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{{warning|This article, [[Ayn Rand]], has frequently become the subject of controversies and criticisms regarding her and her philosophy. While suggestions to improve the content of this article are welcomed, please refrain from posting your personal opinions on Ayn Rand or Objectivism.
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The philosophy criticism section is weak sauce.
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"Online U.S. News and World Report columnist Sara Dabney Tisdale says academic philosophers have generally dismissed Atlas Shrugged as "sophomoric, preachy, and unoriginal."[93] In addition, Greg Nyquist has written that Rand's philosophy fundamentally misunderstands the very core of human nature.[94]

On his blog, Kant scholar William Vallicella has been scathing in describing what he calls her lack of rigour and limited understanding of philosophical subject-matter.[95]"

Why are the opinions of Sara or William worth anything? One is referenced for an undefended generalization and the other for being opposed to Rand which isn't of sufficient significance for mention in itself. The arguments of philosophers further down are explored a little but incompletely accounted for. If a critique of Rand's worth including in the article it's worth giving a full summation of: explaining how [name] says Rand is wrong and in what document. <span style="font-size: smaller;" class="autosigned">—Preceding [[Wikipedia:Signatures|unsigned]] comment added by [[Special:Contributions/173.79.103.30|173.79.103.30]] ([[User talk:173.79.103.30|talk]]) 21:06, 14 March 2009 (UTC)</span><!-- Template:UnsignedIP --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot-->

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|action2=PR
== Randism vs Physics ==
|action2date=7 April 2006
|action2link=Wikipedia:Peer review/Ayn Rand/archive1
|action2oldid=47456924


|action3=GAN
For anyone interested in more on Objectivist hostility towards modern physics, I this hilarious web-series by the Objectivist Mr.Cropper: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T6pwf-fp0aE&feature=channel. [[User:CABlankenship|CABlankenship]] ([[User talk:CABlankenship|talk]]) 12:28, 17 February 2009 (UTC)
|action3date=14 April 2006
:There is a [[criticism of Objectivism]] article for this purpose; discussion here should be limited to the improvement of the Rand article. Regards, <font color="404040">[[User:Skomorokh|<font face="Goudy Old Style" color="black">Skomorokh</font>]]</font> 13:31, 17 February 2009 (UTC)
|action3result=listed
::A bit more context could be given for Rand's hostility towards modern science. [[User:CABlankenship|CABlankenship]] ([[User talk:CABlankenship|talk]]) 14:45, 17 February 2009 (UTC)
|action3oldid=48378752
:::I agree the section is a little short on context. Do you know of any reliable sources that discuss Rand's attitude toward modern science? <font color="404040">[[User:Skomorokh|<font face="Goudy Old Style" color="black">Skomorokh</font>]]</font> 14:56, 17 February 2009 (UTC)
::::No. There's not really much to discuss. She seemed to take a dim view of modern science, and many Objectivist sources are quite hostile to physics. It's interesting, and I wasn't really sure how to present these facts. Thank you for improving the entry. [[User:CABlankenship|CABlankenship]] ([[User talk:CABlankenship|talk]]) 15:25, 17 February 2009 (UTC)
:::::No problem, and sorry for the unnecessary tone of my edit summary (it'ssometimes difficult to entirely assume good faith around here). I find the idea that Rand had issues with modern science quite interesting considering her rationalist pretensions, and am disappointed not to see the issue get further investigation. If we come across some coverage of this from a third party source it would be most welcome, but until then the current paragraph must suffice I suppose. Regards, <font color="404040">[[User:Skomorokh|<font face="Goudy Old Style" color="black">Skomorokh</font>]]</font> 15:32, 17 February 2009 (UTC)
::::::Your edit summary was accurate, and fair. My entry was sloppy and lacked neutrality in tone. Here is another link on this subject that I found interesting: http://www.capmag.com/objective-science/articles/ts_math_vs_matter2.htm. There seems to be a pretty strong current of hostility towards modern physics from Objectivists. Though I guess it would be more appropriate to post these links for consideration under the Objectivism article. [[User:CABlankenship|CABlankenship]] ([[User talk:CABlankenship|talk]]) 15:44, 17 February 2009 (UTC)
:::::::Let's ignore Cropper and return to Our Subject. The issues are with *interpretations* of modern physics, not the physics itself. There is a distinct Kierkegaardian note to the Copenhagen Interpretation of QM (see Murdoch, "Neils Bohr's Philosophy of Physics"), which of course Objectivism would criticize. And what of the ego in the Many Worlds Interpretation, where will becomes redundant as every decision is decided in every possible way? Maybe Objectivism favors the Transactional Interpretation of QM, or it may lead to the development of an Objectivist Interpretation of QM. Then there are Einstein's infamous rants against induction, against all Aristotelian philosophies, Objectivism included. In all cases, Objectivism of course holds the physics, the reality, as a given, and criticizes only interpretations.


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:::::::And again we have CABlankenship grasping at straws to justify his ongoing vandalism. <span style="font-size: smaller;" class="autosigned">—Preceding [[Wikipedia:Signatures|unsigned]] comment added by [[Special:Contributions/70.112.17.99|70.112.17.99]] ([[User talk:70.112.17.99|talk]]) 17:45, 3 March 2009 (UTC)</span><!-- Template:UnsignedIP --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot-->
|action4date=2 May 2006
:::::::: Please [[WP:AGF|assume good faith]]. [[User:TallNapoleon|TallNapoleon]] ([[User talk:TallNapoleon|talk]]) 18:07, 3 March 2009 (UTC)
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The issue is that many of the interpretations of data which Objectivism criticizes are held in near-universal consensus by experts. Among these are particle-wave duality, black holes, and the Big Bang. This is notable, but perhaps not in this article. [[User:CABlankenship|CABlankenship]] ([[User talk:CABlankenship|talk]]) 21:06, 3 March 2009 (UTC)
|action5date=4 June 2006
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== Consensus/Philosopher/Arbcom ==
|action6date=15 September 2009
|action6link=Talk:Ayn Rand/GA1
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|action7=PR
We had a tacit agreement that we were awaiting Arbcom on this. One of the reasons for that is the edit wars could not be resolved that time. While arbcom will not resolve a content issue and possibly not a policy issue they will address behavioural and other issues. My view remains that we should await Arbcom on the contentious issue of naming her a philosopher. If other editors are not prepared to do that, then we need to get a structured discussion here on what is a agreed and disagreed and see if we can find a compromise. In the mean time edit warring and spurious warnings on editor's talk pages will not help. If we can't wait, lets agree a process --[[User:Snowded|Snowded]] ([[User talk:Snowded|talk]]) 21:00, 17 February 2009 (UTC)
|action7date=17:17, 20 April 2010
:Agreed that ArbCom should deal with behavioral issues first, and then we can deal with any content issues that ArbCom doesn't deal with. For the record, the issue of philosopher is under discussion and the addition of that designation was made without consensus. [[User:Idag|Idag]] ([[User talk:Idag|talk]]) 21:21, 17 February 2009 (UTC)
|action7link=Wikipedia:Peer review/Ayn Rand/archive2
::Arbcom doesn't address content disputes. There are numerous sources that establish Rand is a philosopher, such as her NY Times obituary and numerous books written about her and her philosophy. There's also a criticism section in this article full of attacks on her abilities as a philosopher. No sources have been provided to dispute her being a philosopher, so there's really no policy basis to remove the accurate descriptor. I suggest we move on to actual issues that have some need to be worked out. If for some reason arbcom decides the word philosopher should be removed, we can of course do so. [[User:ChildofMidnight|ChildofMidnight]] ([[User talk:ChildofMidnight|talk]]) 21:23, 17 February 2009 (UTC)
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::: Sorry, you do not have agreement to that. Weight is also an issue and your interpretation of policy is nor correct.. I've had enough of this tonight, I will come back to it in the morning and attempt to structure this in the hope of reasonable behaviour. --[[User:Snowded|Snowded]] ([[User talk:Snowded|talk]]) 21:27, 17 February 2009 (UTC)
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::::Agree with Snowded. The descriptor is not accurate as there are a multitude of sources that do not designate Rand as a philosopher. The addition of that designation was completely unilateral, and we will set up a process to discuss it once ArbCom finishes addressing the behavioral issues. [[User:Idag|Idag]] ([[User talk:Idag|talk]]) 21:29, 17 February 2009 (UTC)
:::::Agreed with Snowded and Idag. Those of us who disagree based on specific good-faith policy concerns are neither idiots nor trolls. We're looking for a solid decision that carefully interprets *ALL* the policies correctly. Hopefully, ChildofMidnight (and others) will both acknowledge and respect a request for further patience. I, for one, will be sorely disappointed and irritated if ArbCom fails to address this very serious issue, along with the equally problematic behavioral issues on this and similar pages. [[User:J Readings|J Readings]] ([[User talk:J Readings|talk]]) 22:34, 17 February 2009 (UTC)
There is no policy that supports excluding a well sourced description based on that term not being used in some sources. [[User:ChildofMidnight|ChildofMidnight]] ([[User talk:ChildofMidnight|talk]]) 23:08, 17 February 2009 (UTC)
:Yes, there is. It's called "undue weight." And we're not talking about "some" sources -- we're talking about "many, many" sources. We've discussed this countless times, ChildofMidnight. It's pointless to claim we haven't considered policy in this discussion. If you disagree, you disagree, but it doesn't matter. Ultimately, it's Arbcom's decision, not yours. [[User:J Readings|J Readings]] ([[User talk:J Readings|talk]]) 23:23, 17 February 2009 (UTC)
::So there are many sources that treat her as a philosopher, a section in this article criticizing work as a philosopher, and many many sources that don't mention her at all in relation to philosophy or that don't explicitly state that she is a philosopher? How many sources don't mention her being a writer? Or a playwright? At some point you have to come up with sources for your position. That she isn't mentioned as something in lots of places is a very weak position and there is no policy that supports that as a basis excluding content. [[User:ChildofMidnight|ChildofMidnight]] ([[User talk:ChildofMidnight|talk]]) 23:59, 17 February 2009 (UTC)
:::I disagree. There are policies. I've mentioned them to you already, and please don't exaggerate -- there are only a few sources relatively speaking that state she's a philosopher. There are many more that state she was simply a novelist -- something Rand herself would acknowledge, apparently, according to the Ayn Rand Institute video I was listening to today. Stating that we don't have policy issues here is a bad-faith exercise. "Keep in mind that in determining proper weight we consider a viewpoint's '''prevalence in reliable sources''', not its prevalence among Wikipedia editors."[[User:J Readings|J Readings]] ([[User talk:J Readings|talk]])
::::So it has been argued that the policy that prevents us from calling her a philosopher is "undue weight". Ok, let's agree that this is the point of contention, and let's explore this point. According to the evidence presented, she is known much more commonly as a novelist than philosopher. But is she known more commonly as a screenwriter than a philosopher? Is anyone going to argue that point? Is she known more commonly as a playwright than a philosopher? Please go on record if you believe she is known more commonly as a screenwriter or playwright than philosopher and present evidence to back up that case. If you do not believe that -- and still believe that, based on "undue weight", she should not be called a philosopher, then it follows logically you should be arguing she should not be called a screenwriter or playwright either. [[User:Stevewunder|Stevewunder]] ([[User talk:Stevewunder|talk]]) 01:11, 18 February 2009 (UTC)
(outdent) I'm actually going to flip sides somewhat in this debate. We all agree that there are notable and reliable sources that call Rand a philosopher. Thus, under Undue Weight, the weight for calling her a philosopher is greater than 0, which means we have to include that designation in some form (i.e. we can't omit it entirely). Given that, how about we use the designation "non-academic philosopher"? Almost all of the major philosophy sources that omit her are from academia and we can all agree that Rand and academia did not mix. Thoughts? [[User:Idag|Idag]] ([[User talk:Idag|talk]]) 01:28, 18 February 2009 (UTC)
:How about "popular philosopher"? [[User:TallNapoleon|TallNapoleon]] ([[User talk:TallNapoleon|talk]]) 02:13, 18 February 2009 (UTC)
::I'm not a big fan of that one because she's only popular in certain areas. [[User:Idag|Idag]] ([[User talk:Idag|talk]]) 02:18, 18 February 2009 (UTC)
:::Or you could use "self-described philosopher". [[User:CABlankenship|CABlankenship]] ([[User talk:CABlankenship|talk]]) 02:42, 18 February 2009 (UTC)
::::By calling her a "philosopher" and then including all of the criticism that most academics ignore her as a philosopher, that she lacks rigor, knowledge of subject matter -- whatever -- you accomplish the effect of the "pop" "non-academic" "self-described" labels. The article should stand as a whole consistent piece. The criticism has more meaning if it stands in contrast to how she is presented otherwise. If we ditch or qualify the philosopher label in the beginning, then criticism of her philosophical work starts to have "undue weight". [[User:Stevewunder|Stevewunder]] ([[User talk:Stevewunder|talk]]) 05:25, 18 February 2009 (UTC)


