from: An Anarchist FAQ
Version 8.3 - 13-Apr-2000
<http://flag.blackened.net/intanark/faq/>
Section F.7: What is the myth of "Natural Law"?

Natural Law, and the related concept of Natural Rights, play
an important part in Libertarian and "anarcho"-capitalist
ideology. Right-libertarians are not alone in claiming that
their particular ideology is based on the "law of nature".
Hitler, for one, claimed the same thing for Nazi ideology. So
do numerous other demagogues, religious fanatics, and
political philosophers. However, each likes to claim that only
their "natural law" is the "real" one, all the others being
subjective impositions. We will ignore these assertions (they
are not arguments) and concentrate on explaining why natural
law, in all its forms, is a myth. In addition, we will
indicate its authoritarian implications.

Instead of such myths anarchists urge people to "work it out
for themselves" and realise that any ethical code is
subjective and not a law of nature. If its a good "code", then
others will become convinced of it by your arguments and their
intellect. There is no need to claim its a function of "man's
nature"!

The following books discuss the subject of "Natural Law" in
greater depth and are recommended for a fuller discussion of
the issues raised in this section:

Robert Anton Wilson, Natural Law and L.A. Rollins, The Myth of
Natural Law.

We should note that these books are written by people
associated, to some degree, with right-libertarianism and, of
course, we should point out that not all right-libertarians
subscribe to "natural law" theories (David Friedman, for
example, does not). However, such a position seems to be the
minority in right-Libertarianism (Ayn Rand, Robert Nozick and
Murray Rothbard, among others, did subscribe to it). We should
also point out that the Individualist Anarchist Lysander
Spooner also subscribed to "natural laws" (which shows that,
as we noted above, the concept is not limited to one
particular theory or ideology). We present a short critique of
Spooner's ideas on this subject in section G.7.

Lastly, it could be maintained that it is a common "straw man"
to maintain that supporters of Natural Law argue that their
Laws are like the laws of physics (and so are capable of
stopping people's actions just as the law of gravity
automatically stops people flying from the Earth). But that is
the whole point -- using the term "Natural Law" implies that
the moral rights and laws that its supporters argue for are to
be considered just like the law of gravity (although they
acknowledge, of course, that unlike gravity, their "natural
laws" can be violated in nature). Far from saying that the
rights they support are just that (i.e. rights they think are
good) they try to associate them with universal facts. For
example, Lysander Spooner (who, we must stress, used the
concept of "Natural law" to oppose the transformation of
America into a capitalist society, unlike Rand, Nozick and
Rothbard who use it to defend capitalism) stated that:

"the true definition of law is, that it is a fixed, immutable,
natural principle; and not anything that man ever made, or can
make, unmake, or alter. Thus we speak of the laws of matter,
and the laws of mind; of the laws of gravitation, the laws of
light, heat, and electricity. . .etc., etc. . . . The law of
justice is just as supreme and universal in the moral world,
as these others are in the mental or physical world; and is as
unalterable as are these by any human power. And it is just as
false and absurd to talk of anybody's having the power to
abolish the law of justice, and set up their own in its stead,
as it would be to talk of their having the power to abolish
the law of gravitation, or any other natural laws of the
universe, and set up their own will in the place of them." [A
Letter to Grover Cleveland, p. 88]

Rothbard and other capitalist supporters of "Natural Law" make
the same sort of claims (as we will see). Now, why, if they
are aware of the fact that unlike gravity their "Natural Laws"
can be violated, do they use the term at all? Benjamin Tucker
said that "Natural Law" was a "religious" concept -- and this
provides a clue. To say "Do not violate these rights,
otherwise I will get cross" does not have quite the same power
as "Do not violate these rights, they are facts of natural and
you are violating nature" (compare to "Do not violate these
laws, or you will go to hell"). So to point out that "Natural
Law" is not the same as the law of gravity (because it has to
be enforced by humans) is not attacking some kind of "straw
man" -- it is exposing the fact that these "Natural Laws" are
just the personal prejudices of those who hold them. If they
do not want then to be exposed as such then they should call
their laws what they are -- personal ethical laws -- rather
than compare them to the facts of nature.

