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Previous comments... You are currently on page 5.
"Confessions Of A Serial Rapist"
http://thoughtcatalog.com/anonymous/2015...
The fact that Frisco got so mad at her is evidence to Dagny that he cares greatly about her, which is why she treasures the memory. The whole thing is super romantic and not at all what the author of the article is trying to twist it into by dropping context.
In reality, Frisco slapping Dagny was just "tough love" - perfectly appropriate in that context given their very close relationship and non-contradictory with Objectivism's non-initiation-of-force principle.
I find it very interesting that Rand's critics always accuse her of being too black-and-white and non-nuanced, while constantly missing all the many nuances of the different characters and contexts or turning around and trying to re-frame them as evidence of contradictions in her work.
If you could understand that the word "faith" simply means: "To see patterns and extrapolate from those given patterns" then you would already realize that Ayn had great "faith".
That can do a number on your emotional processes.
Other than that I think that Ayn loved both men and found a different type of solace in each one.
And I've never been convinced that Rand wrote herself into any of the characters of AS.
Life is complicated and the heart wants what it wants.
Just because she was a Genius doesn't mean she was perfect.
She thought she could avoid the moral sin by doing it openly. But she was wrong. People were hurt. Of course.
It was not a mutually agreed arraignment. Those on the outside were coerced to agree by their love for their spouse. The bottom line was "accept it or else".
An open marriage is fine so long as it is entered into knowingly by both sides. Hell, it might even work for some.
But I've never held it hard against her. Who among us is sinless.
I'm not saying it's impossible - only that I've never met one.
I understand, there was no deceit by her, at least.
Maybe she thought she was in love with Branden,
but didn't want to send Frank O'Connor out into the
cold to live. And, maybe, once she was done with Branden, she realized that O'Connor was
the right man for her after all.--It does not affect
the truth of the ideas in her philosophical ideas; if they
can be demonstrated to be true, then they are
true.---Personally, I wish it had not happened;
I think it was a bad mistake; I believe in monogamy,
and lifelong monogamy is what I would want
for myself.
Jan
Wow, this gulch has gone to the dark side.
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