[The Intellectual Activist is
pleased to present selections from Chapter 8 of a forthcoming book of
Ayn Rand's journals. David Harriman, the book's editor, has provided
the following introduction to these excerpts.]
Soon after completing The
Fountainhead, Ayn Rand contracted with her publisher
(Bobbs-Merrill) to write a short nonfiction book giving a systematic
presentation of the novel's ethics and politics. Her working title for
the book was The Moral Basis of Individualism.
Ayn Rand's notes for this book provide a
fascinating record of her philosophic development during the period
between The Fountainhead and Atlas Shrugged. In
reading these notes, we see her in the process of discovering and
clarifying many of the ideas that she later presented in Galt's
speech. Her formulations here should not be taken as final or
definitive; rather, they are her notes to herself while she is working
out how to present Objectivism as a systematic philosophy.
Her journal for The Moral Basis of
Individualism can be viewed as a progression with three stages.
She begins in September of 1943 by writing a foreword and an unworked
draft of the first three chapters. She then stops work on the draft
and instead begins asking herself questions and thinking aloud on
paper. Finally, in the summer of 1945, she critiques her original
draft and rewrites part of it before deciding to drop the project. To
illustrate this progression, I have chosen excerpts from all three
stages. The selection comprises about one fifth of the journal, which
will be presented in its entirety in the forthcoming book.
September 4, 1943
Foreword
Mankind is committing suicide.
The peculiarity of the present world disaster is that every
group of men in every country is the originator of its own
destruction. Men are not fighting one another for self-preservation.
They are each fighting all for the right to annihilate oneself as fast
as possible.
Intellectuals such as Trotsky worked to bring about the
dictatorship of the proletariat in Russia; they have been murdered by
that dictatorship. Industrialists such as [Fritz] Thyssen, and church
leaders such as [Martin] Niemoller, worked to bring about the Nazi
regime in Germany; they have been exterminated. [The preceding two
sentences were crossed out.] American labor union leaders caused the
creation of Labor Boards; these are now the instruments through which
labor union leaders are being sent to jail. Republicans who decry the
New Deal usurpation of power are now advocating the passage of a labor
conscription act which would give the New Deal its last, winning step
toward total power over this country.
Conservatives, anxious to preserve capitalism, are supporting
this measure which would turn citizens into serfs--which would be the
end of capitalism, for it cannot function through serfs. Leaders of
racial minorities are advocating the destruction of the American
system of government--which is the only system that ever has or can
protect a racial minority. Intellectuals have embraced, en masse and
in toto, the doctrine of collectivism--under which the intellectual
professions are the least possible and the first to go. Name a group
of men and you are naming that group's murderers.