F.7.1 Why the term "Natural Law" in the first place?

Murray Rothbard claims that "Natural Law theory rests on the
insight. . . that each entity has distinct and specific
properties, a distinct 'nature,' which can be investigated by
man's reason" [For a New Liberty, p. 25] and that "man has
rights because they are natural rights. They are grounded in
the nature of man." [The Ethics of Liberty, p. 155]

To put it bluntly, this form of "analysis" was originated by
Aristotle and has not been used by science for centuries.
Science investigates by proposing theories and hypotheses to
explain empirical observations, testing and refining them by
experiment. In stark contrast, Rothbard invents definitions
("distinct" "natures") and then draws conclusions from them.
Such a method was last used by the medieval Church and is
devoid of any scientific method. It is, of course, a fiction.
It attempts to deduce the nature of a "natural" society from a
priori considerations of the "innate" nature of human beings,
which just means that the assumptions necessary to reach the
desired conclusions have been built into the definition of
"human nature." In other words, Rothbard defines humans as
having the "distinct and specific properties" that, given his
assumptions, will allow his dogma (private state capitalism)
to be inferred as the "natural" society for humans.
Rothbard claims that "if A, B, C, etc., have differing
attributes, it follows that they have different natures." [The
Ethics of Liberty, p. 9] Does this means that as every
individual is unique (have different attributes), they have
different natures? Skin and hair colour are different
attributes, does this mean that red haired people have
different natures than blondes? That black people have
different natures than white (and such a "theory" of "natural
law" was used to justify slavery -- yes, slaves are human but
they have "different natures" than their masters and so
slavery is okay). Of course Rothbard aggregates "attributes"
to species level, but why not higher? Humans are primates,
does that mean we have the same natures are monkeys or
gorillas? We are also mammals as well, we share many of the
same attributes as whales and dogs. Do we have similar
natures?

But this is by the way. To continue we find that after
defining certain "natures," Rothbard attempts to derive
"Natural Rights and Laws" from them. However, these "Natural
Laws" are quite strange, as they can be violated in nature!
Real natural laws (like the law of gravity) cannot be violated
and therefore do not need to be enforced. The "Natural Laws"
the "Libertarian" desires to foist upon us are not like this.
They need to be enforced by humans and the institutions they
create. Hence, Libertarian "Natural Laws" are more akin to
moral prescriptions or juridical laws. However, this does not
stop Rothbard explicitly "plac[ing]" his "Natural Laws"
"alongside physical or 'scientific' natural laws." [The Ethics
of Liberty, p. 42]

So why do so many Libertarians use the term "Natural Law?"
Simply, it gives them the means by which to elevate their
opinions, dogmas, and prejudices to a metaphysical level where
nobody will dare to criticise or even think about them. The
term smacks of religion, where "Natural Law" has replaced
"God's Law." The latter fiction gave the priest power over
believers. "Natural Law" is designed to give the Libertarian
ideologist power over the people that he or she wants to rule.

How can one be against a "Natural Law" or a "Natural Right"?
It is impossible. How can one argue against gravity? If
private property, for example, is elevated to such a level,
who would dare argue against it? Ayn Rand listed having
landlords and employers along with "the laws of nature." They
are not similar: the first two are social relationships which
have to be imposed by the state; the "laws of nature" (like
gravity, needing food, etc.) are facts which do not need to be
imposed. Rothbard claims that "the natural fact is that labour
service is indeed a commodity." [Op. Cit., p. 40] However,
this is complete nonsense -- labour service as a commodity is
a social fact, dependent on the distribution of property
within society, its social customs and so forth. It is only
"natural" in the sense that it exists within a given society
(the state is also "natural" as it also exists within nature
at a given time). But neither wage slavery or the state is
"natural" in the sense that gravity is natural or a human
having two arms is. Indeed, workers at the dawn of capitalism,
faced with selling their labour services to another,
considered it as decidedly "unnatural" and used the term "wage
slavery" to describe it!

