For the New Intellectual Quotes
For the New Intellectual: The Philosophy of Ayn Rand
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Ayn Rand3,452 ratings, 3.70 average rating, 185 reviews
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For the New Intellectual Quotes
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“So long as men live together on earth and need means to deal with one another—their only substitute, if they abandon money, is the muzzle of a gun.”
― For the New Intellectual: The Philosophy of Ayn Rand
― For the New Intellectual: The Philosophy of Ayn Rand
“Love is not self-sacrifice, but the most profound assertion of your own needs and values. It is for your own happiness that you need the person you love, and that is the greatest compliment, the greatest tribute you can pay to that person.”
― For the New Intellectual: The Philosophy of Ayn Rand
― For the New Intellectual: The Philosophy of Ayn Rand
“socialism is the doctrine that man has no right to exist for his own sake, that his life and his work do not belong to him, but belong to society, that the only justification of his existence is his service to society, and that society may dispose of him in any way it pleases for the sake of whatever it deems to be its own tribal, collective good.”
― For the New Intellectual: The Philosophy of Ayn Rand
― For the New Intellectual: The Philosophy of Ayn Rand
“Your self is your mind; renounce it and you become a chunk of meat ready for any cannibal to swallow.”
― For the New Intellectual: The Philosophy of Ayn Rand
― For the New Intellectual: The Philosophy of Ayn Rand
“Man’s unique reward, however, is that while animals survive by adjusting themselves to their background, man survives by adjusting his background to himself.”
― For the New Intellectual: The Philosophy of Ayn Rand
― For the New Intellectual: The Philosophy of Ayn Rand
“Reason requires freedom, self-confidence and self-esteem. It requires the right to think and to act on the guidance of one’s thinking—the right to live by one’s own independent judgment. Intellectual freedom cannot exist without political freedom; political freedom cannot exist without economic freedom; a free mind and a free market are corollaries.”
― For the New Intellectual: The Philosophy of Ayn Rand
― For the New Intellectual: The Philosophy of Ayn Rand
“The secret of the Witch Doctor’s power lies in the fact that man needs an integrated view of life, a philosophy, whether he is aware of his need or not—and whenever, through ignorance, cowardice or mental sloth, men choose not to be aware of it, their chronic sense of guilt, uncertainty and terror makes them feel that the Witch Doctor’s philosophy is true.”
― For the New Intellectual: The Philosophy of Ayn Rand
― For the New Intellectual: The Philosophy of Ayn Rand
“There is no way to make a human being accept the role of a sacrificial animal except by destroying his self-esteem. There is no way to destroy his self-esteem except by making him reject his own consciousness. There is no way to make him reject his own consciousness except by convincing him of its impotence.”
― For the New Intellectual: The Philosophy of Ayn Rand
― For the New Intellectual: The Philosophy of Ayn Rand
“When you are in love, it means that the person you love is of great personal, selfish importance to you and to your life.”
― For the New Intellectual: The Philosophy of Ayn Rand
― For the New Intellectual: The Philosophy of Ayn Rand
“La mayoría de las sociedades han sido regidas por los bárbaros y los hechiceros.”
― Para el Nuevo Intelectual
― Para el Nuevo Intelectual
“Thinking is man’s only basic virtue, from which all the others proceed. And his basic vice, the source of all his evils, is that nameless act which all of you practice, but struggle never to admit: the act of blanking out, the willful suspension of one’s consciousness, the refusal to think—not blindness, but the refusal to see; not ignorance, but the refusal to know.”
― For the New Intellectual: The Philosophy of Ayn Rand
― For the New Intellectual: The Philosophy of Ayn Rand
“Reason is the faculty that perceives, identifies and integrates the material provided by his senses.”
― For the New Intellectual: The Philosophy of Ayn Rand
― For the New Intellectual: The Philosophy of Ayn Rand
“Life is the reward of virtue—and happiness is the goal and the reward of life.”
― For the New Intellectual: The Philosophy of Ayn Rand
― For the New Intellectual: The Philosophy of Ayn Rand
“My morality, the morality of reason, is contained in a single axiom: existence exists—and in a single choice: to live.”
― For the New Intellectual: The Philosophy of Ayn Rand
― For the New Intellectual: The Philosophy of Ayn Rand
“The power of ideas has no reality for either of them, and neither cares to learn that the proof of that power lies in his own chronic sense of guilt and terror.”
― For the New Intellectual: The Philosophy of Ayn Rand
― For the New Intellectual: The Philosophy of Ayn Rand
“The professional businessman and the professional intellectual came into existence together, as brothers born of the industrial revolution. Both are the sons of capitalism—and if they perish, they will perish together. The tragic irony will be that they will have destroyed each other; and the major share of the guilt will belong to the intellectual.”
― For the New Intellectual: The Philosophy of Ayn Rand
― For the New Intellectual: The Philosophy of Ayn Rand
“Kant’s expressly stated purpose was to save the morality of self-abnegation and self-sacrifice. He knew that it could not survive without a mystic base—and what it had to be saved from was reason.”
― For the New Intellectual: The Philosophy of Ayn Rand
― For the New Intellectual: The Philosophy of Ayn Rand
“When men plead for forgiveness, for the nameless, cosmic forgiveness of an unconfessed evil, when they react with instantaneous compassion to any guilt, to the perpetrators of any atrocity, while turning away indifferently from the bleeding bodies of the victims and the innocent—one may see the actual purpose, motive and psychological appeal of the altruist code. When these same compassionate men turn with snarling hatred upon anyone who pronounces moral judgments, when they scream that the only evil is the determination to fight against evil—one may see the kind of moral blank check that the altruist morality hands out.”
― For the New Intellectual: The Philosophy of Ayn Rand
― For the New Intellectual: The Philosophy of Ayn Rand
“It was not the businessmen or the industrialists or the workers or the labor unions or the remnants of the feudal aristocracy that began the revolt against freedom and the demand for the return of the absolute state: it was the intellectuals. It was the alleged guardians of reason who brought mankind back to the rule of brute force.”
― For the New Intellectual: The Philosophy of Ayn Rand
― For the New Intellectual: The Philosophy of Ayn Rand
“Evading the difference between production and looting, they called the businessman a robber. Evading the difference between freedom and compulsion, they called him a slave driver. Evading the difference between reward and terror, they called him an exploiter. Evading the difference between pay checks and guns, they called him an autocrat. Evading the difference between trade and force, they called him a tyrant. The most crucial issue they had to evade was the difference between the earned and the unearned.”
― For the New Intellectual: The Philosophy of Ayn Rand
― For the New Intellectual: The Philosophy of Ayn Rand
“A man’s method of using his consciousness determines his method of survival. The three contestants are Attila, the Witch Doctor and the Producer—or the man of force, the man of feelings, the man of reason—or the brute, the mystic, the thinker. The rest of mankind calls it expedient to be tossed by the current of events from one of those roles to another, not choosing to identify the fact that those three are the source which determines the current’s direction.”
― For the New Intellectual: The Philosophy of Ayn Rand
― For the New Intellectual: The Philosophy of Ayn Rand
