9.9.“ 'u....6_ HAVE YOU EVER IGNORED THE TRUTH BECAUSE OF LACK OF COURAGE T0 SPEAK THE TRUTH? 4 MAN ARE YOU SELFISH!? In 1917, standing uy the window overlooking the streets of Petrograd, a twelve year old girl stared in shocked indignation at the confused crowds and heard the first shots of the Russian Revolution.. She watched as people "shivered in bread line; there was no food to buy, no money and no work". Why did everyone complain about physical hardships created by communists whose slogan was "live for the state". Why? To her this was sheer horror and anyone who considered such sacrifice was blind to the purpose of his life. Her answer to the slogan was that nothing could be were important than one's individual right to his own life. It was not because she was nely a child that she thought in this way, for as the years went by, the woman developed her own philosophy of life, by which she con- tends, even today, that selfishness is a virtue. HREN The woman who advocates such a position is Ayn Rand, who is recognized by some as one of the "most creative thinkers alive". Her noVels such as Atlas Shrugged and The Fountainhead were ex- tremely popular in the fifties, and some believe, even today, that she has a tremendous mind and a deep introspection into life. Among her writings though, a book entitled The Virtue of Selfishnesa, A New Concept of Egoiam, has puzzled and shocked thousands of readers because her theory of what men really is becomes literally alarming, espec- ially when Ayn Rand says, "I do not believe in the sacrifice of the ideal to the nonideal. I pre- fer the dollar sign, the symbol of free trade, therefore the free mind". I What then becomes man's purpose in life? If her theory is valid, where does man take his stand? Where is‘he going? _Is man really out for_himee1f? First, let us consider why Ayn Rand denotes selfishness as a virtue, while we generally tend to think of selfishness in terms of an egotistic position, or see it as wrong and against our code of morality. To answer this question, Ayn Rand introduces her philosophy of Objective Ethics whereby she proudly advocates that rational self— ishness is a value required for men's survival. Objective Ethics maintains that just as life is an and in itself, so every human being is an and in himself and 223 the means to the welfare of others. She believes that man must live for his own sake, neither sacrificing himself to other man, nor sacrificing others to himself. This latter point though raises a problem. H RBN ALE] PHRBN Is sacrifice really as immoral as she believes it is? In so many circumstances, the people who are crying for help today are hardly "doomed beggars", and those who give them help can't really be seen as lacking self-respect towards those who need the help. Furthermore, the cir- cumstances that create problems often stem from men's self-interest where he is out for himself. Even if Rand does advocate that man must know when and how to use the values of his selfishness 'whe is to draw the boundary line so that these problems will not occur? Rand's basic psychological/ethical frame- work appaars as.an over simplification of what men is all about. You cannot place man~in a box and say "You arellabelledas virtously selfish!" There is so much more at consider, the scope be- ing so broad that probably no one theory or state- ment will ever answer man's quest in a simple, neat, fashion. Ayn Rand is not saying that because man is basically selfish that he is indifferent to other men. But she does believe that the concern for others reverts back to manta own interest in the end and that man "does not subordinate his life to the welfare of others, that he does not sacrifice himself to their needs, that the relief of their suffering is not his primary concern, that any help he gives is an exception, not a rule, an act of generosity, not a moral duty... and that values not disasters, are the goal, the first concern and the motive of his life." Yet in view of this, the fact still remains men have sacrificed their lives to the welfare of others. Jesus did. was it self-interest, was his sacrifice immoral as she believes? Albert Schweitzer did, and how many others in their every day lives have done the same? Can we really say. that the subordination of their lives to others was immoral? Does the fact that she sees it as immoral and disasterous make her concept of egoism the final answer to men's purpose on earth? Nearly 3,000 jobs in Europ ‘ SIIMMEIIE _ Hill STIIIIE \Nearly 3,000 jobs are opentopostsecondaw If man acts for his own self-interest, he is bound to, at some point , sacrifice others for himself because the means whereby he lives for his own. sake, may in fact, entail the disruption of other people's interest and value. But Rand does not view the situation as such. Her belief is that selfishness or self-esteem is the way a man ought to function (but her advocating that man does function selfishly, still holds). For her, sacrificing your life for another person at the risk of loosing your own life, is immoral. Her reasons are as such. First it is a lack of self-esteem, secondly it is lack of self-respect for others because we then would be viewing men as a "herd of doomed beggars crying for someone's help", and thirdly, that life would become a nightmare where the world would be a trap. Canadian students under the International Student Summe‘r Employment Exchange PrO‘ _ gramme. Offered through the Department of ManpOWer and hnnfigrafion,these “working summers" are in Aumna,Bdgum,Denmam, Finland, France, Germany, ADEIPHRBN ALE]?