Thus, where and when a "fact" appears is essential. For
example, Rothbard claims that "[a]n apple, let fall, will drop
to the ground; this we all observe and acknowledge to be in
the nature of the apple." [The Ethics of Liberty, p. 9]
Actually, we do not "acknowledge" anything of the kind. We
acknowledge that the apple was subject to the force of gravity
and that is why it fell. The same apple, "let fall" in a space
ship would not drop to the floor. Has the "nature" of the
apple changed? No, but the situation it is in has. Thus any
attempt to generate abstract "natures" requires you to ignore
reality in favour of ideals.

Because of the confusion its usage creates, we are tempted to
think that the use of "Natural Law" dogma is an attempt to
stop thinking, to restrict analysis, to force certain aspects
of society off the political agenda by giving them a divine,
everlasting quality.

Moreover, such an "individualist" account of the origins of
rights will always turn on a muddled distinction between
individual rationality and some vague notion of rationality
associated with membership of the human species. How are we to
determine what is rational for an individual as and individual
and what is rational for that same individual as a human
being? It is hard to see that we can make such a distinction
for "[i]f I violently interfere with Murray Rothbard's
freedom, this may violate the 'natural law' of Murray
Rothbard's needs, but it doesn't violate the 'natural law' of
my needs." [L.A. Rollins, The Myth of Natural Rights, p. 28]
Both parties, after all, are human and if such interference
is, as Rothbard claims, "antihuman" then why? "If it helps me,
a human, to advance my life, then how can it be unequivocally
'antihuman'?" [L. A. Rollins, Op. Cit., p. 27] Thus "natural
law" is contradictory as it is well within the bounds of human
nature to violate it.
This means that in order to support the dogma of "Natural
Law," the cultists must ignore reality. Ayn Rand claims that
"the source of man's rights is. . .the law of identity. A is A
-- and Man is Man." But Rand (like Rothbard) defines "Man" as
an "entity of a specific kind -- a rational being" [The Virtue
of Selfishness, pp. 94-95]. Therefore she cannot account for
irrational human behaviours (such as those that violate
"Natural Laws"), which are also products of our "nature." To
assert that such behaviours are not human is to assert that A
can be not-A, thus contradicting the law of identity. Her
ideology cannot even meet its own test.

F.7.2 But "Natural Law" provides protection for individual
rights from violation by the State. Those who are against
Natural Law desire total rule by the state.

The second statement represents a common "Libertarian" tactic.
Instead of addressing the issues, they accuse an opponent of
being a "totalitarian" (or the less sinister "statist"). In
this way, they hope to distract attention from, and so avoid
discussing, the issue at hand (while at the same time smearing
their opponent). We can therefore ignore the second statement.

Regarding the first, "Natural Law" has never stopped the
rights of individuals from being violated by the state. Such
"laws" are as much use as a chocolate fire-guard. If "Natural
Rights" could protect one from the power of the state, the
Nazis would not have been able to murder six million Jews. The
only thing that stops the state from attacking people's rights
is individual (and social) power -- the ability and desire to
protect oneself and what one considers to be right and fair.
As the anarchist Rudolf Rocker pointed out:
"Political [or individual] rights do not exist because they
have been legally set down on a piece of paper, but only when
they have become the ingrown habit of a people, and when any
attempt to impair them will be meet with the violent
resistance of the populace. . . .One compels respect from
others when he knows how to defend his dignity as a human
being. . . .The people owe all the political rights and
privileges which we enjoy today, in greater or lesser measure,
not to the good will of their governments, but to their own
strength." [Anarcho-Syndicalism, p. 64]

Of course, if is there are no "Natural Rights," then the state
has no "right" to murder you or otherwise take away what are
commonly regarded as human rights. One can object to state
power without believing in "Natural Law."

F.7.3 Why is "Natural Law" authoritarian?

Rights, far from being fixed, are the product of social
evolution and human action, thought and emotions. What is
acceptable now may become unacceptable in the future. Slavery,
for example, was long considered "natural." In fact, John
Locke, the "father" of "Natural Rights," was heavily involved
in the slave trade. He made a fortune in violating what is
today regarded as a basic human right: not to be enslaved.
Many in Locke's day claimed that slavery was a "Natural Law."
Few would say so now.

