SUBSCRIBER LOGIN

Search
First Things

Loading

RSS

Masthead

Recent Comments

  • teleologist: Thanks you for the opportunity to express our opinions with the time that we had. Tongues will cease,...
  • Orthodoxdj: As Tolkien said to Lewis as they parted on that fateful night in Oxford, “Goodbye.”
  • Livingston Dell: I didn’t always comment as frequently as I had liked to on these articles, but I always...
  • Nikolai Volk: You know, we had a hell of a run in these comment sections. I’ve had many a great discussion with...
  • David Strunk: Hey Joe, I also appreciated what you guys did here, and always had this blog on my RSS feed to see the...
  • Amy K. Hall: Thanks for starting the blog, Joe. It was an honor to be included.
  • Archives

    Categories

    Monthly


    « Previous  |Home|  Next »         

    Friday, April 29, 2011, 3:53 PM

    This piece was originally written for the Breakpoint blog. Crossposted with their permission.

    Christians have a deep ambivalence about Ayn Rand that probably draws as deeply from the facts of her biography as from her famous novels. When the refugee from the old Soviet Union met the Catholic William F. Buckley, she said, “You are too intelligent to believe in God.” Her atheism was militant. Rand’s holy symbol was the dollar sign. Ultimately, Buckley gave Whittaker Chambers the job of writing the National Review essay on Rand’s famous novel Atlas Shrugged that effectively read her and the Objectivists out of the conservative movement. The review characterized Rand’s message as, “To a gas chamber, go!” Chambers thought Rand’s philosophy led to the extinction of the less fit.

    In truth, the great Chambers (his Witness is one of the five finest books I’ve ever read) probably treated Rand’s work unfairly. Though Rand certainly made no secret of her contempt for those unable or unwilling to engage in true exchange of economic value, she was right to tell interviewers that she was no totalitarian because of her abhorrence for the use of force. She did not believe in compulsion. Instead, she wanted a world in which a man stood or fell on his productivity. Rand saw production as the one great life affirming activity. Man does not automatically or instinctively derive his sustenance from the earth. He must labor and produce. This was Rand’s bedrock and explains why she had such contempt for those who try to gain wealth through political arrangements. She saw this parasitism on every point of the economic spectrum from the beggar to the bureaucrat to the purveyor of crony corporatism.

    The critical tension between Rand and Christian theology is on human worth. Christians affirm the inherent and very high value of individuals because of their creation in the image of God. Rand values human beings only for their achievements. A person who does not offer value is a leech, a “second rater.”

    Atlas Shrugged, the film, is well worth seeing, both because of the challenge posed by Rand’s worldview and because it avoids the pedantic speech-making of the overly long novel. Rand doesn’t trust her story to get her philosophy across. The novel struggles under the weight of her desire to teach. Thanks to the constraints of the film medium, we learn through the development of the characters and the plot. As a result, the tale comes through quite clearly and simply.

    The story proceeds from a fascinating premise: what if the most able were to go on strike and take their gifts away from the broader society (like Lebron taking his from Cleveland!)? These talented individuals stop producing because society (in the form of government) has begun to take their contribution for granted and seeks to control the conditions under which they live, work, and create.

    Government action occurs under the rubric of equity, but these people who “move the world” — as one conversation in the film expresses — do not understand what claim the government has to order their lives or to confiscate the fruits of their labor. The villains of the piece are not so much any welfare class as much as corporatists who want to link their companies to government arrangements so as to assure profit without the need for strong performance. They go on about loyalty and public service, but it is a mask for mediocrity and greed. The heroes (Hank Rearden and Dagny Taggert) want to make money, but they are virtuous because they give obvious value for every cent they earn.

    The underlying moral is that we must not make too great a claim to control the inventors and entrepreneurs lest we frustrate them into inactivity. Though we think we gain by taxing and regulating their efforts, there is a strong possibility that we will lose a great deal more by blocking the creative impulse and inspiring a parasitic ethic of entitlement.

    Rand’s atheism, materialism, and reduction of the human being’s value to economic productivity are all severely problematic for a variety of good reasons. But one might compare her political and economic thought to chemotherapy, which is basically a form of poison designed to achieve a positive outcome. You don’t want to take it if you can avoid it. You hope the circumstances in which you would use it don’t arise. However, in an age of statism, it is a message that may need to be heard. Not so much in the hopes that it will prevail as much as to see it arrest movement in a particular direction which will end badly if it continues.

     

    5 Comments

      Stephen
      April 29th, 2011 | 6:53 pm | #1

      “In a particular direction” embodied in rapidly rising tax rates, especially for the high income people who allegedly “move the world?” That is the consequence of our “age or statism,” isn’t it?

      Wait, they’re paying income taxes at a lower rate than they have in decades upon decades? Maybe we should skip the chemotherapy, then.

      Ed Fisher
      May 1st, 2011 | 1:56 pm | #2

      Ambivalent about Ayn Rand? Someone who hated God and whose philosophy is the very antithesis of the Christian worldview. I cannot imagine a Christian feeling anything but disgust and aversion toward her and her message. In an article for the National Review, Peter Wehner described Objectivism as “deeply problematic and morally indefensible” and Rand as “a nut.” Further, her views have “very little to do with authentic conservatism” but were “pernicious, the antithesis of a humane and proper worldview.” This piece by Baker embodies the thinking of those who would subvert the Gospel message to the advancement of a conservative political agenda, fitting perfectly the caricature of politicized evangelicals with their Faustian deals.

      Hunter Baker
      May 1st, 2011 | 3:45 pm | #3

      I wouldn’t subvert the Gospel message for anyone. And yes, I still think ambivalence is the right way to put it. See John Piper’s thoughts on Rand for further consideration:

      http://www.desiringgod.org/resource-library/articles/the-ethics-of-ayn-rand

      Albert
      May 2nd, 2011 | 12:14 pm | #4

      Well, I sympathize with the desire to reach for the literary nuke in the face of the creeping statism of liberal polities. There are bits of truth in Rand, though I think it true they are so mixed with horrid and indefensible ideas that a comparison to Satan’s use of Scripture might be warranted.

      But Rand’s message is not what Whittaker Chambers has in view when describing Atlas Shrugged with “To the gas chambers, go” in hisreview. It was the tone of the novel, which for Chambers (in Burkean fashion) was as important as the implicit or explicit message. The tone was one of total arrogance, “dogmatism without appeal.” The voice commanded earnest genuflection before raw power, and the rawer the power, the deeper the bow. Dissent could only be met with the force reserved for irrational beasts. All this was not explicitly articulated in a message, but communicated in the voice, and thereby no less real. I’ve read her work, and I know what Chambers means, and he is right, though the vulgar tone is so commonplace today that it ceases to be noted.

      Hers is a twisted world, and what truth there is in Rand is probably better taken from truer voices who deserve the spotlight.

      Truth Unites... and Divides
      May 2nd, 2011 | 6:17 pm | #5

      “Hers is a twisted world, and what truth there is in Rand is probably better taken from truer voices who deserve the spotlight.”

      What Albert said.

    Links

    Blogs

    Find Us

    Contact