Atlas Shrugged, Part 1 Chapter 2: The Chain
Summary: After ten years working on it, Hank Rearden (age 40) finished his wife’s bracelet out of the first pour Rearden Metal. Hank’s wife Lillian, his Mother, his brother Philip, and their friend Paul Larkin (age 53) all berated him for working too hard and for his selfish gift.
Start by reading the first-tier comments, which are all quotes of Ayn Rand (some of my favorites, some just important for other reasons). Comment on your favorite ones, or others' comments. Don't see your favorite quote? Post it in a new comment. Please reserve new comments for Ayn Rand, and your non-Rand quotes for "replies" to the quotes or discussion. (Otherwise Rand's quotes will get crowded out and pushed down into oblivion. You can help avoid this by "voting up" the Rand quotes, or at least the ones you think people should see, and voting down first-tier comments that are not quotes of the featured book.)
Atlas Shrugged was written by Ayn Rand in 1957.
My idea for this post is discussed here:
http://www.galtsgulchonline.com/posts...
Start by reading the first-tier comments, which are all quotes of Ayn Rand (some of my favorites, some just important for other reasons). Comment on your favorite ones, or others' comments. Don't see your favorite quote? Post it in a new comment. Please reserve new comments for Ayn Rand, and your non-Rand quotes for "replies" to the quotes or discussion. (Otherwise Rand's quotes will get crowded out and pushed down into oblivion. You can help avoid this by "voting up" the Rand quotes, or at least the ones you think people should see, and voting down first-tier comments that are not quotes of the featured book.)
Atlas Shrugged was written by Ayn Rand in 1957.
My idea for this post is discussed here:
http://www.galtsgulchonline.com/posts...
"but that --is-- my only goal."
“A chain,” she said. “Appropriate, isn’t it? It’s the chain by which he holds us all in bondage.”
Speaking about individual rights -- "Textbook of Americanism"
Why don't you post this as a reply to one of these quotes? Or why don't you start a new thread devoted to the Textbook of Americanism?
Hank should have dumped her decades before - after all, she didn't just become that way in that scene. If my spouse gave ME something that precious, that special, I would have treated it as the heirloom and piece of history it was - And to me, something that represented such a significant portion and success of years of work would be far more precious than any old rock taken from the ground.
And THAT. to me, shows the love held between Hank and Dagny (and makes me admire her all that much more), and to this day still makes me wonder why the story took its strange twist when she "fell" for JG.
It was almost as if Dagny, not Lilian, was the conquistador in the book... having achieved the love of Frisco, having achieved the love of Hank, she then went after JG and achieved that love - from a sober, adult aspect not necessarily mature (or stablity-minded) behavior, and perhaps one of the few things I find fault with my personal hero of the book. But I'm diverging...
the intellectual "conquistador" steadily moving forward regardless
of obstructions. . she sought, and achieved, every business and
social / interpersonal goal she set for herself. -- j
.
Here is another passage that, I think, could be interpreted in the same way. There is an equivocation over the term 'selfish.'
James Taggart: Don't you ever think of anything but d'Anconia Copper?" Jim asked him once.
d'Anconia: "No."
"It seems to me that there are other things in the world."
"Let others think about them."
"Isn't that a very selfish attitude?"
"It is." [P1C5]
Jim is using the term to attack Cisco for not being altruistic; d'Anconia is using the term as a badge of honor for thinking of his rational self-interest. My point was that this is a play on words. I do not believe they are all using the term exclusively for "rational self-interest"; they are equivocating, using the word in different senses. It is clever.