Thomas Jefferson indicates exactly why "Natural Law" is
authoritarian when he wrote "[s]ome men look at constitutions
with sanctimonious reverence, and deem them like the ark of
the Covenant, too sacred to be touched. They ascribe to the
men of the preceding age a wisdom more than human, and suppose
what they did to be beyond amendment. . .laws and institutions
must go hand in hand with the progress of the human mind. . .
as that becomes more developed, more enlightened, as new
discoveries are made, institutions must advance also, to keep
pace with the times. . . We might as well require a man to
wear still the coat which fitted him when a boy as civilised
society to remain forever under the regimen of their barbarous
ancestors."

The "Natural Law" cult desires to stop the evolutionary
process by which new rights are recognised. Instead they wish
to fix social life into what they think is good and right,
using a form of argument that tries to raise their ideology
above critique or thought. Such a wish is opposed to the
fundamental feature of liberty: the ability to think for
oneself. Michael Bakunin writes "the liberty of man consists
solely in this: that he obeys natural laws because he has
himself recognised them as such, and not because they have
been externally imposed upon him by any extrinsic will
whatever, divine or human, collective or individual." [Bakunin
on Anarchism, p. 227]

Thus anarchism, in contrast to the "natural law" cult,
recognises that "natural laws" (like society) are the product
of individual evaluation of reality and social life and are,
therefore, subject to change in the light of new information
and ideas (Society "progresses slowly through the moving power
of individual initiative" [Bakunin, The Political Philosophy
of Bakunin, p. 166] and so, obviously, do social rights and
customs).
Ethical or moral "laws" (which is what the "Natural Law" cult
is actually about) is not a product of "human nature" or
abstract individuals. Rather, it is a social fact, a creation
of society and human interaction. In Bakunin's words, "moral
law is not an individual but a social fact, a creation of
society" and any "natural laws" are "inherent in the social
body" (and so, we must add, not floating abstractions existing
in "man's nature"). [Ibid., p. 125, p. 166]

The case for liberty and a free society is based on the
argument that, since every individual is unique, everyone can
contribute something that no one else has noticed or thought
about. It is the free interaction of individuals which allows
them, along with society and its customs and rights, to
evolve, change and develop. "Natural Law," like the state,
tries to arrest this evolution. It replaces creative inquiry
with dogma, making people subject to yet another god,
destroying critical thought with a new rule book.

In addition, if these "Natural Laws" are really what they are
claimed to be, they are necessarily applicable to all of
humanity (Rothbard explicitly acknowledges this when he wrote
that "one of the notable attributes of natural law" is "its
applicability to all men, regardless of time or place" [The
Ethics of Liberty, p. 42]). In other words, every other law
code must (by definition) be "against nature" and there exists
one way of life (the "natural" one). The authoritarian
implications of such arrogance is clear. That the Dogma of
Natural Law was only invented a few hundred years ago, in one
part of the planet, does not seem to bother its advocates. Nor
does the fact that for the vast majority of human existence,
people have lived in societies which violated almost all of
their so-called "Natural Laws" To take one example, before the
late Neolithic, most societies were based on usufruct, or free
access to communally held land and other resources [see Murray
Bookchin, The Ecology of Freedom]. Thus for millennia, all
human beings lived in violation of the supposed "Natural Law"
of private property -- perhaps the chief "law" in the
"Libertarian" universe.

If "Natural Law" did exist, then all people would have
discovered these "true" laws years ago. To the contrary,
however, the debate is still going on, with (for example)
fascists and "Libertarians" each claiming "the laws of nature"
(and socio-biology) as their own.

F.7.4 Does "Natural Law" actually provides protection for
individual liberty?

But, it seems fair to ask, does "natural law" actually respect
individuals and their rights (i.e. liberty)? We think not.
Why?

According to Rothbard, "the natural law ethic states that for
man, goodness or badness can be determined by what fulfils or
thwarts what is best for man's nature." [The Ethics of
Liberty, p. 10] But, of course, what may be "good" for "man"
may be decidedly bad for men (and women). If we take the
example of the sole oasis in a desert (see section F.4.2)
then, according to Rothbard, the property owner having the
power of life and death over others is "good" while, if the
dispossessed revolt and refuse to recognise his "property",
this is "bad"! In other words, Rothbard's "natural law" is
good for some people (namely property owners) while it can be
bad for others (namely the working class). In more general
terms, this means that a system which results in extensive
hierarchy (i.e. archy, power) is "good" (even though it
restricts liberty for the many) while attempts to remove power
(such as revolution and the democratisation of property
rights) is "bad". Somewhat strange logic, we feel.

