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| Ayn Rands Fiction
We the Living (1936): Set in Soviet Russia, this is Ayn Rands first and most autobiographical novel. Its theme is: the individual against the state, the supreme value of a human life and the evil of the totalitarian state that claims the right to sacrifice it. Buy it now.....Paperback.....Hardcover.....Audio Cassette Anthem (1938): This novelette depicts a world of the future, a society so collectivized that even the word I has vanished from the language. Anthems theme is: the meaning and glory of mans ego. Buy it now.....Paperback.....Hardcover The Fountainhead (1943): The story of an innovator architect Howard Roark and his battle against a tradition-worshipping society. Its theme: individualism versus collectivism, not in politics, but in mans soul; the psychological motivations and the basic premises that produce the character of an individualist or a collectivist. Ayn Rand presented here for the first time her projection of the ideal man. Buy it now.....Paperback.....Hardcover.....Audio Cassette Atlas Shrugged (1957): Ayn Rands complete philosophy, dramatized in the form of a mystery story not about the murder of a mans body, but about the murder and rebirth of mans spirit. The story is set in a near-future U.S.A. whose economy is collapsing due to the inexplicable disappearance of the countrys leading innovators and industrialists the Atlases on whom the world rests. The theme is: the role of the mind in mans existence and, as corollary, the demonstration of a new moral philosophy: the morality of rational self-interest. Buy it now.....Hardcover.....Paperback.....Audio Cassette Ayn Rands Other Fiction Night of January 16th (1934): A courtroom play in which the verdict depends on the sense-of-life of jurors selected from the audience. Buy it now.....Paperback The Early Ayn Rand (1984): A collection of stories and plays written by Ayn Rand in the 1920s and 1930s, plus passages cut from The Fountainhead. Buy it now.....Paperback Ayn Rands Nonfiction For the New Intellectual (1961): A collection of the key philosophical passages from her novels. The 48-page title essay sweeps over the history of thought, showing how ideas control the course of history and how philosophy has served for the most part as an engine of destruction. Buy it now.....Paperback The Virtue of Selfishness (1964): Ayn Rands revolutionary concept of egoism. Essays on the morality of rational selfishness and the political and social implications of such a moral philosophy. Essays include: The Objectivist Ethics, Mans Rights, The Nature of Government, and Racism. Buy it now.....Paperback Capitalism: The Unknown Ideal (1966): Essays on the theory and history of capitalism demonstrating that it is the only moral economic system, i.e., the only one consistent with individual rights and a free society. Includes: What is Capitalism? The Roots of War, Conservatism: An Obituary, and The Anatomy of Compromise. Buy it now.....Paperback Introduction to Objectivist Epistemology (1967): The Objectivist theory of concepts, with Ayn Rands solution to the problem of universals, identifying the relationship of abstractions to concretes. Includes an essay by Leonard Peikoff, The Analytic-Synthetic Dichotomy. The second edition (1990) includes transcripts of Ayn Rands workshops on her theory containing her answers to questions about her theory raised by philosophers and other academics. Buy it now.....Paperback The Romantic Manifesto (1969): Ayn Rands philosophy of art, with a new analysis of the Romantic school of literature. Essays include: Philosophy and Sense of Life, The Psycho-Epistemology of Art, and What is Romanticism? Buy it now.....Paperback The New Left: The Anti-Industrial Revolution (1971): Ayn Rands answer to environmentalism, progressive education, and other contemporary anti-reason movements. Buy it now.....Paperback Philosophy: Who Needs It (1982): Everybody needs philosophy that is the theme of this book. It demonstrates that philosophy is essential in each persons life, and shows how those who do not think philosophically are the helpless victims of ideas they accept passively from others. Essays include Philosophical Detection, Causality Versus Duty, and The Metaphysical Versus the Man-Made. Buy it now.....Paperback The Ayn Rand Lexicon: Objectivism from A to Z (1986): A mini-encyclopedia of Objectivism, containing the key passages from the writings of Ayn Rand and her associates on 400 topics in philosophy and related fields. Edited by Harry Binswanger. Buy it now.....Paperback The Voice of Reason: Essays in Objectivist Thought (1989): Philosophy and cultural analysis, including Who Is the Final Authority in Ethics? Also Religion Versus America by Leonard Peikoff, and Libertarianism: The Perversion of Liberty by Peter Schwartz. Buy it now.....Paperback The Ayn Rand Column (1991): A collection of Ayn Rands columns for the Los Angeles Times, and other essays. Buy it now.....Paperback Ayn Rands Marginalia (1995): Notes Ayn Rand made in the margins of the works of more than twenty authors, including Barry Goldwater, C.S. Lewis, and Ludwig von Mises. Edited by Robert Mayhew. Buy it now.....Paperback Letters of Ayn Rand (1995): This collection of more than 500 letters written by Ayn Rand offers much new information on her life as philosopher, novelist, political activist, and Hollywood screenwriter. Includes letters to fans, friends and family members, celebrities, business leaders, and philosophers. Edited by Michael S. Berliner. Buy it now.....Paperback.....Hardcover Journals of Ayn Rand (1997): An extensive collection of Ayn Rands Buy it now.....Hardcover Ayn Rand: A Sense of Life (1998): The companion book to the Academy Award nominated documentary of the same name. Contains the full script plus 224 black and white photos and 16 color photos from the movie. By Michael Paxton. Buy it now.....Hardcover Works by Leonard Peikoff The Ominous Parallels (1982): The Objectivist philosophy of history through an analysis of the philosophical causes of Nazism, and their parallels in contemporary America. Buy it now.....Paperback Objectivism: The Philosophy of Ayn Rand (1991): This is the definitive, systematic statement of Ayn Rands philosophy, based on Dr. Peikoffs thirty years of philosophical discussions with her. All of the key principles of Objectivism from metaphysics to art are presented in a logical, hierarchical structure. Buy it now.....Paperback |
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