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how objectivism does not relate to glenn gould



Dear Zeldah, F-minoreans, Ayn Rand, Glenn Gould, the world, etc.,

The fact that I disagree with Rand politically and philosophically has very
little to do

with my thinking she is an inferior novelist, and vice versa, I suppose. I
have read Rand and didn't care for her work, stylistically or
thematically--I apologize for all the adverbs--but I never once called
anything "useless."
 To me, it seems as though Rand
was--justifiably--traumatized and angered by being upper-class during the
1917 revolution, and simply took Orwell and the theories of existentialism
and put her own selfish, heroism-driven spin on it. Pardon me for not writing
a thesis paper as an initial response, and just having a random and
completely personal opinion. I understand that many people feel very strongly
about Rand and objectivism, as you do, and as I do, but in opposite ways.


But this isn't about me or Ayn Rand--it's about Gould. I just don't feel that
Gould or a person like him who left his estate to charity, who had such a
fascination with Eastern thought and Zen Buddhism, would have been at all
attracted to the philosophy propagated by someone who wrote The Virtue of
Selfishness
. Gould hated competition, and Rand's emphasis on
survival--intellectual or physical--would show that she would thrive on
competition. I can see how there's a vague connection between Rand's idea of
a struggle between people who create and people who "devour" this creativity,
I believe she said, and Gould's ideas about the hierarchical implications of
"artist" and "audience," but I don't think they mean the same things. While
Gould was saying the distinctions created a sort of class struggle, Rand
seems to be saying that those who do create are rightfully of a higher class
than those who do not.
My argument will never be sufficient because I'm not objective, in the true
sense of the word; I can't stand apart from it. A few things to throw out:

'"Gould claimed to be an avowed socialist [although he was a practical
exponent of the stock market] and would spend many hours of conversation
berating the capitalist system,'  wrote Andrew Kazdin, after working closely
with him for fifteen years."
--from Ostwald's book, though the footnote says it's also in Kazdin's book,
Glenn Gould at Work
, which I, sadly, have yet to read.  
A lot of the things in Gould's self-interview seem to suggest socialist
tendencies, also--the town where all the houses are battleship-grey, which
Gould deems a moral issue rather than an aesthetic one. Also, the books in
Gould's library
--which is a very limited selection, I'm sure, but a good
website--don't seem, to me, to complement Objectivism, Rand, etc. Here is a
good article
from a great magazine, Lingua Franca, but it may put off some
staunch Rand supporters.

"'Convictions' are more dangerous enemies of truth than 'lies.'" -- Nietzsche

As far as a question for Glenn is concerned, while I doubt I'd be able to get
one into the conversation, and I'd really just be happy to talk with him, I
can't really think of a serious question. I'd probably ask him if he'd like
some scrambled eggs.

paige.