However such a position fails to understand why we consider
coercion to be wrong/unethical. Coercion is wrong because it
subjects an individual to the will of another. It is clear
that the victim of coercion is lacking the freedom that the
philosopher Isaiah Berlin describes in the following terms:

"I wish my life and decisions to depend on myself, not on
external forces of whatever kind. I wish to be an instrument
of my own, not of other men's, acts of will. I wish to be a
subject, not an object; to be moved by reasons, by conscious
purposes, which are my own, not by causes which affect me, as
it were, from outside. I wish to be somebody, not nobody; a
doer -- deciding, not being decided for, self-directed and not
acted upon by external nature or by other mean as if I were a
thing, or an animal, or a slave incapable of playing a human
role, that is, of conceiving goals and policies of my own and
realising them." [Four Essays on Liberty, p. 131]
Or, as Alan Haworth points out, "we have to view coercion as a
violation of what Berlin calls positive freedom."
[Anti-Libertarianism, p. 48]

Thus, if a system results in the violation of (positive)
liberty by its very nature -- namely, subject a class of
people to the will of another class (the worker is subject to
the will of their boss and is turned into an order-taker) --
then it is justified to end that system. Yes, it is "coercion"
is dispossess the property owner -- but "coercion" exists only
for as long as they desire to exercise power over others. In
other words, it is not domination to remove domination! And
remember it is the domination that exists in coercion which
fuels our hatred of it, thus "coercion" to free ourselves from
domination is a necessary evil in order to stop far greater
evils occurring (as, for example, in the clear-cut case of the
oasis monopoliser).

Perhaps it will be argued that domination is only bad when it
is involuntary, which means that it is only the involuntary
nature of coercion that makes it bad, not the domination it
involves. By this argument wage slavery is not domination as
workers voluntarily agree to work for a capitalist (after all,
no one puts a gun to their heads) and any attempt to overthrow
capitalist domination is coercion and so wrong. However, this
argument ignores that fact that circumstances force workers to
sell their liberty and so violence on behalf of property
owners is not (usually) required -- market forces ensure that
physical force is purely "defensive" in nature. And as we
argued in section F.2.2, even Rothbard recognised that the
economic power associated with one class of people being
dispossessed and another empowered by this fact results in
relations of domination which cannot be considered "voluntary"
by any stretch of the imagination (although, of course,
Rothbard refuses to see the economic power associated with
capitalism -- when its capitalism, he cannot see the wood for
the trees -- and we are ignoring the fact that capitalism was
created by extensive use of coercion and violence -- see
section F.8).

Thus, "Natural law" and attempts to protect individuals
rights/liberty and see a world in which people are free to
shape their own lives are fatally flawed if they do not
recognise that private property is incompatible with these
goals. This is because the existence of capitalist property
smuggles in power and so domination (the restriction of
liberty, the conversion of some into order-givers and the many
into order-takers) and so Natural Law does not fulfil its
promise that each person is free to pursue their own goals.
The unqualified right of property will lead to the domination
and degradation of large numbers of people (as the oasis
monopoliser so graphically illustrates).

And we stress that anarchists have no desire to harm
individuals, only to change institutions. If a workplace is
taken over by its workers, the owners are not harmed
physically. If the oasis is taken from the monopoliser, the
ex-monopoliser becomes like other users of the oasis (although
probably disliked by others). Thus anarchists desire to treat
people as fairly as possible and not replace one form of
coercion and domination with another -- individuals must never
be treated as abstractions (if they have power over you,
destroy what creates the relation of domination, not the
individual, in other words! And if this power can be removed
without resorting to force, so much the better -- a point
which social and individualist anarchists disagree on, namely
whether capitalism can be reformed away or not comes directly
from this. As the Individualists think it can, they oppose the
use of force. Most social anarchists think it cannot, and so
support revolution).
This argument may be considered as "utilitarian" (the greatest
good for the greatest number) and so treats people not as
"ends in themselves" but as "means to an end". Thus, it could
be argued, "natural law" is required to ensure that all (as
opposed to some, or many, or the majority of) individuals are
free and have their rights protected.

