Putting others first, she argues, means that everyone finishes last. Self-interest, Rand argues, is the best motivation for economics, finance, politics, and basically all of humanity's pursuits. (If you think I'm overstating or mischaracterizing her message, please note that Rand literally published a non-fiction book titled " The Virtue of Selfishness.") "Atlas Shrugged" serves as a page-turning enticement to Ayn Rand's philosophy, Objectivism, which is based on the idea that selfishness should be the guiding virtue for all mankind. The rest of the world - populated only by collectivists, politicians, and other assorted "takers" - quickly begins to fall apart without them. The mysterious hero of the book, John Galt, encourages captains of industry, inventors, and other heroes of capitalism to join him in a secret utopia hidden in Colorado called Galt's Gulch. "Atlas Shrugged," which was published in 1959 and came in second only after The Bible in a Library of Congress survey of influential books, is a 1,200-page sci-fi novel about what would happen if all the "makers" in the world were to go on strike. And like a lot of white males, "Atlas Shrugged" turned me into a huge jerk for a couple of months. Like a lot of white males, I read Ayn Rand's bestselling novel "Atlas Shrugged" when I was 18. Account icon An icon in the shape of a person's head and shoulders.
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