|action8=WPR
* The tacit agreement Snowded speaks of fell apart for me when people started making all of the heavy-duty critical statements in the lede that were an implicit statement that Rand was not a philosopher, and continuing with criticism in general with less and less editing done by consensus. That, plus learning that ArbCom wasn't going to address content, brought the tacit agreement to an ending.
|action8date=20:15, 6 September 2021
* The philosopher issue was not under discussion, it was on hold. In fact, it has not been agreed upon since sometime in December - and in December was the first time it became a matter of contention since somewhere last spring. There was a long period of consensus that she is a philosopher. And over the articles entire history, the periods of contention have been very brief and all of the time in between she has been labeled a philosopher.
|action8result=copyedited
*The weight is ALL on the side of Rand being a philosopher. Only a tiny, tiny number of sources say anything to contradict the fact that she was a philosopher.
|action8oldid=1042794215
* Contrary to what was mentioned above, the removal of the "philosopher" descriptor violated policy and was done unilaterally.
* The weight of all of those sources that don't say she is a philosopher is zero! You can't weigh the absence of an assertion. The only weight is of those sources that make statements that are pertinent to the discussion.
* The sources give us only these facts: 1) she is a philosopher, 2) she chose to present her philosophy to the popular market instead of to academia, 3) she was hostile towards academics, 4) academic philosophy has not given her work much attention, 5) some academnics have criticized her work in normal ways, 6) some academics have been dismissive of her work, 6) some academics have found value in her work. All of the rest is personal pov or original research. --[[User:SteveWolfer|Steve]] ([[User talk:SteveWolfer|talk]]) 05:41, 18 February 2009 (UTC)


|action9=PR
How about "Ayn Rand was a Russian-American intellectual, best known for her novels, and for the philosophical system she named 'Objectivism'." [[User:CABlankenship|CABlankenship]] ([[User talk:CABlankenship|talk]]) 06:53, 18 February 2009 (UTC)
|action9date=11 April 2022
|action9link=Wikipedia:Peer review/Ayn Rand/archive3
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|action9oldid=1080913721


|action10 = FAC
=== trying a new approach ===
|action10date = 2023-02-27
We now have a breathing space with the freeze on the article, hopefully in that time we will get the Arbcom rulings. Can I suggest that we try and agree on a series of facts and problems then try and move forward? Ie for the moment the argument about what it should be stops. We know that a lot of this evidence is contradictory (hence the disputes). Here is my attempt
|action10link = Wikipedia:Featured article candidates/Ayn Rand/archive2
# The contentious areas are her description in the information box and in the introduction to the lede (which will do not have to be the same)
|action10result = failed
# There is no dispute that she gave rise to a school of Philosophy which is called Objectivism
|action10oldid = 1140671680
# If we look in dictionaries and encyclopaedias of philosophy from university publishers then she is mentioned as a philosopher in one US book, as an amateur philosopher in one European one, but otherwise is not listed
# She is frequently mentioned as a philosopher in journals (refereed or otherwise) linked to Objectivism
# Obituaries and other newspaper/magazine references call her a philosopher
# She does not appear to be mentioned in the main international journals of Philosophy (we have some claims here but no references so far)
# Philosophers such as Huemer and Nozick while accepting her politics <s>do not treat her as a philosopher</s> are critical of the quality of her philosophy
# Tara Smith's book on ethics and other work by US based philosophers has developed a respectable body of work based on her ideas
# There is a clear difference between her notability and treatment in the US and the rest of the world
My goal here is to distil down to a short series of statements then attempt to create some actual words that we can agree on. If we look at the article's history when philosopher has been used, it has been qualified --[[User:Snowded|Snowded]] ([[User talk:Snowded|talk]]) 06:56, 18 February 2009 (UTC)


|currentstatus=FFAC/GA
The statements above should reflect the following corrections or observations:
|topic=Language and literature
*1) There area several contentious areas - not just her description in the lede and info box. Edit warring has gone on over the critical statements put into the lead from a blog, over the critcism section, and over the popular influence section.
|otd1date=2017-03-06|otd1oldid=768969940
*3) She is mentioned as a philosopher in a great many solid sources - saying just in 1 US book is a massive misstatement.
|otd2date=2022-03-06|otd2oldid=1075304479
*6) She is found in a number of academic journals of note.
|otd3date=2023-03-06|otd3oldid=1143245258
*7) A number of other philosophers treat her as a philosopher, and call her a philosopher. Some are critical of her work, others not.
}}
*8) There is a difference between her book sales in the US and the rest of the world, but no numbers have been supplied, no sources provided. But we do know that there are a large number of her books sold in foriegn nations and in many different languages. --[[User:SteveWolfer|Steve]] ([[User talk:SteveWolfer|talk]]) 06:01, 19 February 2009 (UTC)
{{Annual readership|days=180}}

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==== comments ====
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:Does Nozick explicitly say that he doesn't consider her a philosopher? Or is it just that he disagrees with her philosophy? [[User:TallNapoleon|TallNapoleon]] ([[User talk:TallNapoleon|talk]]) 07:25, 18 February 2009 (UTC)
{{WikiProject Atheism|importance=mid}}
:: From what I had read (and the same is true of Huemer) they do not treat her as I would expect one philosopher to treat another. They show respect for the politics, but more or less dismiss the philosophy (rather like a professor with a first year enthusiastic student). I chose my words carefully here as it is ambiguous. --[[User:Snowded|Snowded]] ([[User talk:Snowded|talk]]) 07:41, 18 February 2009 (UTC)
{{WikiProject Conservatism|importance=mid}}
:::Yes, the issue is what does it mean to treat her as a philosopher? We're skimming really close to OR and SYNTH to say that based on X Y and Z Nozick clearly doesn't consider her a philosopher. That's why I like the "popular philosopher" formulation. Not in the sense that she was popular everywhere, but that her appeal is popular, and that she is popularly considered to be a philosopher. Not by all of academia perhaps, but certainly, it appears, by many "regular people". [[User:TallNapoleon|TallNapoleon]] ([[User talk:TallNapoleon|talk]]) 07:46, 18 February 2009 (UTC)
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:::: Noted, and poplar if used would I think have to be qualified, but I really don't want to get into solutions yet. We really need to get some agreed statements up first.--[[User:Snowded|Snowded]] ([[User talk:Snowded|talk]]) 08:09, 18 February 2009 (UTC)
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:::: Popular would be OR and she is only popular in a small community, the cited qualification is "amateur". However at this stage I don't think we should be coming up with solutions, but statements. Given your question of that statement I have hanged it. Huemer for example thinks that taking Rand's philosophy as stated may prevent students making progress in ethics as an academic discipline because of the number of errors. The point is that these two have both been cited in lists, but their view of Rand is pro in respect of her politics not her philosophy.
{{WikiProject Politics|importance=mid|American=yes|American-importance=high|libertarianism=yes |libertarianism-importance=high}}
:::::Thing is popular doesn't necessarily mean "well-liked". Consider for instance, a Swedish pop star. Such a person would qualify as a popular artist, despite only being popular within a small community. Considering the amount of books she sells, I don't think that calling her popular is unwarranted, especially since her philosophy is fundamentally an appeal to the populace, not to academia. [[User:TallNapoleon|TallNapoleon]] ([[User talk:TallNapoleon|talk]]) 08:01, 18 February 2009 (UTC)
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::::::TallNapoleon, the thing with "popular" is that it has multiple meanings, one of which is "well-liked." The reader won't necessarily know which meaning we are referring to. However, I think "non-academic" conveys the meaning that you're trying to get at with popular. In response to Snowded, I agree with all of the points you made in your list above. [[User:Idag|Idag]] ([[User talk:Idag|talk]]) 14:38, 18 February 2009 (UTC)
{{WikiProject Theatre|importance=low}}
:::::::There just seems something vaguely negative POV/undue weight about non-academic, ditto for "pop philosopher". I don't know, it's not a huge deal but it makes me feel a little queasy. [[User:TallNapoleon|TallNapoleon]] ([[User talk:TallNapoleon|talk]]) 05:18, 19 February 2009 (UTC)
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{{WikiProject Women writers|importance=top}}
=== Temporary compromise to lift protection ===
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Any chance we can agree on something between simply-philosopher and no-mention-of-philosopher and leave it be for a while so the page can be unprotected?
{{External peer review|small=yes|org=London Review of Books |url=https://www.lrb.co.uk/the-paper/v31/n10/david-runciman/like-boiling-a-frog |comment="...Reads as though it has been worked over far too much, and like any form of writing that is overcooked it alienates the reader by appearing to be closed off in its own private world of obsession and anxiety." |date=20 May 2009}}

{{User:MiszaBot/config
You all must realise that proposing either Rand being identified as a philosopher without qualification, and not being discussed as a philosopher at all will only result in an edit-war, blocks, protections, topic bans and so on. At least until Arbcom makes its decisions on misconduct and editing principles, we should agree on a temporary compromise on the philosopher issue, leave it be and go on improving the rest of the article (where there has been remarkably little acrimony).
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Two options that might be palatable would be
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a) Listing novelist first, then some qualification of philosopher, then screenwriter and playwright.
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b) Sticking with novelist, screenwriter and playwright for the opener, then having a philosophy-heavy sentence immediately after.
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|archive = Talk:Ayn Rand/Archive %(counter)d
I tentatively suggest this because some of us who have been anti-philosopher in the past (Idag and TallNapoleon) seem to be amenable to some form of a), while CABlankenship proposed a form of b) above ["Ayn Rand was a Russian-American intellectual, best known for her novels, and for the philosophical system she named 'Objectivism'."]
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I think a temporary solution along these lines ought to be acceptable to the pro-philosopher editors, having had to tolerate no mention of Rand as philosopher for the past few weeks.

Do you all think something along these lines could be workable? I'd like to edit the article some time before fucking March 17th. <font color="404040">[[User:Skomorokh|<font face="Goudy Old Style" color="black">Skomorokh</font>]]</font> 03:48, 19 February 2009 (UTC)
:I'm fine with either A or B. Once the protection is lifted, I'm also voluntarily limiting myself to 1RR on this article. [[User:Idag|Idag]] ([[User talk:Idag|talk]]) 04:08, 19 February 2009 (UTC)

