrod - Basic Books Explains how cooperation can emerge among self-seeking individuals when there is no central authority to police their actions. Not surprisingly, the most practical way of dealing with the Prisoners' Dilemma is to use a technique based on the libertarian ethic. (Axelrod is not a libertarian.) MARKET FOR LIBERTY - Morris and Linda Tannehill - Laissez Faire Books, 1970 Contains some excellent statements of principle, but all else consists of the WouldChuck argument. THE ENTERPRISE OF LAW contains the proof for the principles presented in this book. FOR A NEW LIBERTY fills in the principled basis. * Politics CIVIL DISOBEDIENCE - Henry Thoreau (in "Walden and Other Writings", Bantam 21246) A classic portrayal of the anarchist principle. ENTERPRISE OF LAW - Bruce Benson - Pacific Research Institute This book is a very good documentation of the historical rise and development of government law, the present disastrous state of government law, and the present nature of private law. It is a good answer to the question "What is government?" A strong case is made that government in the USA is a tool of coercion used by special-interest groups to effect wealth transfers. SWEET LAND OF LIBERTY? The Supreme Court and Individual Rights - by Henry Mark Holzer (The Common Sense Press, 1983) Prior to reading this book you should read Ayn Rand's two essays, "Man's Rights" and "Collectivized 'Rights'" which appear in THE VIRTUE OF SELFISHNESS. Rand identified the underlying ethical principle, Holzer shows how the Supreme Court has applied that principle throughout its existence. By quoting the opinions written by various justices, Holzer presents the Court's justification for its decisions. He makes it perfectly clear that ALL the Court's decisions, both those that accidentally accord with libertarian precepts, and those that deliberately deny them, arise from the altruist-collectivist-statist philosophy. Holzer reveals the Court's decisions to be clear expressions of the idea that individual rights come from, and are subordinate to, "society" - that it is a proper function of government to deny individual rights for the "common good." Holzer shows that in spite of the Bill of Rights and everything else in the Constitution, there are two and only two basic ideas underlying the decisions of the Court: "the interests of the government," and the Court's estimate of "the will of the people." Though from time to time and issue to issue some justices appear to care about individual rights, this "care" has been both superficial and selective. For example: though "liberals" usually oppose government restraints on speech, they frequently support government regulation of economic behavior. And on the other hand, though "conservatives" usually oppose government restraints on economics, they often support government regulation of speech. To the extent that there has been disagreement among the justices, it has not concerned the fundamental principle of whether or not government should control people's lives, but merely the details of how, when, and to what extent individual lives are to be controlled. Thus, it isn't important what kind of judges are interpreting the Constitution, i.e., whether the Bench is made up of "liberals" or "conservatives" or "strict constructionists" or "loose" ones. What is significant is that the Supreme Court consistently upholds the constitutionality of laws which violate individual rights. And it has done so from its very beginning, as is shown in this opinion by justice Iredell in 1798: Some of the most necessary and important acts of Legislation are... founded upon the principle that private rights must yield to public exigencies.... if the owners should refuse voluntarily to accommodate the public, they must be constrained, as far as the public necessities require.... Even for a hard-core anti-statist libertarian like me, who has been aware of and studying the phemonenon of statism for many years, it is truly frightening to see how the Court has explicitly created the absolute and unlimited government power that underlies the law in America. This book conveys an enormously distressing message, all the more so because Holzer demonstrates that it is not at all difficult to ferret out the justices' standards of judgment. Anyone who monitored the several confirmation hearings held in 2005-2006 had the opportunity to look inside the minds of people who, often as not, do not themselves know what they think on an issue, much less why they think it, but whose thoughts do, nevertheless, rest upon identifiable premises. It is not the case that Holzer is making a biased presentation that rests on "proof by selected instances." Just take a look at recent Court decisions involving individual rights and you will see that the two "basic ideas" I mentioned above are being applied right to this day. For example: HIIBEL V. SIXTH JUDICIAL DIST. COURT OF NEV.,HUMBOLDT CTY. (03-5554) 542 U.S. 177 (June, 2004): In the ordinary course a police officer is free to ask a person for identification without implicating the Fourth Amendment.... As best we can tell, petitioner refused to identify himself only because he thought his name was none of the officer's business.... A state law requiring a suspect to disclose his [identity]... is consistent with Fourth Amendment prohibitions against unreasonable searches and seizures.... [The state is merely] balancing