A blog dedicated to philosophy, history, politics, literature
Sunday, 31 December 2023
On Reforming the Hindu Personal Law
Saturday, 30 December 2023
Narendra Modi: In comparison to Thatcher, Xiaoping, Reagan and Gorbachev
Narendra Modi |
Monday, 25 December 2023
There are no good civilizations and evil civilizations
Sunday, 24 December 2023
To be successful a nation needs friends—to be very successful it needs enemies
Saturday, 23 December 2023
Territory versus property
Sunday, 17 December 2023
History does not repeat itself; the future is unknowable
Saturday, 16 December 2023
Two failed ideologies: socialism & capitalism
Sunday, 10 December 2023
Journalism: The Frightful Monstrosity and Delusion
Saturday, 9 December 2023
Rama Rajya: The Civilization of Faith & Reason
Sunday, 3 December 2023
“Reason is always a kind of brute force”
Saturday, 2 December 2023
4 Most Powerful Geopolitical Forces in History of Civilization
Sunday, 26 November 2023
Life is not rational; reason is unknowable
Saturday, 25 November 2023
Self praise is a sign of weakness
Sunday, 19 November 2023
Bill Gates: The World’s Worst Book Reviewer
Saturday, 18 November 2023
Rereading Exodus by Leon Uris
Sunday, 12 November 2023
On Catherine Nixey’s book ‘The Darkening Age’
Saturday, 11 November 2023
Teaching of Bhagavad Gita: Dharma is superior to morality, ethics, legality
Sunday, 5 November 2023
The important lesson of history
Ruins of Nalanda University in Bihar (Started in the Vedic Age, before 1200 BCE) |
Sunday, 29 October 2023
Reason and morality are subjective, transitory and fallible
Saturday, 28 October 2023
Leftists are top capitalists; Rightists are incompetent capitalists
Sri Aurobindo: Gandhian politics, Tolstoyism and Bolshevism
Tuesday, 24 October 2023
On Day of Vijayadashami: Four Mahavakyas from the Upanishads
Rama story carved in wall of Shiva temple Ellora Caves, 8th Century |
Monday, 23 October 2023
Victor Hugo’s fallacious argument on ideas whose time has come
Saturday, 21 October 2023
Vishnu, the collectivist; Shiva, the individualist
Parvati and Dancing Shiva (Ellora cave) |
Sunday, 15 October 2023
The Frankensteins that America & Israel created in the 1980s
Saturday, 14 October 2023
Israel versus Palestine: The human quest for meaning
Sunday, 8 October 2023
Perfection is not possible; Lord Agni’s fire is enveloped in smoke
Saturday, 7 October 2023
Bhagavad Gita: Metaphysical and moral implications of the theory of rebirth, redeath
Tuesday, 3 October 2023
The Saptarshi in the asterism of the Big Dipper
Sunday, 1 October 2023
Culture, collectivism and civilization: What the Upanishads say
Stone wheel engraved on walls of Konark Temple |
Sunday, 24 September 2023
Rationality is a myth; man is a creature of emotions
Goddess Saraswati (10th century) |
Saturday, 23 September 2023
Lord Kalki: The end of metaphysics, the beginning of new universe
Sunday, 17 September 2023
John Galt: Ayn Rand’s world-destroying, world-conquering conquistador
He was convinced that he knew what was the best possible way of life and that he had the moral right to decide how every other human being should think and live.
In the climax of Ayn Rand’s novel Atlas Shrugged, John Galt and his acolytes destroy all the major industries, they facilitate bridge collapses, plane crashes, rail accidents and nuclear explosions, they engineer the collapse of the monetary system and the political establishment, they decimate the law & order machinery, and they become indirectly responsible for the death of tens of millions of people.
In Ayn Rand’s convoluted worldview, these mass murderers were the good guys. They were the good guys because they did their destruction and killing in the name of Ayn Rand’s so-called values—the values of reason, atheism, individualism, freedom and capitalism.
Ayn Rand was a big fan of Columbus, Hernán Cortés and the conquistadors who had wiped out the native population of the Americas to create space for the rise of modern America. In her historically-ignorant and morally-decrepit essays, she has denigrated the Native Indians and suggested that they deserved to die. She believed that America had lost its way in the early 20th century and that a new band of conquistadors must arise to utterly destroy society and pave the way for the development of a new world in which every human being would accept and live by her values.
She did not preach violence but she realized that most people in the world would NEVER accept to live by her set of foolish values, and give up their religions and traditions, unless they were demoralized and tyrannized by large-scale social and economic collapse and mass slaughter. This is what John Galt and his acolytes (conquistadors) set out to achieve in her novel. The conquistadors of the 16th and 17th centuries killed by swords and spears, but Ayn Rand shunned violence, so she got Galt and his men to destroy by words.
In Atlas Shrugged, Galt is the smooth-talking pseudo-philosopher who brainwashes people with his words and gets them to do the dirty work of destroying and killing. In the final part of the book, he gives a long speech, of around 60-pages, which is an elucidation of Ayn Rand's rather silly and insane philosophy. The tone of speech is hectoring and dictatorial. He is clearly stating that either you accept everything that I say as the ultimate truth or you will be left to rot and die. Every human in the world is given a stark choice: dreary death or slavery to Ayn Rand’s values.
Ayn Rand is seen as a philosopher of classical liberalism and libertarianism, but she was not a philosopher. Her knowledge of philosophy and history was atrocious—this is obvious from the naive and laughable comments that she has made on Aristotle, Plato, Kant and a few other philosophers. She was a mediocre fiction writer and politically, she was a tyrant. She believed that the world belonged to “only one type of people”—those who lived by her system of thought.
In the last three decades of her life she tried to start a movement. She attracted a small ragtag bunch of semi-educated and ill-experienced youngsters. The intelligent ones in this bunch quickly saw through the contradictions in her thought and they fled from her, never to come back again. Only the mediocrities stuck with her. She spent the final years of her life in the company of these mediocrities, who pampered themselves with the notion that they were like John Galt. They venerated her as their God and her movement became a cult.
Sunday, 10 September 2023
Rajiv Malhotra's Being Different: Arguments against the ideologies of sameness, multiculturalism, assimilation
Started reading Rajiv Malhotra's book Being Different yesterday. Now on Chapter 3.
Sunday, 8 January 2023
Bhima: The Greatest Warrior of the Mahabharata
Raja Ravi Varma’s Painting of Bhima |