George Will On Religion and Founding Needs Ayn Rand's Theory of Rights
"He even says explicitly that neither successful self-government nor “a government with clear limits defined by the natural rights of the governed” requires religion. For these, writes Will, “religion is helpful and important but not quite essential.”"
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Ayn Rand did address why religion was created. It is a primitive form of philosophy and every human being requires a philosophy in some form to integrate his ideas and observations. As conceptual beings who must use our rational minds for survival we can't live range of the moment jumping from one thought to another with no connection, coherence or explanation. See her essay "Philosophy and Sense of Life", republished in her anthology The Romantic Manifesto. It should have also been included in the more recent Philosophy: Who Needs It?.
This is an excellent post with awesome comments from new comers. Good work! :)
Galt's oath is the denial of altruism; e.g. his unwillingness to accept the sanction of the victim. I can think of something even more fundamental: one cannot be both a Christian and Objectivist because the Christian accepts the existence of a supernatural entity on faith and bases everything else upon that belief, and the Objectivist rejects the supernatural entirely.
Yes. I am atheist, but my kids know the people think the Devil punishes evil-doers and that there's no evidence for this. My son is interested, and my daughter doesn't care. I try really hard not to give them any of my ideas. They don't know for sure what I think of politicians or anything I think is controversial. They'll figure out the world based on reason and facts.
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