::I have no objection to Skomorokh being allowed to edit - he hasn't been part of this conflict, and I'm sure that he would stay away from anything controversial, and clear anything questionable on the talk page. But I don't think anyone else should be on this article till ArbCom renders a decision on the behavioral issues. The fact is that there still is a great deal of acrimony in a number of areas. It would not be good to open the article while this is still unresolved. --[[User:SteveWolfer|Steve]] ([[User talk:SteveWolfer|talk]]) 04:31, 19 February 2009 (UTC)
:::As far as I recall I've been fairly consistently pro-philosopher, but my rationale has basically been a bit different. Essentially I think that if enough people say someone is a philosopher, then they are a philosopher, and that enough people do say that Rand is a phliosopher. Ofc finding sources to back this up might be a pain. [[User:TallNapoleon|TallNapoleon]] ([[User talk:TallNapoleon|talk]]) 05:15, 19 February 2009 (UTC)
::::And I'd be happy either with philosopher or not. Just make it clear which, and everyone agree to stick to it. [[User:TallNapoleon|TallNapoleon]] ([[User talk:TallNapoleon|talk]]) 05:16, 19 February 2009 (UTC)
::::: I too think the solution (both temporary and permanent) lies somewhere between no-philosopher and philosopher, hence the attempt to see what we can agree on as facts, and then form some words around that. For example, keeping Author in the information box but saying at the start of the lede that she wrote books on philosophy and created a philosophical movement. I was also happy to move some material from the lede (the criticism re Kant). Recent postings on the arbcom working page however are not encouraging. --[[User:Snowded|Snowded]] ([[User talk:Snowded|talk]]) 06:04, 19 February 2009 (UTC)
::::::I said a long time ago I'm happy with calling her an intellectual or writer who wrote this that...etc. tho i am not happy with a qualified philosopher label, because it is asymmetric with including serious criticism of her philosophical work. i think few here believe the philosophical criticism should be thrown out, thus if she is to be criticized as a philosopher, she must first be called a philosopher. [[User:Stevewunder|Stevewunder]] ([[User talk:Stevewunder|talk]]) 08:07, 19 February 2009 (UTC)
:::::::Stevewunder, so I take it you would prefer option B? [[User:Idag|Idag]] ([[User talk:Idag|talk]]) 14:25, 19 February 2009 (UTC)
::::::::Yes, I am fine with B in the form "Ayn Rand was a Russian-American intellectual, etc . [[User:Stevewunder|Stevewunder]] ([[User talk:Stevewunder|talk]]) 00:04, 20 February 2009 (UTC)
Aside from Steve, I'm sensing broad agreement on a temporary compromise on this issue. I'd like to propose as the opening line the following:
{{bquote|'''Ayn Rand''' ({{IPAEng|ˈaɪn ˈrænd}}, {{OldStyleDate|February 2|1905|January 20}} &ndash; March 6, 1982) was a Russian-American intellectual best known for her novels and for developing a philosophical system called [[Objectivism (Ayn Rand)|Objectivism]].}}
I'm not proposing that this is the closest to the truth, or the most representative of reliable sources, merely that it is an acceptable introduction to the topic we can agree on while discussion continues. <font color="404040">[[User:Skomorokh|<font face="Goudy Old Style" color="black">Skomorokh</font>]]</font> 05:18, 22 February 2009 (UTC)
: It's a variation on the previous compromise. I would prefer .''.. Russian-American novelist and scriptwriter also known for developing a philosophical system ...''' however I can accept the above. --[[User:Snowded|Snowded]] ([[User talk:Snowded|talk]]) 08:22, 22 February 2009 (UTC)
::Scriptwriter doesn't work without philosopher, as writing scripts was much much less important to the life of Rand than writing philosophy. If we're leaving philosopher out, we will should go with intellectual/author/writer. <font color="404040">[[User:Skomorokh|<font face="Goudy Old Style" color="black">Skomorokh</font>]]</font> 09:42, 22 February 2009 (UTC)
::I agree with the above. Although I think the best intro sentence is "Ayn Rand was a Russian-American author." it succinctly tells the full story. then we amplify. [[User:Stevewunder|Stevewunder]] ([[User talk:Stevewunder|talk]]) 08:52, 22 February 2009 (UTC)
::(edit conflict) What's the source upon which we're basing the exclusion of describing her as a philosopher? I appreciate these attempts, but they're awkward, inaccurate and clumsy (wordy). Can't we just include the word philosopher (gasp!!!) '''AND''' a cogent explanation of the notable criticisms for balance? [[User:ChildofMidnight|ChildofMidnight]] ([[User talk:ChildofMidnight|talk]]) 08:56, 22 February 2009 (UTC)
::::The article's coverage of criticism of Rand is very, very far from comprehensive or representative, making a summary untenable at this point. I think your suggestion is good for what the lead should ultimately say, however. <font color="404040">[[User:Skomorokh|<font face="Goudy Old Style" color="black">Skomorokh</font>]]</font> 09:42, 22 February 2009 (UTC)
:::I'm okay with Wunder's start, but where form there? How are you going to deal with the philosopher issue? Best to just put it out there up front and then balance it with notable criticism (I would say opposition, but no one has provided a single source arguing she isn't a philosopher). [[User:ChildofMidnight|ChildofMidnight]] ([[User talk:ChildofMidnight|talk]]) 08:56, 22 February 2009 (UTC)
::::::The whole point is not to deal with the philosopher issue; I intend to leave that to you fine fellows here to argue out here, based on the sources. The "best known for developing a philosophy called Objectivism" line lets the reader know in no uncertain terms that Rand's philosophical contributions are at the core of her notability. <font color="404040">[[User:Skomorokh|<font face="Goudy Old Style" color="black">Skomorokh</font>]]</font> 09:42, 22 February 2009 (UTC)
:::: Ignoring the citation argument, if you want to go down that route, then the statement of accepted facts (not stated, but those accepted by both sides) is a first step.--[[User:Snowded|Snowded]] ([[User talk:Snowded|talk]]) 09:05, 22 February 2009 (UTC)
:::::I concur with this compromise. As far as something more permanent, I think, once ArbCom wraps up, we should take this issue to the NOR noticeboards to get wider community participation since this issue is not limited to this article. [[User:Idag|Idag]] ([[User talk:Idag|talk]]) 16:15, 22 February 2009 (UTC)

:::::: You would have to delete properly cited material, violating Wikipedia policy to achieve what you are calling a compromise, but would instead be an error - one of undue weight, original research and POV. You are not going to find consensus going down that road. There are some editors that are simply going to have to accept that she was a philosopher - perhaps not as they see it, or wish it, but as the Wikipedia policy requires that it be interpreted. --[[User:SteveWolfer|Steve]] ([[User talk:SteveWolfer|talk]]) 16:40, 22 February 2009 (UTC)

::::::::Steve, [[WP:CONSENSUS|consensus]] is Wikipedia policy too, and the current wording emphatically does not fulfill it. It's perfectly easy to verify the proposed wording to reliable sources without engaging in original research, and consensus here does not support the idea that the proposed wording is non-neutral. Do you not see that you will not be able to get the article to reflect your perspective by stonewalling? <font color="404040">[[User:Skomorokh|<font face="Goudy Old Style" color="black">Skomorokh</font>]]</font> 17:37, 22 February 2009 (UTC)

::::::::::There's nothing about what he's saying that's stonewalling. He's 100% correct. By any rational application of the word she was a philosopher. Your attempts to couch it in false officiality are completely transparent, you and various others are the ones doing exactly what you accuse Steve of - you're trying to push an inaccurate point that's supported only by your own agenda, not by reality. [[User:TheDarkOneLives|TheDarkOneLives]] ([[User talk:TheDarkOneLives|talk]]) 07:14, 24 February 2009 (UTC)
:::::::::::1. I don't believe I have questioned the accuracy of Steve's perspective. 2. Unless you consider wanting to write a comprehensive, verifiable and neutral article on the topic an agenda, I don't have one. 3. I personally consider Ayn Rand to be a philosopher. 4. Claims in Wikipedia do not rest on editors' delusional pretenses to understanding The Truth or Reality, but on the consensus of [[WP:RS|reliable sources]]. 5. For someone devoting their time to a collaborative encyclopaedia, you have a terrible attitude. <font color="404040">[[User:Skomorokh|<font face="Goudy Old Style" color="black">Skomorokh</font>]]</font> 07:32, 24 February 2009 (UTC)
::::::: The primary issue with Arbcom is the behaviour of editors and there is no better illustration of why this has become necessary that the response above. I wonder if Steve has ever made a post where those who disagreed with him were not accused of POV or OR. --[[User:Snowded|Snowded]] ([[User talk:Snowded|talk]]) 17:26, 22 February 2009 (UTC)

::::::::Before anyone bites, this is not the appropriate forum for comments about other editors; you already have your Arbcom pages for that. I would really appreciate if we could stay on-topic here. <font color="404040">[[User:Skomorokh|<font face="Goudy Old Style" color="black">Skomorokh</font>]]</font> 17:37, 22 February 2009 (UTC)

Skomorokh, consensus is attempting to get agreement on the proper application of Wikipedia policies. You called my attempt stonewalling, but I am only doing what other other editors have done on this issue, calling for observing Wikipedia policy where Ayn Rand is described as a philosopher. Some editors propose to change it to something else, they call it 'compromise.' This has happened before in the many years the article has been here. And over time, despite several conflicts on this exact same issue, the editors decided that WP supported calling her a philosopher.

I followed the link you provided to refesh my memory on Consensus, and I noted that "consensus" explicitly takes back seat to Wikipedia's policies and guidlines: ''"Consensus among a small number of editors can never override the community consensus that is presented in Wikipedia's policies and guidelines; instead, consensus is the main tool for enforcing these standards. The focus of every dispute should be determining how best to comply with the relevant policies and guidelines. Editors have reached consensus when they agree that they have appropriately applied Wikipedia's policies and guidelines, not when they personally like the outcome."''

The editors at this article have a disagreement on applying the three most fundamental of Wikipedia policies: [[wP:NPOV]], [[WP:V]], and [[WP:OR]].

In the article on consensus it says, ''"Developing consensus requires special attention to neutrality."'' This needs to be mentioned here, but in the interest of avoiding more contentious exchanges, just to say that allegations are being addressed in the ArbCom.

The heart of the dispute is that solid, reliable verifiable sources call Rand a philosopher. When some editors offer reasons for deleting those sources, they have said that it is because Rand is NOT listed in many of the sources as a philosopher, and that this absence of a mention means, in effect, the same as a source explicitly saying she is not a philosopher. That is a form of original research.

The same editors who argue for the not-called-philosopher-therefore-isn't say that it is undue weight to use those sources that call Rand a philosopher instead of the sources that are mute on the subject. But "prevalence" in reliable sources means weighing "not a philosopher" sources against the "is a philosopher" sources. Rand's absence or the absence of a "philosopher" description is a negative - it has no weight in the presence of a positive.

Putting together these different sources that are mute, and then implying that their muteness is in itself equivalent to saying Rand is not a philosopher and that the weight of the muteness is such as to completely overthrow the sources that are clear in saying she is a philosopher is synthesis that is very heavy on original research.

At this date, this is the principle, as seen by one of the arbitors of the ArbCom, which is still underway. ''"The neutral point of view, and Wikipedia's nature as an encyclopaedia, demand that articles should always use the best and most reputable sources. The neutral point of view is not fulfilled by merely presenting a plurality of opposing viewpoints, each derived from a polarised source. Prevalence in reliable sources determines proper weight. Relying instead on implied arguments, synthesized claims, and the views of Wikipedia editors is contrary to the neutral point of view, and explicitly considered original research".'' --[[User:SteveWolfer|Steve]] ([[User talk:SteveWolfer|talk]]) 19:13, 22 February 2009 (UTC)
:Steve, it is possible to have other understandings of WP policy than your own. Please, it is only a TEMPORARY compromise to prevent edit warring until we can find a better solution. It does not imply ultimate acceptance. [[User:TallNapoleon|TallNapoleon]] ([[User talk:TallNapoleon|talk]]) 19:24, 22 February 2009 (UTC)

::Frankly, does anyone other than Steve oppose this compromise? Because consensus does not require unanimity and it looks like we only have one editor who is opposed to the compromise. [[User:Idag|Idag]] ([[User talk:Idag|talk]]) 19:34, 22 February 2009 (UTC)

:::Not me. I am so tired of this confrontational drama and the insistence that only Steve's interpretation of policy *has to be* the correct one that I suspect I'm not the only one who is irritated at this point. [[WP:CONSENSUS]] does not mean 100% agreement among all established editors. If it did, I could have held up the Raymond Boisvert decision for years by simply disagreeing with the few others who sought to remove Boisvert's criticism from the article. At some point, one must respect others. One last comment on what Steve wrote: "one of the arbitors (sic) of the ArbCom" is a misleading statement. The editor in question made it quite clear that the reply was simply his or her personal opinion, that it counted for nothing as far as ArbCom's decision was concerned, and the opinion itself -- in my view -- was also vaguely stated to the point that it does not outweigh the collected opinions of other editors interpreting WP policy in good faith, or more importantly, ArbCom itself. Overall, to be frank, those types of (mis?)statements above are part of the reason why I don't contribute more to the various discussions on this talk page. Again, I suspect that I'm not alone. [[User:J Readings|J Readings]] ([[User talk:J Readings|talk]]) 22:19, 22 February 2009 (UTC)
::::Again, I don't see what the basis is for excluding the word philosopher. We're going to dance around it by saying she developed a philosophical system? Doesn't that make her a philosopher? And we're doing this even though there are numerous sources, including her own critics, who refer to her as a philosopher? Why? What would be the policy basis for this? We're doing it not based on sources but the fact that some sources don't include her? This seem preposterous. I've always supported a cogent explanation of the criticisms against her, philosophical and political, but I don't see any evidence that anyone has argued she isn't a philosopher except on this talk page. [[User:ChildofMidnight|ChildofMidnight]] ([[User talk:ChildofMidnight|talk]]) 22:30, 22 February 2009 (UTC)
:::::How about so that we can put off the decision and work on other things? [[User:TallNapoleon|TallNapoleon]] ([[User talk:TallNapoleon|talk]]) 22:37, 22 February 2009 (UTC)
::::::This compromise is a temporary solution. For now, we agree to disagree and put in the above proposal that no one, with the exception of Steve, finds repellent. Once ArbCom ends, we can continue this debate at the community noticeboards and get some community-wide input so we can permanently resolve it. As, TallNapoleon pointed out above, the compromise will let us move on to other things in this article that need attention. [[User:Idag|Idag]] ([[User talk:Idag|talk]]) 22:40, 22 February 2009 (UTC)
:::::::That compromise would be wrong. It would involve deleting sourced material without consensus and as Idag knows there are many, many editors who take the same position that I do - I am most certainly not the only editor that finds that position repellent. Idag was the one who requested this freeze, if he and others would like to request an early defrosting, and a temporary solution, it is simple. Agree to leave the lede as it is, and edit the way one should on an controversial, frequently contested article - make suggestions on the talk page, if there is an objection to the proposed change, leave it alone and make a different proposal. Meanwhile, try to achieve real consensus - an agreement to the application of WP. --[[User:SteveWolfer|Steve]] ([[User talk:SteveWolfer|talk]]) 23:38, 22 February 2009 (UTC)
::::::::"Delete sourced material without consensus" -- what does that even mean any more? [[User:J Readings|J Readings]] ([[User talk:J Readings|talk]]) 23:51, 22 February 2009 (UTC)

