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The Objective Standard: Fall 2019, Vol. 14, No. 3

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The Fall 2019 issue of The Objective Standard features the following articles, shorts, and



"How I Avoided the Struggles of Most Young Gay People" by Stewart Margolis "John The Father of Liberalism" by Jon Hersey "The Green New A Plan to Sink America" by Tim White "Washington Crossing the Delaware: A Beacon of the American Spirit" by Joseph Kellard "The Man Who Electrified Music" by Jon Hersey "How John H. Patterson Modernized Industry" by Jonathan Townley "The Enigma Code Breakers Who Saved the World" by Tim White "Joan of Heroine of France, Exemplar of Courage" by Tim White "Seven Great Poems on the Glory of Man" by various authors "Dr. Preaching the Goodness of Sex" by Timothy Sandefur "Deriving More Joy from One of Life’s Richest Sources" by Jon Hersey "McCartan Delighted in the Sensual World" by Timothy Sandefur "John Milton’s Lovers in Paradise" by Timothy Sandefur "Suffused with The Paintings of John White Alexander" by Timothy Sandefur "Jerry Goldsmith’s Voice of Idealism" by Timothy Sandefur "René A Voice of Independence" by Timothy Sandefur "Scientific Morality and the Streetlight Effect" by Craig Biddle "The Argument from A Confession of Intellectual Impotence" by Craig Biddle "The Battle for Values in American Westerns" by Timothy Sandefur "Alt-Education Is Filling a Void That Colleges Can’t" by Lolita Allgyer "Entrepreneurs in Space" by Timothy Sandefur "Thanks to Science, Allergies Don’t Have to Keep You Down" by Timothy Sandefur "Socrates: Dramatizing the History of Western Thought" reviewed by Robert Begley "Free to A Total Productivity System to Achieve More by Doing Less" by Michael Hyatt, reviewed by Jonathan Townley "Pimpernel" Smith (1941), reviewed by Arie Vilner The Objective Standard is a quarterly journal of culture and politics written from an Objectivist perspective (Objectivism being Ayn Rand’s philosophy of reason, egoism, and laissez-faire capitalism). The journal is based on the idea that for every human concern - from personal matters to foreign policy, from the sciences to the arts, from education to legislation - there are demonstrably objective standards by reference to which we can assess what is true or false, good or bad, right or wrong. The purpose of the journal is to analyze and evaluate ideas, trends, events, and policies accordingly.

We maintain that the standards of both knowledge and value derive from the facts of reality; that truth is discovered only by means of reason (i.e. through observation and logic); that the factual requirements of man’s life on earth determine his moral values; that the selfish pursuit of one’s own life-serving goals is virtuous; and that individual rights are moral principles defining the fundamental requirements of a civilized society.

We stand opposed to the notion that the standards of knowledge and value are not factual but subjective (feeling-based) or other-worldly (faith-based); that truth is ultimately dictated by majority opinion or a "supernatural" being’s will; that democratic consensus or "God’s word" determines what is moral; that sacrifice for "the common good" or in obedience to "God’s commands" is virtuous; and that rights are social conventions or "divine decrees".

In stark contrast to these philosophic approaches, ours is a philosophy of reality, reason, egoism, and laissez-faire capitalism.

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Published October 14, 2019

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About the author

Craig Biddle

49 books19 followers
Craig Biddle writes and lectures on philosophical and political issues from an Objectivist perspective, Objectivism being the philosophy created by Ayn Rand. Craig also edits The Objective Standard, a quarterly journal of culture and politics. His first book, Loving Life: The Morality of Self-Interest and the Facts that Support It, is a highly concretized, systematic introduction to Ayn Rand's ethics.

The book in progress is an introduction to the principles of good thinking and the fallacies that are violations of those principles. He has lectured and taught seminars at universities across the country, including Stanford, Duke, Tufts, UVA, UCLA, UM–Wisconsin, and NYU. Also lecture regularly at Objectivist conferences.

For a brief elaboration on the nature of Objectivism, see my essay “Introducing The Objective Standard” or Leonard Peikoff’s essay “The Philosophy of Objectivism: A Brief Summary.” To learn more about the philosophy, I suggest beginning with Ayn Rand’s novel Atlas Shrugged.

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