However, it is clear that "natural law" can easily result in a
minority having their freedom and rights respected, while the
majority are forced by circumstances (created by the
rights/laws produced by applying "natural law" we must note)
to sell their liberty and rights in order to survive. If it is
wrong to treat anyone as a "means to an end", then it is
equally wrong to support a theory or economic system that
results in people having to negate themselves in order to
live. A respect for persons -- to treat them as ends and never
as means -- is not compatible with private property.

The simple fact is that there are no easy answers -- we need
to weight up our options and act on what we think is best.
Yes, such subjectivism lacks the "elegance" and simplicity of
"natural law" but it reflects real life and freedom far
better. All in all, we must always remember that what is
"good" for man need not be good for people. "Natural law"
fails to do this and stands condemned.

F.7.5 But Natural Law was discovered, not invented!

This statement truly shows the religious nature of the Natural
Law cult. To see why its notion of "discovery" is confused,
let us consider the Law of Gravity. Newton did not "discover"
the law of gravity, he invented a theory which explained
certain observed phenomena in the physical world. Later
Einstein updated Newton's theories in ways that allowed for a
better explanation of physical reality. Thus, unlike "Natural
Law," scientific laws can be updated and changed as our
knowledge changes and grows. As we have already noted,
however, "Natural Laws" cannot be updated because they are
derived from fixed definitions (Rothbard is pretty clear on
this, he states that it is "[v]ery true" that natural law is
"universal, fixed and immutable" and so are "'absolute'
principles of justice" and that they are "independent of time
and place" [The Ethics of Liberty, p. 19]). However, what he
fails to understand is that what the "Natural Law" cultists
are "discovering" are simply the implications of their own
definitions, which in turn simply reflect their own prejudices
and preferences.

Since "Natural Laws" are thus "unchanging" and are said to
have been "discovered" centuries ago, it's no wonder that many
of its followers look for support in socio-biology, claiming
that their "laws" are part of the genetic structure of
humanity. But socio-biology has dubious scientific credentials
for many of its claims. Also, it has authoritarian
implications exactly like Natural Law. Murray Bookchin rightly
characterises socio-biology as "suffocatingly rigid; it not
only impedes action with the autocracy of a genetic tyrant but
it closes the door to any action that is not biochemically
defined by its own configuration. When freedom is nothing more
than the recognition of necessity. . .we discover the gene's
tyranny over the greater totality of life. . .when knowledge
becomes dogma (and few movements are more dogmatic than
socio-biology) freedom is ultimately denied." ["Socio-biology
or Social Ecology", in Which way for the Ecology Movement? pp.
49 - 75, p. 60]

In conclusion the doctrine of Natural Law, far from supporting
individual freedom, is one of its greatest enemies. By
locating individual rights within "Man's Nature," it becomes
an unchanging set of dogmas. Do we really know enough about
humanity to say what are "Natural" and universal Laws,
applicable forever? Is it not a rejection of critical thinking
and thus individual freedom to do so?

F.7.6 Why is the notion of "discovery" contradictory?

Ayn Rand indicates the illogical and contradictory nature of
the concepts of "discovering" "natural law" and the "natural
rights" this "discovery" argument creates when she stated that
her theory was "objective." Her "Objectivist" political theory
"holds that good is neither an attribute of 'things in
themselves' nor man's emotional state, but an evaluation of
the facts of reality by man's consciousness according to a
rational standard of value. . . The objective theory holds
that the good is an aspect of reality in relation to man - and
that it must be discovered, not invented, by man."
[Capitalism: The Unknown Ideal, p. 22]

However, this is playing with words. If something is
"discovered" then it has always been there and so is an
intrinsic part of it. If "good" is "discovered" by "man" then
"good" exists independently of people -- it is waiting to be
"discovered." In other words, "good" is an attribute of "man
as man," of "things in themselves" (in addition, such a theory
also implies that there is just one possible interpretation of
what is "good" for all humanity). This can be seen when Rand
talks about her system of "objective" values and rights.

