As mentioned in an earlier blog, I was delighted when I found out that Diana Hsieh had recently commented on the article I wrote for SOLO back in the spring. My writings don't normally get much attention. So any time I see a person with a very large audience commenting on them it is a pleasant surprise. It is especially nice because Diana Hsieh's writings have had some impact on my intellectual development, going all the way back to her undergrad paper on the analytic/synthetic dichotomy.
However, I don't want people to get the wrong idea about my opinion of ARI. Although I now recognize that ARI isn't completely full of malevolent, intolerant, cultish fanatics, that doesn't mean that I think they are totally without fault. On the contrary, I think ARI has greatly contributed to the public's perception of it as an irrational organization by it's own actions.
For example, what originally convinced me not to support the Ayn Rand Institute was Peter Shwartz' essay "On Moral Sanctions". That was 8 years ago, when I was 19 years old. In David Kelly's "A Question of Sanction", he had accused Peter Shwartz of asserting that "libertarians are the moral 'equivalent' of the Soviet regime, and I the equivalent of Armand Hammer. These are wild accusations, preposterous on their face." Sure enough, when reading Peter Shwartz' essay I found the following statement:
"IS LIBERTARIANISM AN EVIL DOCTRINE? Yes, if evil is the irrational and the destructive. Libertarianism belligerently rejects the very need for any justification for its belief in something called 'liberty.' It repudiates the need for any intellectual foundation to explain why 'liberty' is desirable and what 'liberty' means. Anyone from a gay-rights activist to a criminal counterfeiter to an overt anarchist can declare that he is merely asserting his 'liberty'—and no Libertarian (even those who happen to disagree) can objectively refute his definition. Subjectivism, amoralism and anarchism are not merely present in certain 'wings' of the Libertarian movement; they are integral to it. In the absence of any intellectual framework, the zealous advocacy of 'liberty' can represent only the mindless quest to eliminate all restraints on human behavior—political, moral, metaphysical. And since reality is the fundamental 'restraint' upon men's actions, it is nihilism—the desire to obliterate reality—that is the very essence of Libertarianism. If the Libertarian movement were ever to come to power, widespread death would be the consequence."
Now, having known many Libertarians and participated in countless discussions over how to philosophically justify the existence of natural rights, I knew that the idea that they "belligerantly reject" the need for a philosophical defense of liberty was patently false. I also knew, due to witnessing countless denials by various Libertarian spokespeople, that they were certainly not advocates of "nihilism". As such, It wasn't difficult to determine that Shwartz' statements were unfair charachterizations of the Libertarian Party. As Kelly said, they lacked a "sense of proportion".
Now, lest any ARI supporter go ballistic on account of me criticizing Shwartz' essay, let me also say that many TOC supporters are guilty of behaving in exactly the same way when they start talking about ARI. This tendency to engage in crazed denunciations whenever someone disagrees with one's conclusions is shared by both sides.
However, This is one of the main reasons I had such a poor view of the Ayn Rand Institute. It was not only because I had heard bad things about them, but because I had read their own essays and seen for myself what kind of people they were.
Luckily, I was able to see another side of ARI that I had not seen before. Yaron Brook did not accuse Libertarians of being "nihilists" or belligerently rejecting the need for philosophy. Instead, he merely stated that it was a "big tent" organization and so could never achieve the kind of things that ARI could do in the long run. There is a big difference between those two types of statements. Brook's statement is a reasonable criticism which even an Objectivist supporter of the LP would agree to, while Shwartz's statement is a crazed denunciation that has no effect except to make the reader feel as if he can't trust the person who's written the essay. When I read Peikoff's "Fact and Value", in which he said that he agreed completely with Shwartz' view, I could only conclude that the kind of "moral judgement" he was defending was exactly the kind I saw in Shwartz' writing. As such, I couldn't see how the ARI point of view could be justified.
Yaron Brook, on the other hand, never exhibited the kind of charachteristics I saw in Peter Shwartz' writing. Even when I asked him a deliberately inflammatory question he was completely polite to me. In fact, everything he said throughout the lecture was very reasonable. Although I didn't agree with all of it, there was never a time that he said something that was just completely and utterly off the wall.
Nevertheless, to those who say that ARI has not changed: I must admit, I am not totally convinced myself. It may be that this is just a passing phase that ARI is going through. At some point in the future we may see yet another schism, followed by frenzied denunciations on all sides, while the public looks on and concludes that there is very little value in a movement that just cannot seem to get it's act together. That danger will always be there as long as the Objectivist movement consists only of "think tanks" who's leaders are unelected. The answer lies in creating something totally new: An organization that truly represents the broad base of the Objectivist movement, rather than just a small group of academics. But alas, that is not going to happen anytime soon. And so, until then, ARI will have to do.
--------------------Tom Blackstone