=== !vote ===

(outdent) If there are "many many editors" who oppose this, I do not see them. Let's do a quick straw poll, who here is in favor of adopting Skoromokh's temporary compromise proposal so we can move on to other things for now? [[User:Idag|Idag]] ([[User talk:Idag|talk]]) 02:29, 23 February 2009 (UTC)

* '''Weak support''' Given the reaction of Steve and CoM even this might produce edit warring elsewhere in the article, we might be best waiting for Arncom --[[User:Snowded|Snowded]] ([[User talk:Snowded|talk]]) 07:39, 24 February 2009 (UTC)
* Changing my position to '''oppose''': Without ArbCom and some administrator oversight, it appears that we will just have another edit war on our hands if protection gets removed. [[User:TallNapoleon|TallNapoleon]] ([[User talk:TallNapoleon|talk]]) 08:17, 24 February 2009 (UTC)
::I think there's a difference though between a good faith dispute and one editor stonewalling against a consensus compromise. [[User:Idag|Idag]] ([[User talk:Idag|talk]]) 14:37, 24 February 2009 (UTC)
::::: [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:NOTDEMOCRACY#DEMOCRACY Disputes on Wikipedia are settled by editing and discussion, not by voting.] Idag, it is inappropriate of you to characterize my motivations - it is referred to as a lack of good faith, as you are fond of pointing out. --[[User:SteveWolfer|Steve]] ([[User talk:SteveWolfer|talk]]) 21:10, 24 February 2009 (UTC)

:::::: However votes to gage consensus--which is clearly what this is--are acceptable. BTW Idag, I'm not saying it's ''right'' that we'll have an edit-war on our hands, just that I think we will. To be clear I have no problems with the compromise wording so long as we all understand that it's temporary. [[User:TallNapoleon|TallNapoleon]] ([[User talk:TallNapoleon|talk]]) 22:50, 24 February 2009 (UTC)

:::::::The thing is, if we do come up with a clear compromise and someone reverts against that compromise, we don't need to edit war. We leave his changes alone and then report that person on ANI, which is still going strong as evidenced by some recent blocks. I'm not saying that this is the preferred approach, but there are ways to enforce compromises and I don't think that we should let worry over enforcement trump the need to come to some type of a consensus. There's going to be more admins watching the behavior here now that this case is in ArbCom, so I think that if we actually get a consensus, it will be enforced. [[User:Idag|Idag]] ([[User talk:Idag|talk]]) 23:21, 24 February 2009 (UTC)

:::Well, let's put it this way: without administrators around to enforce the compromise it's fairly clear that it will get broken. [[User:TallNapoleon|TallNapoleon]] ([[User talk:TallNapoleon|talk]]) 15:11, 24 February 2009 (UTC)

::::While I put forth the phrase "philosophical system", I believe that this is not actually appropriate. The phrase "philosophical doctrines" is more accurate. [[User:CABlankenship|CABlankenship]] ([[User talk:CABlankenship|talk]]) 00:53, 25 February 2009 (UTC)

* '''support''' [[User:CABlankenship|CABlankenship]] ([[User talk:CABlankenship|talk]]) 08:20, 24 February 2009 (UTC)
* '''support''' the compromise wording of Skomorokh. [[User:J Readings|J Readings]] ([[User talk:J Readings|talk]]) 16:30, 24 February 2009 (UTC)
* '''support''' [[User:Idag|Idag]] ([[User talk:Idag|talk]]) 23:23, 24 February 2009 (UTC)

== Pretty long article for an unimportant author--huge talk page ==

Objectivism? Objectivism Movement? Epistemoligical views? Ethics? social and political view? war? economics? charity? gender and sex? homosexuality? gender &sex? huac testimony? philosophic criticism? if she is not a philosopher why include her unworthy philosophical views on things?

Does robert ludlum or judy blume include all this? what is james joyces view on native americans? tom clancy's epistemolgy?[[User:Brushcherry|Brushcherry]] ([[User talk:Brushcherry|talk]]) 08:22, 19 February 2009 (UTC)brushcherry
:Clancy's ''An Introduction to Neoconservative Epistemology'' is stuck in the proofreading stages, while Joyce's dalliances among the Native Americans were too risque for Irish publishers and the manuscripts are closely guarded by his estate. Thanks for asking though. <font color="404040">[[User:Skomorokh|<font face="Goudy Old Style" color="black">Skomorokh</font>]]</font> 08:29, 19 February 2009 (UTC)

::Don't be Flippant...TallNapoleon is watching[[User:Brushcherry|Brushcherry]] ([[User talk:Brushcherry|talk]]) 08:39, 19 February 2009 (UTC)brushcherry

== where did everybody go? ==

i've been out at a bar all night, got home, and my last post is still here. what the hell? does nobody care anymore? [[User:Stevewunder|Stevewunder]] ([[User talk:Stevewunder|talk]]) 04:28, 20 February 2009 (UTC)
:Even [[God]] had to have a day of rest. [[User:ChildofMidnight|ChildofMidnight]] ([[User talk:ChildofMidnight|talk]]) 05:56, 20 February 2009 (UTC)

::But the Devil never rests. [[User:TallNapoleon|TallNapoleon]] ([[User talk:TallNapoleon|talk]]) 06:49, 20 February 2009 (UTC)

: We are part of a undiscovered play by Beckett in which the resolution is as yet unresolved. --[[User:Snowded|Snowded]] ([[User talk:Snowded|talk]]) 06:41, 20 February 2009 (UTC)

they have been deleted[[User:Brushcherry|Brushcherry]] ([[User talk:Brushcherry|talk]]) 09:00, 26 February 2009 (UTC)brushcherry

It looks like you're all about to [[Wikipedia:Requests for arbitration/Ayn Rand/Proposed decision|get a holiday]], boys. <font color="404040">[[User:Skomorokh|<font face="Goudy Old Style" color="black">Skomorokh</font>]]</font> 03:05, 2 March 2009 (UTC)

Skomo, it seems as if it might be best for you to spearhead the editing of this article. I'm pretty burnt out on Rand after all of this, but I'll watch the article and pop in to give sources if relevant. Good luck with the article, [[User:CABlankenship|CABlankenship]] ([[User talk:CABlankenship|talk]]) 05:00, 2 March 2009 (UTC)

:We'll see who is left when the smoke clears. The severity of the sanctions at least might encourage hitherto intransigent editors to compromise. Thanks for the support, <font color="404040">[[User:Skomorokh|<font face="Goudy Old Style" color="black">Skomorokh</font>]]</font> 05:08, 2 March 2009 (UTC)
::I'd be glad to see Skom help lead things. J Readings would also be excellent. [[User:TallNapoleon|TallNapoleon]] ([[User talk:TallNapoleon|talk]]) 05:18, 2 March 2009 (UTC)

:::I'll also try to pop in from time to time, but it looks like Skom and JReadings will be spearheading the edits for a while. Frankly, its a result that I'm fairly happy with, as they're both reasonable folks. [[User:Idag|Idag]] ([[User talk:Idag|talk]]) 14:17, 2 March 2009 (UTC)

::::It's a reasonable result. [[User:Stevewunder|Stevewunder]] ([[User talk:Stevewunder|talk]]) 04:58, 3 March 2009 (UTC)
:::::For the record, I came to this page in good faith, but things changed. [[User:Stevewunder|Stevewunder]] ([[User talk:Stevewunder|talk]]) 05:05, 3 March 2009 (UTC)

Sanctions? Result? I'm unaware of any ruling. Did I miss something? --[[User:SteveWolfer|Steve]] ([[User talk:SteveWolfer|talk]]) 05:50, 3 March 2009 (UTC)
:It's not final yet, but you may want to acquaint yourself with [[Wikipedia:Requests_for_arbitration/Ayn_Rand/Proposed_decision]]. I'm sure you'll be formally notified once the case is closed. <font color="404040">[[User:Skomorokh|<font face="Goudy Old Style" color="black">Skomorokh</font>]]</font> 05:54, 3 March 2009 (UTC)

== Tiebreaker ==

So I just realized that the Hebrew Wikipedia's version of the Ayn Rand article is a featured article. Why don't we just resolve the philosopher debate, as well as the other pointed debates, by going with whatever that article says? Anyone here know Hebrew? [[User:Idag|Idag]] ([[User talk:Idag|talk]]) 18:53, 26 February 2009 (UTC)

: And do they have the same behavioural issues? That is much more important than the specific issue. Without that issue we could reach agreement --[[User:Snowded|Snowded]] ([[User talk:Snowded|talk]]) 19:04, 26 February 2009 (UTC)

::No idea about the behavioral issues, but I presume that ArbCom will deal with those. As far as content, a featured article on the same subject is a fairly good precedent. [[User:Idag|Idag]] ([[User talk:Idag|talk]]) 19:32, 26 February 2009 (UTC)
:::Do we have anyone here who reads Hebrew? [[User:TallNapoleon|TallNapoleon]] ([[User talk:TallNapoleon|talk]]) 20:22, 26 February 2009 (UTC)
::::Not to rain on anyone's parade, but (1) the Hebrew Wikipedia and the English Wikipedia are two separate entities with two separate sets of admins, editors, agreed-upon notions of what constitutes a "featured article" (which, incidentally, keeps evolving on the English-Wikipedia, too), etc. More importantly, (2) looking at the Hebrew-language article seems to be a variation of the "other stuff exists" argument in which people (I also plead guilty) sometimes mistakenly look to other articles to try to settle disputes about notability, etc., by pointing to what is and is not found elsewhere. It doesn't necessarily follow that what's in another article should also be in this article. Conceivably, if the logic or policies were/are incorrect, whatever was/is found there should not exist in that article, either, because (1) the sourcing was/is wrong or (2) any number of policies were/are overlooked or (3) the consensus that arrived at that particular wording was/is only temporary. Life gets complicated, no doubt. FWIW, [[User:J Readings|J Readings]] ([[User talk:J Readings|talk]]) 22:06, 26 February 2009 (UTC)
:::::Well yes, I don't mean that we follow it blindly, but it would definitely be a good idea to see how they resolved similar issues. [[User:Idag|Idag]] ([[User talk:Idag|talk]]) 00:31, 27 February 2009 (UTC)
:With the exception of de:, other language Wikipedias are not works to be emulated. You'll notice that the Hebrew article has zero inline citations and appears to be written by a handful of editors. It's not anything to aspire to. On a down note, transgressions on this article have not escalated to the extent that the banning of particular editors by Arbcom is likely, meaning this will most likely revert to a full scale edit war between the finely-balanced demographics once protection is lifted. <font color="404040">[[User:Skomorokh|<font face="Goudy Old Style" color="black">Skomorokh</font>]]</font> 00:39, 27 February 2009 (UTC)
::Yeah, I was trying to get some type of consensus so that it wouldn't happen. Though looking at the votes for your compromise, we might have something there. [[User:Idag|Idag]] ([[User talk:Idag|talk]]) 01:18, 27 February 2009 (UTC)

== <nowiki>{{editprotected}}</nowiki> please add citation ==

{{tlx|editprotected}}
I have found a citation for a part of the article that ought to be added. In the section '''Political and social views''', in the last sentence of the first paragraph, where it says:

<blockquote>Rand detested many prominent liberal and conservative politicians of her time, including prominent anti-Communists, such as [[Harry S. Truman]], [[Ronald Reagan]], [[Hubert Humphrey]], and [[Joseph McCarthy]].<sup><nowiki>[</nowiki>[[Wikipedia:Citation needed|citation needed]]<nowiki>]</nowiki></sup></blockquote>
<pre>Rand detested many prominent liberal and conservative politicians of her time, including prominent anti-Communists, such as
[[Harry S. Truman]], [[Ronald Reagan]], [[Hubert Humphrey]], and [[Joseph McCarthy]].{{Fact|date=January 2009}}</pre>

please change it to

<pre>Rand detested many prominent liberal and conservative politicians of her time, including prominent anti-Communists, such as
[[Harry S. Truman]], [[Ronald Reagan]]<ref>{{cite news
|authorlink=Maureen Dowd
|author=Maureen Dowd
|title=Where 'Atlas Shrugged' Is Still Read - Forthrightly
|url=http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9B0DEED81631F930A2575AC0A961948260&sec=&spon=&pagewanted=2
|work=[[The New York Times]]
|date=September 13, 1982
|accessdate=2009-03-03
|quote=Miss Rand was vehemently anti-Reagan when he challenged Gerald Ford in 1976, and her disciples never saw much sign that she
softened toward him over the years. She wrote in a letter to The New York Times in 1976, 'I am profoundly opposed to Ronald Reagan.
Since he denies the right to abortion, he cannot be a defender of any rights.'
}}</ref>, [[Hubert Humphrey]], and [[Joseph McCarthy]].{{Fact|date=January 2009}}</pre>

This inserts a citation (NYT) for the claim about her not liking Ronald Reagan.