its intrusion on the individual's Fourth Amendment interests against its promotion of legitimate government interests. After reading this book you will realize full well that there is not, and cannot ever be, any hope for libertarian politics. Only a restructuring of the Constitution could possibly save America from eventual dissolution. This book should be required reading for any American who believes that he lives in a free society - a society governed by a Constitution that protects individual rights. He does not. Here are some novels that illustrate political ideas: THE MOON IS A HARSH MISTRESS - Robert Heinlein - Berkley 0 425 06262 7 A colony on the Moon is Earth's "Botany Bay." The central managing computer becomes a conscious entity and it, along with a few of the humans, stage a revolution, freeing Luna from Earth's control. The best SF story ever written. It contains some of Heinlein's best political philosophy. THE GREAT EXPLOSION - Eric Frank Russell - Avon (Equinox) 23820 Includes a portrayal of a society without government VOYAGE FROM YESTERYEAR - James P Hogan - Ballantine Del Ray 29472 Another portrayal of a society without government THE SYNDIC - C.M. Kornbluth - Avon (Equinox) 20586 The government has been driven out of America, and the country is ruled by a consortium of the Mafia et al. THE PROBABILITY BROACH - L. Neil Smith - Ballantine 28593 What would America be like today if the Whiskey Rebellion had been successful, Washington executed, the Constitution abolished, and the political ideals of the Anti-Federalists implemented? * Economics HOW YOU CAN PROFIT FROM THE COMING DEVALUATION - Harry Browne - Arlington House, 1970 (out of print) Despite its unfortunate name, this is an excellent textbook on economics. ECONOMICS IN ONE LESSON - Henry Hazlitt - Harper & Row This book is an excellent refutation of many economic errors. But that's all it is. The entire work is a criticism of economic error and an apology for the institution (government) that perpetrates that error. He nowhere proposes what might be the proper course of economic endeavor. I think this would make a good primer--something that would clear away the mistaken beliefs in a person's mind. CAPITALISM THE UNKNOWN IDEAL - Rand et al. - Signet E9227 HOW THE WEST GREW RICH - Nathan Rosenberg and L.E.Birdzell, Jr. - Basic Books. This is a fascinating and illuminating history of the economic growth of our society, from the demise of the feudal system of the Middle Ages to the beginning of the 20th century. This book is an excellent starting point for a study of economic history. AUTOBIOGRAPHY OF AMERICAN BUSINESS - Edited by John Brooks - Doubleday PANICS AND CRASHES - Harry Schultz - Pinnacle Books 230516 This is an excellent history book, with lots of fascinating documentation, but not much at all in the way of principled guidance. THE ECONOMIC TIME BOMB - Harry Browne - St. Martin's Press, 312-92133-0. Browne argues that the larger danger in a crisis situation is not the crisis itself but the potentially destructive effect of the government's response to the crisis. This applies not only to real crises, but also to imagined ones. As such "non-problems" as the trade deficit, stock market declines, and America's new status as a debtor nation are exploited as excuses for more government, the probability of catastrophe increases. Another aspect of this analysis is that government might already have taken actions (prior to a crisis) that preclude an alleviation of the crisis. For example: Environmental laws passed prior to the California earthquake made it illegal for Route 1 to be repaired. PUBLIC GOODS & MARKET FAILURES - Edited by Tyler Cowen - Transaction Publishers Only the third section of this book (Case Studies) has any real value. But it is pricelessly valuable! It consists of examinations, in the real world, of situations contemplated theoretically in the first two sections. It clearly shows the tremendous difference between the fantasy of economic theory and the reality of economic fact. TRIUMPH OF CONSERVATISM - Gabriel Kolko; Quadrangle Books, Chicago 1967 Shows how a political-industrial complex came into being in America during the early years of the 20th century as businessmen tried (successfully) to use the federal government as a tool of coercion in the marketplace. This book is good for background but not as a primary source. It corroborates the "special-interest" thesis in THE ENTERPRISE OF LAW. FREE TO CHOOSE - Milton & Rose Friedman - Avon 52548 The best--and really the only useful--parts of this book are chapters 7 and 8, where the Friedmans critique government intervention in the marketplace. These two chapters have a lot of useful historical analysis. * Esthetics THE ROMANTIC MANIFESTO - Rand * Books and Movies in the Romantic Art Form I will begin by naming the principle that underlies those works of literature that I, as an Objectivist, find esthetically appealing. The thing they all have in common is a manifestation of VALUES; to be precise: a striving to achieve important values in the face of great adversity. The defining characteristic of Romantic Art is that it portrays Man as a volitional being whose choices are significant determining factors in the course of his life. For a full philosophical explanation of what values are and why they are a fundamental necessity of life, you should read Ayn Rand's essay "The Objectivist Ethics", which