Ayn Rand the Fountainhead Essay

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    The fiction novel, The Fountainhead, by Ayn Rand is based off of her philosophy of Objectivism. Ayn Rand defines and separates her philosophy of Objectivism into four different and distinct parts. The first part Ayn Rand explains is Metaphysics. Metaphysics is an objective reality where you only accept facts as reality and not fantasies or desires. The next part of Objectivism is Epistemology, which is reasoning by perceiving reality by using knowledge or facts as your guide. The third part is

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    The Fountainhead is an American black and white drama film which was released in 1949. It is an adaptation of the novel called Fountainhead, written by Ayn Rand, who also wrote the screenplay for the film. Both the novel and the film rotate around the central character – Howard Roark, who gets rusticated from his university for having a very different train of thought and vision in architecture than what his professors would deem him to have. He then voluntarily chooses to struggle rather than

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    Individualism in The Fountainhead Essay

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    Individualism in The Fountainhead        Individualism, the doctrine of free thought and action of the individual, forms the basis of Ayn Rand's novel The Fountainhead. The major theme of her fiction is the primacy of the individual, the unique and precious individual life. That which sustains and enriches life is good, that which negates and impoverishes the individual's pursuit of happiness is evil. The Fountainhead is Rand's fullest explication of the primacy of the individual. As

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    any knowledge man acquires is acquired by his own will and effort, and that that is his distinction in the universe, that is his nature, his morality, his glory,” a quote from Rand’s “For the New Intellectual” that defines one of the topics in Fountainhead; the American Dream. The characters Howard Roark and Peter Keating strive for their dreams, reflecting different sides of the path of success society created of the communal mind, and individuals created of the independent mind. “The upward journey

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    The Power of the Individual Revealed in The Fountainhead     The Fountainhead provided and continues to provide a powerful inspiration to the individualist movement in America, and throughout the world. More than any other single work, The Fountainhead revived popular enthusiasm for a way of thinking, and a way of life, that in 1943 was regarded by virtually every sector of intellectual opinion as outmoded. Ayn Rand's courageous challenge to accepted ideas was rendered still more courageous

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    According to Rand, Egoism gives you the right to be entitled to your own happiness. An Egoist usually has a resolution to conflict and tends to argue less caring. Ethical Egoism doesn’t focus on the morality of things, it focuses more on self-interest. Sacrificing yourself interests for the greater good of others defeats the fundamental value of one’s life to oneself. This is the argument that is being portrayed by Ayn Rand and the author of “The Fountainhead.” In the “The Fountainhead”, Howard Roark

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    In the story of the Fountainhead, a brilliant young architect, named Howard Roark, is expelled form his prestigious architecture school. He does this by his refusal of following the school’s traditions that are considered outdated. His unordinary actions begin to convey some of the unique themes used in the novel. Henry Cameron is a discredited architect from New York whom Howard Roark goes to work for due to the admiration he has for Henry Cameron after he is expelled from his school. Howard Roark’s

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    Objectivism and The Fountainhead Essay

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    Objectivism and The Fountainhead     How should we live our lives? Do you live for others or for yourself? What do you deem to be the ideal: selflessness, or selfishness? Why? Ayn Rand’s novel The Fountainhead addresses these issues and her philosophy behind it called Objectivism. Her rebellious rhetoric is to convince us that the only true virtue is selfishness and that we should abide by its standards and live for ourselves. Ayn Rand was from the Soviet Union, and her background helps

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    Power of the Moral Ideal in The Fountainhead     The Fountainhead is a novel of gigantic proportions.  It deals with great talent and great mediocrity, with great love and great hatred, with great ambition and equally great complacence.  It unpretentiously chooses to steer clear of the much hyped common man, with his commonplace dreams and aspirations. The theme of The Fountainhead can be summarized in the famous line by the author-"man's ego is the fountainhead of human progress".  The novel

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    of people. Also, Marxists taught that to attain a higher form of humanity, the working class must struggle. Moreover, past moral codes have taught that social life is a cutthroat battle in which people must subdue through self-sacrifice. Now enter Ayn Rand. Her method of thinking lead to the theory of objectivism. According to this theory, serving others is not the ultimate good; instead, the ultimate good is a person's own life and happiness. To achieve happiness requires a morality of rational selfishness

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