--[[User:superiority|superioridad]] <sup>([[User talk:superiority|discusión]])</sup> 07:58, 3 March 2009 (UTC)
:{{done}}. Thank you! [[User:Msgj|Martin]]<sup>[[User talk:Msgj|msgj]]</sup> 08:05, 3 March 2009 (UTC)

== [[Talk:Ayn Rand/Sandbox]] ==

I've created a Sandbox subpage. The idea is that editing that might be a better way to achieve consensus than further edit-warring on the main page. Unfortunately the source copy I did nuked all of the newlines, so it's a bit of a mess right now, and currently my browser is not cooperating with me on fixing it. If this is considered problematic, against policy, in the wrong place or whatever I have no problems with it being speedied. [[User:TallNapoleon|TallNapoleon]] ([[User talk:TallNapoleon|talk]]) 09:11, 3 March 2009 (UTC)
:This is actually a great idea, IMHO, but based on my experience, someone will need to remove the "categories" section ASAP or it definitely will be deleted. "Categories" are only added to the real articles, not the copies. I also think that a "sandbox" template or something similar at the head of the article stating that the article is a copy will be necessary. I'm not sure where I saw that template, but it's around somewhere. [[User:J Readings|J Readings]] ([[User talk:J Readings|talk]]) 11:00, 3 March 2009 (UTC)
::Cool, I'll try to find that. Also, although it is still lacking in paragraphs it now has all the section headers sorted. [[User:TallNapoleon|TallNapoleon]] ([[User talk:TallNapoleon|talk]]) 17:39, 3 March 2009 (UTC)

:::It is a '''not''' a good idea to edit in a sandbox. That kind of editing without consensus took us to where we are now. The people who spend time working on the sandbox version will feel like they have done good work and will want to transfer it to the real article when it is thawed. But unless we have rulings from ArbCom before then, all that has been done is create a large increase in the motivation to edit war between those who have invested time in the sandbox and those who resent large numbers of edits being made at once from the sandbox to the real article. It is far better to edit some other articles or to take a break and await the ArbCom decision. There can be no claims of a consensus when work is being done in a sandbox while other editors are avoiding this article while it is under ArbCom and frozen. With millions of articles available there is no excuse for making the situation here more explosive. --[[User:SteveWolfer|Steve]] ([[User talk:SteveWolfer|talk]]) 03:16, 5 March 2009 (UTC)
::::That's a moot point considering that the ArbCom decision looks like its going to be finalized fairly soon. [[User:Idag|Idag]] ([[User talk:Idag|talk]]) 21:18, 5 March 2009 (UTC)

== Vandalism on protected page ==

The last entry in her nonfiction bibliography is:

* ''Rand on Rand: Adam Smith with Dick Jokes'' (edited by Huey Long) (1993)

Just to make sure it was vandalism, I did a Google search--the only hit is Wikipedia. An admin should delete this entry ASAP. [[User:TallNapoleon|TallNapoleon]] ([[User talk:TallNapoleon|talk]]) 17:31, 3 March 2009 (UTC)


== Notable mentions sorely missing ==
:{{tick|18}} '''Done''' [[User:Vassyana|Vassyana]] ([[User talk:Vassyana|talk]]) 23:10, 3 March 2009 (UTC)


Article nneeds to catch up with popculture. Nothing about Obama, or for that matter the responses he received after his disparaging comments. Nothing about the highly unusual for Argentina politician Milei, although he is of course not an Objectivist. Etc. [[Special:Contributions/83.255.180.77|83.255.180.77]] ([[User talk:83.255.180.77|talk]]) 22:14, 29 November 2023 (UTC)
== Moving on ==


:Obama commented about Rand briefly in 2012, people responded, and >99.999% of the population has not thought twice about it since that week. That isn't a matter of "catching up"; it is something that wasn't important then and definitely isn't now.
My understanding is that the only big issue that we have left to resolve on this article is the philosopher debate. I propose the following:


:As for Milei, he may be more relevant since we do call out examples of politicians that she has influenced, and he could be the most important of those if the influence is firmly established. Can you point out some reliable secondary sources that establish a meaningful connection? The news articles I've seen say that he claims to have spoken with her ghost, which is not the usual sort of influence we have documented here. --[[User:RL0919|RL0919]] ([[User talk:RL0919|talk]]) 00:53, 30 November 2023 (UTC)
1. We move the philosopher debate to the NPOV noticeboard to get wider community input, as well as some more experienced editors involved.


== Rand was a philosopher ==
2. In the meantime, we put this article up for Peer Review. There's a number of small issues that probably need to be addressed, and frankly, I think its a shame that an article as detailed as this one is not a Good Article. We could probably resolve the "non-philosopher" issues fairly quickly (especially now that we have a Sandbox to work with) and get this article up to where it should be.


The expression "public philosopher" will not be recognized by most people and is useless to readers. Also, it is a preposterous and basically meaningless expression. No one is called a "private philosopher", so why describe someone as a "public philosopher"? Calling Rand a philosopher is good enough. [[User:Zarenon|Zarenon]] ([[User talk:Zarenon|talk]]) 08:38, 3 December 2023 (UTC)
What do you guys think? [[User:Idag|Idag]] ([[User talk:Idag|talk]]) 14:43, 4 March 2009 (UTC)
:The term is linked to an article that explains what it means to anyone who is unfamiliar. Rand did what that article describes, and she is mentioned in it as an example. Contrary to your comments here and in edit summaries, the term ''public philosopher'' is not "meaningless" or the "opposite" of ''philosopher'' – ''public'' is simply a modifier to indicate a specific mode of engagement with philosophy. --[[User:RL0919|RL0919]] ([[User talk:RL0919|talk]]) 22:00, 3 December 2023 (UTC)
:I think the Peer Review suggestion is an excellent suggestion, and have had similar thoughts re: GA status. I wouldn't have very high hopes for NPOVN. I agree that the philosopher debate has been the main bone of contention, but the last sentence of the lede summarizing the positive and negative aspects of Rand's legacy has long been contentious and will probably continue to be. I don't have an easy answer to the philosopher issue, other than agreeing on something that is somewhat acceptable while a comprehensive analysis of the sources is undergone. I think moving on is a good suggestion. <font color="404040">[[User:Skomorokh|<font face="Goudy Old Style" color="black">Skomorokh</font>]]</font> 15:11, 4 March 2009 (UTC)
:: I'm doubtful of PP, as opposed to P. Can you point to other examples? For example, I see ''[[Sharyn Clough]] (born 14 May 1965) is professor of [[philosophy]] at Oregon State University. Her teaching and research specialties focus on [[public philosophy]]...'' so here we have someone called a P, even though her research focusses on PP. PP sounds very much like not-as-good-as-a-proper-p [[User:William M. Connolley|William M. Connolley]] ([[User talk:William M. Connolley|talk]]) 09:15, 4 December 2023 (UTC)
:::A "public philosopher" is just a type of "philosopher" so in theory anyone who is the former could simply be called the latter in a lead, or both. [[Walter Terence Stace]] is "public philosopher" as part of his initial description. [[Jane Addams]] is "philosopher" in the initial sentence, then "public philosopher" later in the lead. [[Susan Schneider]] is "philosopher" in the lead and "public philosopher" in the body. In none of these cases does there appear to be any disparagement intended. There are modifiers for ''philosopher'' that would be widely considered disparaging, such as ''amateur'', that have come up in the past. But I don't see how ''public'' is in that category.


:::Anyhow, the modifier was added following a [[Talk:Ayn_Rand#two_comments_on_the_lead|September discussion]] that is still above on this talk page. You are welcome to read through that for more background. I don't mind if the lead doesn't have any modifier for ''philosopher'', and I don't mind if it does have one as long as that modifier is accurate, neutral, and supported by a decent amount of sources. As I said to [[User:PatrickJWelsh]] previously, I thought it was "OK to try out an alternative and see what the reaction is". If the reaction is negative, then we can return to the status quo ante and/or discuss it more. --[[User:RL0919|RL0919]] ([[User talk:RL0919|talk]]) 21:36, 4 December 2023 (UTC)
::From what I read here, I think that editors have had more significant concerns than just the philosopher issue. A Peer Review would help uncover others, which would be useful however, and bring in some new voices. I do have one specific suggestion for removing half the problem regarding the endless philosopher debate. Delete the info box, leaving just the picture. --[[User:Slp1|Slp1]] ([[User talk:Slp1|talk]]) 15:19, 4 March 2009 (UTC)
::::The term "public philosopher" is useless and stupid. We are told in the article [[Public philosopher]], that "Public philosophy is a subfield of philosophy that involves engagement with the public". The definition is hopelessly vague and it does not improve the article at all to add that kind of vague language. The article also says that, public philosophy involves "doing philosophy with general audience", which is nonsense. When Rand wrote her novels and her books she wasn't "doing philosophy" with a "general audience"; she was expounding her own ideas. [[User:Zarenon|Zarenon]] ([[User talk:Zarenon|talk]]) 04:32, 5 December 2023 (UTC)
:::::The fact that this has been repeatedly disputed suggests to me that we should stick with just the perfectly neutral "writer". I would not object to "writer and public intellectual".
:::::Have you reviewed [[Talk:Ayn_Rand#two_comments_on_the_lead|the discussion above]]?
:::::Cheers, [[User:PatrickJWelsh|Patrick J. Welsh]] ([[User talk:PatrickJWelsh|talk]]) 01:36, 6 December 2023 (UTC)
::::::The dispute raised in this section is about the modifier that was added in [https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Ayn_Rand&diff=1177090361&oldid=1177082632 this edit], not about the use of the term ''philosopher''. As I already quoted myself earlier regarding the addition of a modifier, we tried "an alternative [to] see what the reaction is". This is that reaction. Not a shock to me, since I've seen this topic discussed multiple times in the past. There are literally dozens of reliable sources that refer to her as a philosopher, with or without some modifier, so there is not a good case to deny that core term. But the options for modifiers vary, so there is much more room to dispute any specific modifier. --[[User:RL0919|RL0919]] ([[User talk:RL0919|talk]]) 04:49, 6 December 2023 (UTC)
:::::::I think that someone familiar with Rand would realize that she would have completely rejected the term "public philosopher". [[User:Zarenon|Zarenon]] ([[User talk:Zarenon|talk]]) 07:32, 6 December 2023 (UTC)
:Hi @[[User:Zarenon|Zarenon]],
:The problem with "philosopher", as I see it, is a consequence of the highly polarized views the she inspires. I don't doubt @[[User:RL0919|RL0919]] for a second when they promise they could produce many quality sources calling her a philosopher. And usually this would be all we need.
:In this case, however, many other quality sources take issue with this descriptor. Some folks consider her to be just about the only person you need to read. Other folks, however, including many working in philosophy departments on research topically overlapping with her own do not consider the quality of her writing to merit mention or engagement—to the point some would consider a suggestion to the contrary disqualifying.
:For example, from the article:
:<blockquote>Rand's relationship with contemporary philosophers was mostly antagonistic. She was not an academic and did not participate in academic discourse. She was dismissive of critics and wrote about ideas she disagreed with in a polemical manner without in-depth analysis. She was in turn viewed very negatively by many academic philosophers, who dismissed her as an unimportant figure who should not be considered a philosopher or given any serious response.</blockquote>
:Since, as is the case, her status as a philosopher is heavily contested by many people who incontestably are philosophers, it should not be stated as a fact in the first sentence of the lead. That is a violation of [[WP:NPOV]].
:What is the objection to "public intellectual"? It is neutral and also captures a wider range of her activities. As a second choice, I would also be fine with "non-academic philosopher", suggested above by RL0919.
:Cheers, [[User:PatrickJWelsh|Patrick J. Welsh]] ([[User talk:PatrickJWelsh|talk]]) 15:41, 6 December 2023 (UTC)