appears in her book THE VIRTUE OF SELFISHNESS. When a person strives to achieve great values--and is successful--that person is a HERO. Indeed, it is precisely this behavior that is the defining characteristic of a hero. So, to put it quite simply, since I am a man whose life is built around very firmly and explicitly held values, I love stories about heroes. Stories which show me, in symbolic form, the achievements of others and thus help give me the spiritual strength to work toward my own goals. For a magnificent description of heroes--and why we don't have them anymore--you should read James Goldman's screenplay for ROBIN AND MARIAN. Man needs heroes. We need to believe in strength, nobility and courage. Otherwise we become sheep. There is one more attribute a good story should have: it should be a well-told story: a story that consists of a believable world--one that is internally coherent and can induce in the observer an appropriate mental frame-of-reference. J.R.R. Tolkien described this attribute as a condition of "...literary belief, the state of mind that has been called 'willing suspension of disbelief.' What really happens is that the story-maker proves a successful 'subcreator.' He makes a Secondary World which your mind can enter. Inside it, what he relates is 'true': it accords with the laws of that world. You therefore believe it, while you are, as it were, inside. The moment disbelief arises, the spell is broken; the magic, or rather art, has failed. You are then out in the Primary World again, looking at the little abortive Secondary World from outside. If you are obliged, by kindliness or circumstance, to stay, then disbelief must be suspended (or stifled), otherwise listening and looking would become intolerable. But this suspension of disbelief is a substitute for the genuine thing, a subterfuge we use when condescending to games or make-believe, or when trying (more or less willingly) to find what virtue we can in the work of an art that has for us failed." Tolkien's masterpiece, THE LORD OF THE RINGS, is by far the best example of the sort of Romantic Art described here. It is a magnificent fairy tale about a fabulous land, Middle Earth, where the forces of Good war against and are victorious over the forces of Evil. A land where the Kings have majesty, the Heroes have grace, and even the Villains have stature. Some other good examples of Romantic Art are: DOWN THE LONG HILLS - Louis L'Amour - Bantam #02038 One of L'Amour's best - the hero is a 7-year-old boy. ON THE BEACH - Nevil Shute - Bantam #S3875 THE GIRL WHO OWNED A CITY - O.T. Nelson -Dell (Laurel Leaf) #92893 A plague takes all human adults, leaving only the children. THE OLD MAN AND THE SEA - Hemingway - Scribner #SL104 CYRANO DE BERGERAC - Edmond Rostand - Bantam HT4650 THE MIRACLE WORKER - William Gibson - Samuel French, Inc. How Annie Sullivan taught the child Helen Keller to be a human. One of the very few works of literature that has an explicitly epistemological theme. ANTHEM - Ayn Rand TOILERS OF THE SEA - Victor Hugo WATERSHIP DOWN - Richard Adams Here are some of the movies that are excellent portrayals of heroism (I think it unfortunate that many of them have a setting of war and violence, but human society being what it is, this context is what gives rise to much of the heroism in fiction): Black Stallion Firefox Spartacus Man From Snowy River Dam Busters Great Escape Muppet Movie Swiss Family Robinson Dark Crystal High Noon Train Philadelphia Experiment Dark Victory Lassiter Raid on Entebbe Somewhere in Time Dragonslayer Last Unicorn Watership Down Benji the Hunted These three movies I take special note of, because they portray a rarely- encountered hero--a strong-willed, self-assertive woman: Conan the Barbarian Time Rider Yentl * Miscellaneous good stuff Cato Institute 1000 Massachusetts Ave NW Washington DC 20001 The Cato Institute Cato is a think tank run by Ed Crane--an enormously intelligent libertarian. But some of his associates are not nearly as intelligent, and not at all libertarian. THE VINTAGE MENCKEN - ed. by Alistair Cooke - Random House (Vintage) #V- 25 Mencken was one of the greatest masters of the English language. THE DEVIL'S DICTIONARY - Ambrose Bierce - Dover #T487 In the form of a dictionary, this is some of Bierce's strange humor. I am sorry to say that I have not found any periodicals that make a genuine effort to develop libertarian ideas. No one at all advocates Shrugging, and most people who call themselves Objectivists and/or Libertarians reject--either implicitly or sometimes even explicitly--the non-aggression principle. The Randites have always been vehemently anti-libertarian and, by and large, the libertarian movement that arose during the 1970s has since been co-opted by political conservatives. The Libertarian Party has been infiltrated with them to the extent that many of its members are now merely disenchanted Republicans. REASON magazine was at the forefront of libertarianism during the 1970s but has since become mostly conservative in its orientation. The IOS JOURNAL (from the Institute for Objectivist Studies, 82 Washington Street, Suite 207, Poughkeepsie NY 12601-9768 Directed by David Kelley.) This has a strongly statist political frame-of-reference. David Kelley, however, is an extremely intelligent man with a very high level of philosophical acumen. Many of his writings are quite valuable. Back to MyBook