Also Read Ayn Rand wrote:
Laupala wrote:I am now embarrassed to say it, but reading Atlas Shrugged did sort of change my life, in that reading it made me realize that I am an atheist. I was raised Christian, but deep down never truly believed, and reading Atlas Shrugged gave me reasons to accept my disbelief. I followed the normal progression of any 18-21 year old male who reads that book, I became enthralled for about 6 months, and then realize Rand's a crappy philosopher, but the atheist stuff stuck with me.
I think people are too hard on Atlas Shrugged. If you treat it like some sort of philosophical bible, you're probably an idiot, and you deserve some ridicule.
However, it contains a bunch of higher-level themes that I think are both reasonable and applicable on a philosophical level.
People just need to not take Rand's words as gospel at face value, and instead consider the generalities of individualism, hard work, relationships between people and government, etc.
I agree with both of you. My brain has always worked a bit faster than most, and that seemed to be a source of shame rather than a source of pride. My family would always tell me, "Why can't you just learn to talk about the things most people talk about?" Like gossip, shopping, their people problems, TV, stupid fights, and other non-stimulating issues. Spare me.
When I read Atlas Shrugged, I realized it wasn't a bad thing to value quality, competition, hard work, not being a lazy ass. My efforts to excel at my activities was held back by peers, and maybe it wasn't a bad thing that I cared about the quality of my efforts.
I never took her ramblings as gospel, though. I would recommend against taking anybody's ramblings as gospel.