::"In this case, however, many other quality sources take issue with this descriptor." But this is not true. In actual (Wikipedia-reliable) ''sources'', the numbers are lopsided: many sources that call her a philosopher, and a vastly smaller number that deny it. We hear from secondary sources about what an unspecified number of mostly unidentified academics (who may or may not be "incontestably" philosophers – that is your own spin, not from any source at all) believe: there are people who ''think'' she wasn't a philosopher, and presumably make some mention of this in conversation or other informal ways that made secondary source authors aware of their existence. But these people apparently aren't bothering to put their rejection of the label into reliable source content that we can use in an article. Far from "heavily contest[ing]" the matter, these people – however many of them there may be, we don't know – have passively conceded the field of discussion about her within reliable sources. If that results in their viewpoints having less weight in this article, then that is their own fault. --[[User:RL0919|RL0919]] ([[User talk:RL0919|talk]]) 16:27, 6 December 2023 (UTC)
:::I'd have no problem with that. If we dont' want to delete the entire infobox, we could also simply delete the "Occupation" field from it. [[User:Idag|Idag]] ([[User talk:Idag|talk]]) 15:33, 4 March 2009 (UTC)
:::Hi @[[User:RL0919|RL0919]]
::::We should probably leave the birth and death dates and the two novels listed, but I think deleting the occupation and influence sections of the infobox may be a good idea. [[User:TallNapoleon|TallNapoleon]] ([[User talk:TallNapoleon|talk]]) 17:32, 4 March 2009 (UTC)
:::If professional philosophers do not engage with her, that would seem to me to be a natural consequence of her disregard for them. It is crucial to philosophy that practitioners subject their claims to the scrutiny of their peers. All the way back in ancient Greece, Socrates practiced philosophy in the agora, Plato wrote dialogues, Aristotle began his lectures with the consideration of what has been handed down from the wise.
:::The modern university system, for all of its many faults, institutionalizes and promotes this kind of sometimes oppositional collaboration.
:::If you publish with non-academic presses and mostly just respond to questions from your fans, you're not practicing philosophy. You are propounding or evangelizing or something of that kind.
:::Academics, cultural critics, and (in some cases) journalists actually really love it when someone takes a clear, strong position, as Rand does, and resolutely defends it in response to criticism. For instance, look at the professional success of [[Richard Rorty]]! Nearly everyone thought he was wrong on almost all of his core positions, but he was widely cited and even well-liked—because he expressed himself with great clarity and responded with care to criticisms of his work.
:::Rand, for her own reasons, declined to participate in this kind of knowledge-building, quality-assurance process. She opted out. So scholars interested in these topics instead write about, e.g., [[Robert Nozick]] or [[Milton Friedman]].
:::It is possible that she, like Nietzsche, will be elevated posthumously. Maybe this has already happened. Some of the sources listed in the bibliography are obviously legit academic work. I do not see, however, how her own output makes her a philosopher. Although I'm not at all willing to make a research project out of compiling sources rejecting the designation, there definitely are high-quality sources, e.g., [[The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy]] begins with a discussion to justify her inclusion and includes lines such as,
:::<blockquote>Some who do read her work point out that her arguments too often do not support her conclusions. This estimate is shared even by many who find her conclusions and her criticisms of contemporary culture, morality, and politics original and insightful. It is not surprising, then, that she is either mentioned in passing, or not mentioned at all, in the entries that discuss current philosophical thought about virtue ethics, egoism, rights, libertarianism, or markets.</blockquote>
:::Finally, just as an aside, did you mean to imply in your parenthetical that people who have PhDs in philosophy, have published peer-reviewed work in philosophy, and are employed by accredited institutions of post-secondary education to teach philosophers are not incontestably philosophers? (I am not saying these are necessary criteria that could disqualify Rand or anyone else, just that they are sufficient.) Some of these folk are shoddy philosophers, to be sure, if that is what you mean. But if you mean something different, would you mind saying a little more about what you understand the term to mean? It might help to facilitate our discussion about the article.
:::Cheers, [[User:PatrickJWelsh|Patrick J. Welsh]] ([[User talk:PatrickJWelsh|talk]]) 18:04, 6 December 2023 (UTC)
Ayn Rand was a [[Poet]], not any sort of modified philosopher and the mainstream does not support "philosopher" in any meaningful form.[[User:SPECIFICO |<b style="color: #0011FF;"> SPECIFICO</b>]][[User_talk:SPECIFICO | ''talk'']] 18:54, 6 December 2023 (UTC)


::::{{Re|PatrickJWelsh}} I am not going to argue about your personal view of who qualifies as a "philosopher" and I am not propounding my own. The beliefs of Wikipedia editors about who ''should'' be called a philosopher is not supposed to guide our decisions about article content (although you might have trouble reconciling that with much of what people say on these talk pages, cf some of the other participants so far). What I am saying is that when, e.g., [https://aeon.co/ideas/philosophy-shrugged-ignoring-ayn-rand-wont-make-her-go-away Skye Cleary] writes that, "Many [philosophers] propose that [Rand is] not a philosopher at all", this statement tells us that such people exist in some number, but not specifically who they are or even how many. She also doesn't say that the "philosopher" status of this "many" is ''incontestable''. That is your own term reflecting your own view, not something stated in any source that I have seen. – therefore, as I said just a few sentences back, not something that should guide article content and not something I'm going to directly engage with here. (FWIW, Cleary indicates that her own view is that Rand is a philosopher, "just not a very good one".) Claudia Brühwiler, who argues a case ''against'' Rand being a philosopher, ironically highlights the asymmetry in other sources: In her discussion, she names dozen figures who credited Rand with being a philosopher. She names two who denied it. And it is the overall ecosystem of sources that we (should) care most about in deciding what labels to use in our article. --[[User:RL0919|RL0919]] ([[User talk:RL0919|talk]]) 20:30, 6 December 2023 (UTC)
:::::Should we pursue Slp1's good-faith suggestion (and let me be clear that I respect Slp1 greatly), a few serious questions arise: First, what is to stop heretofore-banned editors from re-emerging after the stipulated time frame and simply "re-adding" the infobox, the "occupation" field or any other attempt at a current compromise? My suspected answer, barring a definitive Arbcom ruling on this and related matters, is "nothing." No one [[WP:OWN|owns]] the article. [[WP:CONSENSUS|Consensus]] can always change. Editors come and go. And sadly, good-faith interpretations of policy, if this page is any solid guide, are fairly wide-ranging. The second issue is procedural. Skomorokh, to his credit, is trying to force the issue at ArbCom with a definitive ruling on what is more than just a simple good-faith content dispute about Rand's occupation. I suspect that he won't succeed, thus forcing this headache to re-emerge six months to a year from now once the individual bannings expire. In my view, therefore, the only workable alternative is to list *all* reliable sources that literally state Rand's occupation by name and their passages on a separate talk page, tally up the results, including (but not limited to) other negative evidence and present to a serious committee for extended review and consultation in accordance with WP policy on undue weight. Of course, this is no small exercise. It would take quite a while (READ: weeks) for me, for example, to literally type out every single citation from [[LexisNexis]] and elsewhere. Is it worth it? And with that, I really don't have an answer. It's frustrating and interesting at the same time. [[User:J Readings|J Readings]] ([[User talk:J Readings|talk]]) 17:58, 4 March 2009 (UTC)
:::::I asked you the wrong question. Instead: what does Rand think a philosopher is? Does she give a direct definition anywhere? Or is there a scholarly source that reconstructs one from her writings?
::::::I think the solution would be the Mediation Committee. Hopefully if this becomes an issue again we'll go there rather than to ArbCom. [[User:TallNapoleon|TallNapoleon]] ([[User talk:TallNapoleon|talk]]) 19:22, 4 March 2009 (UTC)
:::::This would be a welcome addition to the article. Because I politely take issue with your characterization of my previous post as just "personal opinion". It's a high-level description of a 2,500 year history of the term designating a person committed to a loosely defined set of truth-seeking practices into which Rand does not seem to comfortably fit.
:::::::I agree with TallNapoleon. While consensus can always change, if there is an extended discussion on this topic with wide community involvement, I think we can get a consensus that's going to be as permanent as something can be on Wikipedia. [[User:Idag|Idag]] ([[User talk:Idag|talk]]) 20:05, 4 March 2009 (UTC)
:::::We need a definition stronger than just having more-or-less considered views about the world, how one ought to act, what the government should be doing, et cetera (and also, in many cases, being more than happy to propound these views at length to anyone who will listen). Because that would make just about everyone a philosopher, rendering the term nearly meaningless as a description of anyone.
:::::Perhaps something about her commitment to a systematic procedure?
:::::Cheers, [[User:PatrickJWelsh|Patrick J. Welsh]] ([[User talk:PatrickJWelsh|talk]]) 22:10, 6 December 2023 (UTC)


::::::Rand was very concerned with the importance of ''philosophy'' – personally, socially, and historically – but not so much with ''philosophers'', except in their functional role of generating philosophical ideas. I can't recall her defining any qualifications or other gatekeeping for who was or could be a philosopher, as long as they were producing relevant ideas. If you just accept existing ideas, however well-considered, I don't think she would call you a philosopher. People who re-transmit the ideas of others were "intellectuals" – hence the title of her first nonfiction book was ''[[For the New Intellectual]]'' because it was her giving her ideas to those she hoped would circulate them. However, while this could be interesting for the article if secondary sources can be found – the preceding was my own summary from primary sources – I don't think it speaks to the matter we were discussing. We don't generally give subjects – especially ones long dead – determinative control over their own descriptions. She would be appalled to see us revealing her legal name (thoroughly hidden during her lifetime) or describing her as an important influence on libertarianism (a movement she denounced). But sources tell us these things. If sources tell us she was a philosopher, then we can call her that regardless of whether she would have – although she did in fact use the term for herself. --[[User:RL0919|RL0919]] ([[User talk:RL0919|talk]]) 23:55, 6 December 2023 (UTC)
:::::::: J Readings speaks of "heretofore-banned editors" and "individual bannings." Which editors are being referred to? What bannings? J Reading, are you talking about the decision that ArbCom has NOT yet made? --[[User:SteveWolfer|Steve]] ([[User talk:SteveWolfer|talk]]) 03:38, 5 March 2009 (UTC)
:::::::@[[User:RL0919|RL0919]], all right. If you ever do come across a good source on either her stated conception of her own activity as a philosopher or a scholarly reconstruction of some more specific sense in which she is well-described by the term, I would consider adding this to the article. Something along these lines would probably have assuaged my concerns at least well enough have dropped the matter fairly early in our first exchange.
:::::::(As it stands, this still feels uncomfortably close to calling someone who has no academic training a "psychologist" on the basis of a sequence of best-selling self-help books and television appearances.)
:::::::But I will relent to the sources you've amassed and drop the issue.
:::::::Thank you for your patience with this exchange and for your consistent civility.
:::::::Cheers, [[User:PatrickJWelsh|Patrick J. Welsh]] ([[User talk:PatrickJWelsh|talk]]) 00:30, 7 December 2023 (UTC)


== Does a better profile photo exist? ==
:::::::::Excuse me, yes. "Proposed ArbCom bannings." [[User:J Readings|J Readings]] ([[User talk:J Readings|talk]]) 05:47, 5 March 2009 (UTC)
:::::::: As to Slp1's suggestion, it is a good approach to a compromise, but it won't work for the same reasons that now have us in ArbCom. If a ruling goes one way, the info box or the occupation part of it will be gone, or the occupation will be "writer" or some such. But if the ruling goes another way, it will be occupation = philosopher and the info box will be the more detailed one for philosophers. --[[User:SteveWolfer|Steve]] ([[User talk:SteveWolfer|talk]]) 03:38, 5 March 2009 (UTC)


