I have a new post up at BHL: Eudaimonist Libertarianism. Not too hot, not too cold like lukewarm porridge, its just right!
Tag Archives | Left-Libertarian
Atlas Shrunk, Part 9: Atlas Shrugs Again; So Do I
Its been announced (timed to coincide with Rands birthday) that part 2 of the Atlas film trilogy is going ahead.
I wish I could be excited about this. But I found part 1 so lackluster that I havent even bought the dvd yet, despite having spent decades fantasising about an Atlas film. (Ive probably missed my chance to get the now-recalled dvd box with the blurb praising Ayn Rands timeless novel of courage and self-sacrifice.) Rand is such an intensely cinematic writer, and the film over and over turns away from her cinematic choices (even in cases where constraints of time and budget would have permitted following them) in favour of something less interesting.
Still and all, Im mildly pleased that the project will continue. I guess I prefer a completed mediocre Atlas adaptation to an uncompleted mediocre Atlas adaptation.
Frisbee: Who Needs It
More juvenilia: Ayn Rand Writes Worthless Book, a parody, directed at both Randians and anti-Randians, on the occasion of the posthumous publication of Rands Philosophy: Who Needs It so 1982, age 18, the height of my Randian period.
And if this is what I was writing at the height of my Randian period, I suppose its no surprise that I ended up drifting from apostolic purity.
The Atrocity of Hope, Part 19: Droning On
The politerati are all aflutter because GOP party hack Reince Priebus compared our President Incarnate to Francesco Schettino, the cruise ship captain whos been charged with manslaughter in connection with the recent shipwreck off the coast of Italy.
Debbie Wasserman Schultz, Priebuss counterhack on the Democratic side, called it an unbelievable comparison, opining that for the RNC chairman to compare the president of the United States to someone who has been charged with manslaughter shows a dramatic level of insensitivity to the families of those victims.
I agree. After all, Obama is guilty of actual mass murder against the civilian population of Pakistan. To compare him to someone charged with the lesser offense of manslaughter is dramatically insensitive to the families of Obamas victims.
The Butler Did It
Josiah Warren is often called the father of American individualist anarchism. (Im in the midst of reading Crispin Sartwells excellent Warren collection.) Most of Warrens major works are relatively easy to find online; an exception is his unpublished Notebook D, edited by Ann Butler for her undergraduate thesis in 1964. This too turns out to be online, but its being so is a bit tricky to detect: my information had led me to look for Butlers 1968 M.A. thesis, which has the same title and is evidently not online; how it differs from the 1964 version I know not. (Butler wrote her 1978 Ph.D. thesis on Warren as well, though thankfully with a different title; this too is not online.)
Notebook D is probably not the ideal place to start with Warren; Equitable Commerce and True Civilization are better entry points. But Notebook D remains important and valuable; among its most interesting features is Warrens account of his views on marriage and the family, and in particular his narrative of the way in which he applied his anarchistic principles to the education of his children. Read Part 1, from 1840, and Part 2, from 1860 and 1873.