When discussing the difference between "subjective,"
"intrinsic" and "objective" values Rand noted that "intrinsic"
and "subjective" theories "make it possible for a man to
believe what is good is independent of man's mind and can be
achieved by physical force." [Op. Cit., p. 22] In other words,
intrinsic and subjective values justify tyranny. However, her
"objective" values are placed squarely in "Man's Nature" --
she states that "[i]ndividual rights are the means of
subordinating society to moral law" and that "the source of
man's rights is man's nature." [Op. Cit., p. 320, p. 322]

She argues that the "intrinsic theory holds that the good is
inherent in certain things or actions, as such, regardless of
their context and consequences, regardless of any benefit or
injury they may cause to the actors and subjects involved."
[Op. Cit., p. 21] According to the Concise Oxford Dictionary,
"intrinsic" is defined as "inherent," "essential," "belonging
naturally" and defines "nature" as "a thing's, or person's,
innate or essential qualities or character." In other words,
if, as Rand maintains, man's rights are the product of "man's
nature" then such rights are intrinsic! And if, as Rand
maintains, such rights are the "extension of morality into the
social system" then morality itself is also intrinsic.

Again, her ideology fails to meet its own tests -- and opens
the way for tyranny. This can be seen by her whole hearted
support for wage slavery and her total lack of concern how it,
and concentrations of wealth and power, affect the individuals
subjected to them. For, after all, what is "good" is
"inherent" in capitalism, regardless of the context,
consequences, benefits or injuries it may cause to the actors
and subjects involved.

The key to understanding her contradictory and illogical
ideology lies in her contradictory use of the word "man."
Sometimes she uses it to describe individuals but usually it
is used to describe the human race collectively ("man's
nature," "man's consciousness"). But "Man" does not have a
consciousness, only individuals do. Man is an abstraction, it
is individuals who live and think, not "Man." Such "Man
worship" -- like Natural Law -- has all the markings of a
religion.

As Max Stirner argues "liberalism is a religion because it
separates my essence from me and sets it above me, because it
exalts 'Man' to the same extent as any other religion does to
God. . . it sets me beneath Man." [The Ego and Its Own, p.
176] Indeed, he "who is infatuated with Man leaves persons out
of account so far as that infatuation extends, and floats in
an ideal, sacred interest. Man, you see, is not a person, but
an ideal, a spook." [Op. Cit., p.79]

Rand argues that we must evaluate "the facts of reality by
man's consciousness according to a rational standard of value"
but who determines that value? She states that "[v]alues are
not determined by fiat nor by majority vote" [p. 24] but,
however, neither can they be determined by "man" or "man's
consciousness" because "man" does not exist. Individuals exist
and have consciousness and because they are unique have
different values (but as we argued in section A.2.19, being
social creatures these values are generalised across
individuals into social, i.e. objective, values). So, the
abstraction "man" does not exist and because of this we see
the healthy sight of different individuals convincing others
of their ideas and theories by discussion, presenting facts
and rational debate. This can be best seen in scientific
debate.

The aim of the scientific method is to invent theories that
explain facts, the theories are not part of the facts but
created by the individual's mind in order to explain those
facts. Such scientific "laws" can and do change in light of
new information and new thought. In other words, the
scientific method is the creation of subjective theories that
explain the objective facts. Rand's method is the opposite -
she assumes "man's nature," "discovers" what is "good" from
those assumptions and draws her theories by deduction from
that. This is the exact opposite of the scientific method and,
as we noted above, comes to us straight from the Roman
Catholic church.

It is the subjective revolt by individuals against what is
considered "objective" fact or "common sense" which creates
progress and develops ethics (what is considered "good" and
"right") and society. This, in turn, becomes "accepted fact"
until the next free thinker comes along and changes how we
view the world by presenting new evidence, re-evaluating old
ideas and facts or exposing the evil effects associated with
certain ideas (and the social relationships they reflect) by
argument, fact and passion. Attempts to impose "an evaluation
of the facts of reality by man's consciousness" would be a
death blow to this process of critical thought, development
and evaluation of the facts of reality by individual's
consciousness. Human thought would be subsumed by dogma.

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