She is barely recognizable in the current one. I've seen plenty more recent photos where she smiles, is dressed differently and the shadows obscure less. It looks like a different person. But I suppose we need one that is free to use for our purposes here.[[Special:Contributions/83.255.180.77|83.255.180.77]] ([[User talk:83.255.180.77|talk]]) 22:51, 10 December 2023 (UTC)
::::::::::If you get a consensus here that the infobox and all or part of its contents should be removed because it is more trouble than it is worth, then if a new editor tries to readd "occupation" or whatever then you delete it pending a new consensus on the talkpage, taking it to mediation etc if necessary. I doubt there would be much toleration from admins for any topic-banned editor returning to edit war the same issue on this article, in any case.
:Yes, we are required to include only "free use" images when such are available. The one we are using is a professional publicity shot used to promote one of her books, which is in the [[public domain]] due to quirks of US copyright law. --[[User:RL0919|RL0919]] ([[User talk:RL0919|talk]]) 00:32, 11 December 2023 (UTC)
::::::::::There are lots of editors who dislike infoboxes in principle because you often end up having to shove square pegs into round holes, causing pointless problems. See this dispute on a similar issue [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Expo_67#Infobox]. If Ayn Rand's "occupation" isn't a simple issue (and it obviously isn't, as she clearly spent her time and earned her money in multiple ways), then leave it out and have people read the article to find out the details.--[[User:Slp1|Slp1]] ([[User talk:Slp1|talk]]) 20:43, 7 March 2009 (UTC)


== Sentence correction edit rejected by WP bot ==
== Rand and the Tradition, &sect; edit ==


"Her villains support duty and collectivist moral ideals."
I would separate what currently is listed as Posthumous in the bib into a "Further Readings" &sect; (or otherwise distinguish her works from those of others) and add: <blockquote>The Philosophic Thought of Ayn Rand. Edited by Rassmussen and Den Uyl., 1986 ISBN 0-252-01407-3. U. of Il. Press. </blockquote> Puts the lie to the notion that Rand was treated unfairly by academic philosphy in general. [[User:Lycurgus|Lycurgus]] ([[User talk:Lycurgus|talk]]) 17:14, 6 March 2009 (UTC)
:The Bibliography section ought to list all the published writings of Rand and nothing more. So the section at stands is a good one, though the Screenplays and adaptations and film adaptations and Films about Rand subsections ought to be split out. A Further reading section serves a quite distinct function to a Bibliography, and rarely includes the author's own work. The Further reading section here is quite extensive, and is already distinguished from the Bibliography (the two are divided by an also-extensive References section). I have no objection to adding the Rassmussen and Den Uyl to the Further reading, but I am really not seeing the thrust of your argument. Sincerely, <font color="404040">[[User:Skomorokh|<font face="Goudy Old Style" color="black">Skomorokh</font>]]</font> 20:35, 6 March 2009 (UTC)


This sentence as published is clearly incorrect and highly misleading.
:: The standard connotation of "posthumous work" is one wholly by an author (albeit perhaps redacted to its published form) but published after their death. I (inconsistently till now) would have considered fourth level &sect;s to be paragraphs not sections (since currently they don't result in a &lt;HR&gt; and edit link). Obviously it (the &sect; level) is irrelevant/not substantive/a mere style issue. [[User:Lycurgus|Lycurgus]] ([[User talk:Lycurgus|talk]]) 00:20, 7 March 2009 (UTC)


Based on personal knowledge of Ayn Rand's novels and philosophy it is clear that this sentence should be edited as follows:
:::BTW, Steven Colbert tonight referred to Ayn Rand as: author, philosopher, and female comb-over specialist. Can we quote the Colbert Report here now? [[User:Stevewunder|Stevewunder]] ([[User talk:Stevewunder|talk]]) 06:06, 12 March 2009 (UTC)


"Her villains support duty and *reject* collectivist moral ideals."
::::On the chance Stevewunder was being serious (I suspect he wasn't), Steven Colbert is a comedian. Quoting a comedian's opinion of Ayn Rand in this biography would seem a little out of place. [[User:J Readings|J Readings]] ([[User talk:J Readings|talk]]) 16:03, 12 March 2009 (UTC)


Please correct the record. [[Special:Contributions/2603:8001:C200:1637:F492:43CE:6A38:DF3A|2603:8001:C200:1637:F492:43CE:6A38:DF3A]] ([[User talk:2603:8001:C200:1637:F492:43CE:6A38:DF3A|talk]]) 12:12, 30 March 2024 (UTC)
:::::My point was that I thought it was pretty interesting that Ayn Rand was the topic of Colbert's The Word last night and that he offered such a description. Of course, Colbert is also known for making frequent WP references and encouraging vandalism. GEEZ, LIGHTEN UP! [[User:Stevewunder|Stevewunder]] ([[User talk:Stevewunder|talk]]) 02:16, 13 March 2009 (UTC)


:The bot reverted your edit because you inserted it with commentary rather than just making the change. But even if properly formatted, the change you are asking for is wrong. I'm not sure if you are misreading the sentence in the article, or if you have profoundly misunderstood Rand's views. Rand herself was opposed to collectivism, so her villains typically support collectivist morality, which is what the sentence says. Her villains definitely are not portrayed as ''rejecting'' collectivism. --[[User:RL0919|RL0919]] ([[User talk:RL0919|talk]]) 17:12, 30 March 2024 (UTC)
::::::"GEEZ, LIGHTEN UP." Wow, bold case screams for politely responding to what I thought could have been a serious question. I'm sorry, Stevewunder. [[User:J Readings|J Readings]] ([[User talk:J Readings|talk]]) 02:54, 13 March 2009 (UTC)
::I came back to state that I was in error. My apologies. [[Special:Contributions/2603:8001:C200:1637:D116:EE89:6C1C:ABB0|2603:8001:C200:1637:D116:EE89:6C1C:ABB0]] ([[User talk:2603:8001:C200:1637:D116:EE89:6C1C:ABB0|talk]]) 21:51, 1 April 2024 (UTC)


== Was Ayn Rand a Soviet Spy? ==
::::::Easy Steve. J.R. indicated he thought you were kidding, but lots of times people add pop culture information based on show appearances. So offering his opinion that Colbert's comments can't really be used is quite reasonable. Your reaction comes off as a bit touchy, so it may be you that needs to lighten up? :) Someone mentioned the segment to me on my talk page so I watched it when it was replayed on Comedy Central. It was quite a long segment, so it was kind of fun to watch I thought. Interesting, somewhat amusing, but I'm not a huge Colbert fan. He seems a little glib or trite to me. Anyway, it's too bad we can't take Colbert's referring to her as "author, philosopher, and female comb-over specialist" as conclusive because it would certainly end an awful lot of drama. [[User:ChildofMidnight|ChildofMidnight]] ([[User talk:ChildofMidnight|talk]]) 03:14, 13 March 2009 (UTC)
:::::::'''Support''' describing Ayn Rand as "author, philosopher, and female comb-over pioneer" in the lead. Who's with me? [[User:TallNapoleon|TallNapoleon]] ([[User talk:TallNapoleon|talk]]) 03:28, 13 March 2009 (UTC)


I find it suspicious that hat she was granted a visa to visit relatives in the United States. Visas to go to America and other free countries were almost never granted to Soviet citizens unless they enjoyed a position of great trust in the Communist party. In the looking-glass world of espionage, people are often the exact opposite of what they appear to be in public. [[Special:Contributions/2603:7000:CF00:1202:898B:3640:2608:EAF8|2603:7000:CF00:1202:898B:3640:2608:EAF8]] ([[User talk:2603:7000:CF00:1202:898B:3640:2608:EAF8|talk]]) 19:51, 1 May 2024 (UTC)
"She first achieved notoriety with The Fountainhead (1943),[6] and her best-known work – the philosophical novel Atlas Shrugged – was published in 1957."


:If there are [[WP:RS|reliable sources]] to support this theory, please provide details about where they are. If not, relevant information can be found [[WP:NOTFORUM|here]] and [[WP:TALKNO|here]]. --[[User:RL0919|RL0919]] ([[User talk:RL0919|talk]]) 01:22, 2 May 2024 (UTC)
HURR DURR Achieving notoriety means she is notorious. Being notorious is a bad thing. This is like confusing famous and infamous. Holy shit people these words are not interchangeable.

Latest revision as of 12:31, 2 May 2024

Former featured article candidateAyn Rand is a former featured article candidate. Please view the links under Article milestones below to see why the nomination failed. For older candidates, please check the archive.
Good articleAyn Rand has been listed as one of the Language and literature good articles under the good article criteria. If you can improve it further, please do so. If it no longer meets these criteria, you can reassess it.
On this day... Article milestones
DateProcessResult
March 20, 2006Featured article candidateNot promoted
April 7, 2006Peer reviewReviewed
April 14, 2006Good article nomineeListed
May 2, 2006Featured article candidateNot promoted
June 4, 2006Good article reassessmentDelisted
September 15, 2009Good article nomineeListed
April 20, 2010Peer reviewReviewed
September 6, 2021Guild of Copy EditorsCopyedited
April 11, 2022Peer reviewReviewed
February 27, 2023Featured article candidateNot promoted
On this day... Facts from this article were featured on Wikipedia's Main Page in the "On this day..." column on March 6, 2017, March 6, 2022, and March 6, 2023.
Current status: Former featured article candidate, current good article

Notable mentions sorely missing[edit]

Article nneeds to catch up with popculture. Nothing about Obama, or for that matter the responses he received after his disparaging comments. Nothing about the highly unusual for Argentina politician Milei, although he is of course not an Objectivist. Etc. 83.255.180.77 (talk) 22:14, 29 November 2023 (UTC)[reply]

Obama commented about Rand briefly in 2012, people responded, and >99.999% of the population has not thought twice about it since that week. That isn't a matter of "catching up"; it is something that wasn't important then and definitely isn't now.
As for Milei, he may be more relevant since we do call out examples of politicians that she has influenced, and he could be the most important of those if the influence is firmly established. Can you point out some reliable secondary sources that establish a meaningful connection? The news articles I've seen say that he claims to have spoken with her ghost, which is not the usual sort of influence we have documented here. --RL0919 (talk) 00:53, 30 November 2023 (UTC)[reply]

Rand was a philosopher[edit]

The expression "public philosopher" will not be recognized by most people and is useless to readers. Also, it is a preposterous and basically meaningless expression. No one is called a "private philosopher", so why describe someone as a "public philosopher"? Calling Rand a philosopher is good enough. Zarenon (talk) 08:38, 3 December 2023 (UTC)[reply]

