The Ayn Rand Column ‘Introducing Objectivism’
“My philosophy, in essence, is the concept of man as a heroic being, with his own happiness as the moral purpose of his life, with productive achievement as his noblest activity, and reason as his only absolute.”
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Ayn Rand 322
Russian-American novelist and philosopher 1905–1982Related quotes
Vol. I, Ch. 13: "Machinery and Big Industry".
(Buch I) (1867)
As quoted in The MacMillan Dictionary of Quotations (1989) by John Daintith, Hazel Egerton, Rosalind Ferguson, Anne Stibbs and Edmund Wright, p. 374.
Source: Words of a Sage : Selected thoughts of African Spir (1937), p. 40.
Preface of M. Quetelet
A Treatise on Man and the Development of His Faculties (1842)
Context: The analysis of the moral man through his actions, and of the intellectual man through his productions, seems to me calculated to form one of the most interesting parts of the sciences of observation, applied to anthropology.
Source: Man for Himself (1947), p.189
“The Contradiction in Objectivism,” 1968