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2006-09-02 12:22:11 · 13 answers · asked by Anonymous in Arts & Humanities Philosophy

I'm talking about the philosophica objectivist movement started by Ayn Rand

2006-09-02 12:27:56 · update #1

Shes dead and I think she may have avoided this intersection.

2006-09-02 12:29:00 · update #2

13 answers

Nope. The most fundamental aspects are in the epistemology elements; how you know what you know, the importance of rooting out contradictions, the rejection of faith & central role of reason. This can't be reconciled with any sort of mysticism.

2006-09-02 13:21:56 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

Ask Ayn Rand

2006-09-02 12:27:39 · answer #2 · answered by amglo1 4 · 0 1

That depends on what you mean by objectivist. But many Neo-Thomist scholars believe their arguments for the Christian God are objective.

2006-09-02 12:26:28 · answer #3 · answered by Easy B 3 · 0 0

You mean as in Ayn Rand? That is really un-Christian as it is based primarily on selfishness. Would Jesus encourage selfishness and doing what you want no matter the effect on others? I don't think so.

2006-09-02 12:28:34 · answer #4 · answered by banjuja58 4 · 1 1

Objective in a sense of Science verus Christianity...leaves no rock unturned, but it does leave theory over run by Science .

2006-09-07 14:31:21 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

If you think about it, it would be spiritually wrong NOT to be objective about how you look at things!

You know theres a God, because the universe is too complicated to have orginated on its own. (Use the old disassembled watch, put it in a bag, and shake until its reassembled itself for those who disagree arguement)

and yet, you're also talking about the spirit world.

2006-09-02 12:26:12 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

spiritual talk is all about metaphisic talk so there no tru way of telling the phenomenon of the mind,. but thats what the mind is, creative, logic, insightful its the art

2006-09-02 12:34:17 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

As a Christian, I object to your question.

2006-09-02 12:28:11 · answer #8 · answered by Wise ol' owl 6 · 0 1

No....it's also not possible to be an atheist and jewish though many I know of folks who claim exactly that.

2006-09-02 13:24:56 · answer #9 · answered by flignar 2 · 0 1

no. this religion does not allow it.

2006-09-07 01:47:15 · answer #10 · answered by jsjmlj 5 · 0 0

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