The term is linked to an article that explains what it means to anyone who is unfamiliar. Rand did what that article describes, and she is mentioned in it as an example. Contrary to your comments here and in edit summaries, the term public philosopher is not "meaningless" or the "opposite" of philosopherpublic is simply a modifier to indicate a specific mode of engagement with philosophy. --RL0919 (talk) 22:00, 3 December 2023 (UTC)[reply]
I'm doubtful of PP, as opposed to P. Can you point to other examples? For example, I see Sharyn Clough (born 14 May 1965) is professor of philosophy at Oregon State University. Her teaching and research specialties focus on public philosophy... so here we have someone called a P, even though her research focusses on PP. PP sounds very much like not-as-good-as-a-proper-p William M. Connolley (talk) 09:15, 4 December 2023 (UTC)[reply]
A "public philosopher" is just a type of "philosopher" so in theory anyone who is the former could simply be called the latter in a lead, or both. Walter Terence Stace is "public philosopher" as part of his initial description. Jane Addams is "philosopher" in the initial sentence, then "public philosopher" later in the lead. Susan Schneider is "philosopher" in the lead and "public philosopher" in the body. In none of these cases does there appear to be any disparagement intended. There are modifiers for philosopher that would be widely considered disparaging, such as amateur, that have come up in the past. But I don't see how public is in that category.
Anyhow, the modifier was added following a September discussion that is still above on this talk page. You are welcome to read through that for more background. I don't mind if the lead doesn't have any modifier for philosopher, and I don't mind if it does have one as long as that modifier is accurate, neutral, and supported by a decent amount of sources. As I said to User:PatrickJWelsh previously, I thought it was "OK to try out an alternative and see what the reaction is". If the reaction is negative, then we can return to the status quo ante and/or discuss it more. --RL0919 (talk) 21:36, 4 December 2023 (UTC)[reply]
The term "public philosopher" is useless and stupid. We are told in the article Public philosopher, that "Public philosophy is a subfield of philosophy that involves engagement with the public". The definition is hopelessly vague and it does not improve the article at all to add that kind of vague language. The article also says that, public philosophy involves "doing philosophy with general audience", which is nonsense. When Rand wrote her novels and her books she wasn't "doing philosophy" with a "general audience"; she was expounding her own ideas. Zarenon (talk) 04:32, 5 December 2023 (UTC)[reply]
The fact that this has been repeatedly disputed suggests to me that we should stick with just the perfectly neutral "writer". I would not object to "writer and public intellectual".
Have you reviewed the discussion above?
Cheers, Patrick J. Welsh (talk) 01:36, 6 December 2023 (UTC)[reply]
The dispute raised in this section is about the modifier that was added in this edit, not about the use of the term philosopher. As I already quoted myself earlier regarding the addition of a modifier, we tried "an alternative [to] see what the reaction is". This is that reaction. Not a shock to me, since I've seen this topic discussed multiple times in the past. There are literally dozens of reliable sources that refer to her as a philosopher, with or without some modifier, so there is not a good case to deny that core term. But the options for modifiers vary, so there is much more room to dispute any specific modifier. --RL0919 (talk) 04:49, 6 December 2023 (UTC)[reply]
I think that someone familiar with Rand would realize that she would have completely rejected the term "public philosopher". Zarenon (talk) 07:32, 6 December 2023 (UTC)[reply]
Hi @Zarenon,
The problem with "philosopher", as I see it, is a consequence of the highly polarized views the she inspires. I don't doubt @RL0919 for a second when they promise they could produce many quality sources calling her a philosopher. And usually this would be all we need.
In this case, however, many other quality sources take issue with this descriptor. Some folks consider her to be just about the only person you need to read. Other folks, however, including many working in philosophy departments on research topically overlapping with her own do not consider the quality of her writing to merit mention or engagement—to the point some would consider a suggestion to the contrary disqualifying.
For example, from the article:

Rand's relationship with contemporary philosophers was mostly antagonistic. She was not an academic and did not participate in academic discourse. She was dismissive of critics and wrote about ideas she disagreed with in a polemical manner without in-depth analysis. She was in turn viewed very negatively by many academic philosophers, who dismissed her as an unimportant figure who should not be considered a philosopher or given any serious response.

Since, as is the case, her status as a philosopher is heavily contested by many people who incontestably are philosophers, it should not be stated as a fact in the first sentence of the lead. That is a violation of WP:NPOV.
What is the objection to "public intellectual"? It is neutral and also captures a wider range of her activities. As a second choice, I would also be fine with "non-academic philosopher", suggested above by RL0919.
Cheers, Patrick J. Welsh (talk) 15:41, 6 December 2023 (UTC)[reply]
"In this case, however, many other quality sources take issue with this descriptor." But this is not true. In actual (Wikipedia-reliable) sources, the numbers are lopsided: many sources that call her a philosopher, and a vastly smaller number that deny it. We hear from secondary sources about what an unspecified number of mostly unidentified academics (who may or may not be "incontestably" philosophers – that is your own spin, not from any source at all) believe: there are people who think she wasn't a philosopher, and presumably make some mention of this in conversation or other informal ways that made secondary source authors aware of their existence. But these people apparently aren't bothering to put their rejection of the label into reliable source content that we can use in an article. Far from "heavily contest[ing]" the matter, these people – however many of them there may be, we don't know – have passively conceded the field of discussion about her within reliable sources. If that results in their viewpoints having less weight in this article, then that is their own fault. --RL0919 (talk) 16:27, 6 December 2023 (UTC)[reply]
Hi @RL0919
If professional philosophers do not engage with her, that would seem to me to be a natural consequence of her disregard for them. It is crucial to philosophy that practitioners subject their claims to the scrutiny of their peers. All the way back in ancient Greece, Socrates practiced philosophy in the agora, Plato wrote dialogues, Aristotle began his lectures with the consideration of what has been handed down from the wise.
The modern university system, for all of its many faults, institutionalizes and promotes this kind of sometimes oppositional collaboration.
If you publish with non-academic presses and mostly just respond to questions from your fans, you're not practicing philosophy. You are propounding or evangelizing or something of that kind.
Academics, cultural critics, and (in some cases) journalists actually really love it when someone takes a clear, strong position, as Rand does, and resolutely defends it in response to criticism. For instance, look at the professional success of Richard Rorty! Nearly everyone thought he was wrong on almost all of his core positions, but he was widely cited and even well-liked—because he expressed himself with great clarity and responded with care to criticisms of his work.
Rand, for her own reasons, declined to participate in this kind of knowledge-building, quality-assurance process. She opted out. So scholars interested in these topics instead write about, e.g., Robert Nozick or Milton Friedman.
It is possible that she, like Nietzsche, will be elevated posthumously. Maybe this has already happened. Some of the sources listed in the bibliography are obviously legit academic work. I do not see, however, how her own output makes her a philosopher. Although I'm not at all willing to make a research project out of compiling sources rejecting the designation, there definitely are high-quality sources, e.g., The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy begins with a discussion to justify her inclusion and includes lines such as,

Some who do read her work point out that her arguments too often do not support her conclusions. This estimate is shared even by many who find her conclusions and her criticisms of contemporary culture, morality, and politics original and insightful. It is not surprising, then, that she is either mentioned in passing, or not mentioned at all, in the entries that discuss current philosophical thought about virtue ethics, egoism, rights, libertarianism, or markets.

Finally, just as an aside, did you mean to imply in your parenthetical that people who have PhDs in philosophy, have published peer-reviewed work in philosophy, and are employed by accredited institutions of post-secondary education to teach philosophers are not incontestably philosophers? (I am not saying these are necessary criteria that could disqualify Rand or anyone else, just that they are sufficient.) Some of these folk are shoddy philosophers, to be sure, if that is what you mean. But if you mean something different, would you mind saying a little more about what you understand the term to mean? It might help to facilitate our discussion about the article.
Cheers, Patrick J. Welsh (talk) 18:04, 6 December 2023 (UTC)[reply]

Ayn Rand was a Poet, not any sort of modified philosopher and the mainstream does not support "philosopher" in any meaningful form. SPECIFICO talk 18:54, 6 December 2023 (UTC)[reply]

@PatrickJWelsh: I am not going to argue about your personal view of who qualifies as a "philosopher" and I am not propounding my own. The beliefs of Wikipedia editors about who should be called a philosopher is not supposed to guide our decisions about article content (although you might have trouble reconciling that with much of what people say on these talk pages, cf some of the other participants so far). What I am saying is that when, e.g., Skye Cleary writes that, "Many [philosophers] propose that [Rand is] not a philosopher at all", this statement tells us that such people exist in some number, but not specifically who they are or even how many. She also doesn't say that the "philosopher" status of this "many" is incontestable. That is your own term reflecting your own view, not something stated in any source that I have seen. – therefore, as I said just a few sentences back, not something that should guide article content and not something I'm going to directly engage with here. (FWIW, Cleary indicates that her own view is that Rand is a philosopher, "just not a very good one".) Claudia Brühwiler, who argues a case against Rand being a philosopher, ironically highlights the asymmetry in other sources: In her discussion, she names dozen figures who credited Rand with being a philosopher. She names two who denied it. And it is the overall ecosystem of sources that we (should) care most about in deciding what labels to use in our article. --RL0919 (talk) 20:30, 6 December 2023 (UTC)[reply]
I asked you the wrong question. Instead: what does Rand think a philosopher is? Does she give a direct definition anywhere? Or is there a scholarly source that reconstructs one from her writings?
This would be a welcome addition to the article. Because I politely take issue with your characterization of my previous post as just "personal opinion". It's a high-level description of a 2,500 year history of the term designating a person committed to a loosely defined set of truth-seeking practices into which Rand does not seem to comfortably fit.
We need a definition stronger than just having more-or-less considered views about the world, how one ought to act, what the government should be doing, et cetera (and also, in many cases, being more than happy to propound these views at length to anyone who will listen). Because that would make just about everyone a philosopher, rendering the term nearly meaningless as a description of anyone.
Perhaps something about her commitment to a systematic procedure?
Cheers, Patrick J. Welsh (talk) 22:10, 6 December 2023 (UTC)[reply]
Rand was very concerned with the importance of philosophy – personally, socially, and historically – but not so much with philosophers, except in their functional role of generating philosophical ideas. I can't recall her defining any qualifications or other gatekeeping for who was or could be a philosopher, as long as they were producing relevant ideas. If you just accept existing ideas, however well-considered, I don't think she would call you a philosopher. People who re-transmit the ideas of others were "intellectuals" – hence the title of her first nonfiction book was For the New Intellectual because it was her giving her ideas to those she hoped would circulate them. However, while this could be interesting for the article if secondary sources can be found – the preceding was my own summary from primary sources – I don't think it speaks to the matter we were discussing. We don't generally give subjects – especially ones long dead – determinative control over their own descriptions. She would be appalled to see us revealing her legal name (thoroughly hidden during her lifetime) or describing her as an important influence on libertarianism (a movement she denounced). But sources tell us these things. If sources tell us she was a philosopher, then we can call her that regardless of whether she would have – although she did in fact use the term for herself. --RL0919 (talk) 23:55, 6 December 2023 (UTC)[reply]
@RL0919, all right. If you ever do come across a good source on either her stated conception of her own activity as a philosopher or a scholarly reconstruction of some more specific sense in which she is well-described by the term, I would consider adding this to the article. Something along these lines would probably have assuaged my concerns at least well enough have dropped the matter fairly early in our first exchange.
(As it stands, this still feels uncomfortably close to calling someone who has no academic training a "psychologist" on the basis of a sequence of best-selling self-help books and television appearances.)
But I will relent to the sources you've amassed and drop the issue.
Thank you for your patience with this exchange and for your consistent civility.
Cheers, Patrick J. Welsh (talk) 00:30, 7 December 2023 (UTC)[reply]

Does a better profile photo exist?[edit]

She is barely recognizable in the current one. I've seen plenty more recent photos where she smiles, is dressed differently and the shadows obscure less. It looks like a different person. But I suppose we need one that is free to use for our purposes here.83.255.180.77 (talk) 22:51, 10 December 2023 (UTC)[reply]

Yes, we are required to include only "free use" images when such are available. The one we are using is a professional publicity shot used to promote one of her books, which is in the public domain due to quirks of US copyright law. --RL0919 (talk) 00:32, 11 December 2023 (UTC)[reply]

Sentence correction edit rejected by WP bot[edit]

"Her villains support duty and collectivist moral ideals."

This sentence as published is clearly incorrect and highly misleading.

Based on personal knowledge of Ayn Rand's novels and philosophy it is clear that this sentence should be edited as follows:

"Her villains support duty and *reject* collectivist moral ideals."

Please correct the record. 2603:8001:C200:1637:F492:43CE:6A38:DF3A (talk) 12:12, 30 March 2024 (UTC)[reply]

The bot reverted your edit because you inserted it with commentary rather than just making the change. But even if properly formatted, the change you are asking for is wrong. I'm not sure if you are misreading the sentence in the article, or if you have profoundly misunderstood Rand's views. Rand herself was opposed to collectivism, so her villains typically support collectivist morality, which is what the sentence says. Her villains definitely are not portrayed as rejecting collectivism. --RL0919 (talk) 17:12, 30 March 2024 (UTC)[reply]
I came back to state that I was in error. My apologies. 2603:8001:C200:1637:D116:EE89:6C1C:ABB0 (talk) 21:51, 1 April 2024 (UTC)[reply]

Was Ayn Rand a Soviet Spy?[edit]

I find it suspicious that hat she was granted a visa to visit relatives in the United States. Visas to go to America and other free countries were almost never granted to Soviet citizens unless they enjoyed a position of great trust in the Communist party. In the looking-glass world of espionage, people are often the exact opposite of what they appear to be in public. 2603:7000:CF00:1202:898B:3640:2608:EAF8 (talk) 19:51, 1 May 2024 (UTC)[reply]

If there are reliable sources to support this theory, please provide details about where they are. If not, relevant information can be found here and here. --RL0919 (talk) 01:22, 2 May 2024 (UTC)[reply]

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