<http://www.nytimes.com/>  <http://www.nytimes.com/> The New York Times 
<http://www.nytimes.com/> 


http://graphics8.nytimes.com/ads/spacer.gif 
<http://www.nytimes.com/adx/bin/adx_click.html?type=goto&page=www.nytimes.com/printer-friendly&pos=Position1&camp=foxsearch2007-emailtools02d-nyt5-511278&ad=dej_button.gif&goto=http://www.foxsearchlight.com/thedarjeelinglimited/>
 




  _____  

September 15, 2007


Ayn Rand’s Literature of Capitalism 


By HARRIET RUBIN

One of the most influential business books ever written is a 1,200-page novel 
published 50 years ago, on Oct. 12, 1957. It is still drawing readers; it ranks 
388th on Amazon.com 
<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/news/business/companies/amazon_inc/index.html?inline=nyt-org>
 ’s best-seller list. (“Winning,” by John F. Welch Jr. 
<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/w/john_f_jr_welch/index.html?inline=nyt-per>
 , at a breezy 384 pages, is No. 1,431.) 

The book is “Atlas Shrugged,” Ayn Rand’s glorification of the right of 
individuals to live entirely for their own interest. 

For years, Rand’s message was attacked by intellectuals whom her circle labeled 
“do-gooders,” who argued that individuals should also work in the service of 
others. Her book was dismissed as an homage to greed. Gore Vidal 
<http://www.nytimes.com/books/01/07/01/specials/vidal.html?inline=nyt-per>  
described its philosophy as “nearly perfect in its immorality.”

But the book attracted a coterie of fans, some of them top corporate 
executives, who dared not speak of its impact except in private. When they read 
the book, often as college students, they now say, it gave form and substance 
to their inchoate thoughts, showing there is no conflict between private 
ambition and public benefit.

“I know from talking to a lot of Fortune 500 C.E.O.’s that ‘Atlas Shrugged’ has 
had a significant effect on their business decisions, even if they don’t agree 
with all of Ayn Rand’s ideas,” said John A. Allison, the chief executive of BB 
<http://www.nytimes.com/mem/MWredirect.html?MW=http://custom.marketwatch.com/custom/nyt-com/html-companyprofile.asp&symb=BBT>
 &T, one of the largest banks in the United States. 

“It offers something other books don’t: the principles that apply to business 
and to life in general. I would call it complete,” he said.

One of Rand’s most famous devotees is Alan Greenspan 
<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/g/alan_greenspan/index.html?inline=nyt-per>
 , the former chairman of the Federal Reserve, whose memoir, “The Age of 
Turbulence,” will be officially released Monday. 

Mr. Greenspan met Rand when he was 25 and working as an economic forecaster. 
She was already renowned as the author of “The Fountainhead,” a novel about an 
architect true to his principles. Mr. Greenspan had married a member of Rand’s 
inner circle, known as the Collective, that met every Saturday night in her New 
York apartment. Rand did not pay much attention to Mr. Greenspan until he began 
praising drafts of “Atlas,” which she read aloud to her disciples, according to 
Jeff Britting, the archivist of Ayn Rand’s papers. He was attracted, Mr. 
Britting said, to “her moral defense of capitalism.”

Rand’s free-market philosophy was hard won. She was born in 1905 in Russia. Her 
life changed overnight when the Bolsheviks broke into her father’s pharmacy and 
declared his livelihood the property of the state. She fled the Soviet Union in 
1926 and arrived later that year in Hollywood, where she peered through a gate 
at the set where the director Cecil B. DeMille was filming a silent movie, 
“King of Kings.”

He offered her a ride to the set, then a job as an extra on the film and later 
a position as a junior screenwriter. She sold several screenplays and 
intermittently wrote novels that were commercial failures, until 1943, when 
fans of “The Fountainhead” began a word-of-mouth campaign that helped sales 
immensely. 

Shortly after “Atlas Shrugged” was published in 1957, Mr. Greenspan wrote a 
letter to The New York Times to counter a critic’s comment that “the book was 
written out of hate.” Mr. Greenspan wrote: “ ‘Atlas Shrugged’ is a celebration 
of life and happiness. Justice is unrelenting. Creative individuals and 
undeviating purpose and rationality achieve joy and fulfillment. Parasites who 
persistently avoid either purpose or reason perish as they should.”

Rand’s magazine, The Objectivist, later published several essays by Mr. 
Greenspan, including one on the gold standard in 1966.

Rand called “Atlas” a mystery, “not about the murder of man’s body, but about 
the murder — and rebirth — of man’s spirit.” It begins in a time of recession. 
To save the economy, the hero, John Galt, calls for a strike against government 
interference. Factories, farms and shops shut down. Riots break out as food 
becomes scarce.

Rand said she “set out to show how desperately the world needs prime movers and 
how viciously it treats them” and to portray “what happens to a world without 
them.”

The book was released to terrible reviews. Critics faulted its length, its 
philosophy and its literary ambitions. Both conservatives and liberals were 
unstinting in disparaging the book; the right saw promotion of godlessness, and 
the left saw a message of “greed is good.” Rand is said to have cried every day 
as the reviews came out. 

Rand had a reputation for living for her own interest. She is said to have 
seduced her most serious reader, Nathaniel Branden, when he was 24 or 25 and 
she was at least 50. Each was married to someone else. In fact, Mr. Britting 
confirmed, they called their spouses to a meeting at which the pair announced 
their intention to make the mentor-protégé relationship a sexual one. 

“She wasn’t a nice person, ” said Darla Moore, vice president of the private 
investment firm Rainwater Inc. “But what a gift she’s given us.”

Ms. Moore, a benefactor of the University of South 
<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/organizations/u/university_of_south_carolina/index.html?inline=nyt-org>
  Carolina, spoke of her debt to Rand in 1998, when the business school at the 
university was named in Ms. Moore’s honor. “As a woman and a Southerner,” she 
said, “I thrived on Rand’s message that only quality work counted, not who you 
are.” 

Rand’s idea of “the virtue of selfishness,” Ms. Moore said, “is a harsh phrase 
for the Buddhist idea that you have to take care of yourself.”

Some business leaders might be unsettled by the idea that the only thing 
members of the leadership class have in common is their success. James M. 
Kilts, who led turnarounds at Gillette, Nabisco and Kraft, said he encountered 
“Atlas” at “a time in college life when everybody was a nihilist, 
anti-establishment, and a collectivist.” He found her writing reassuring 
because it made success seem rational.

“Rand believed that there is right and wrong,” he said, “that excellence should 
be your goal.”

John P. Stack is one business executive who has taken Rand’s ideas to heart. He 
was chief executive of Springfield Remanufacturing Company, a retooler of 
tractor engines in Springfield, Mo., when its parent company, International 
Harvester, divested itself of the firm in the recession of 1982, the year Rand 
died. 

Having lost his sole customer in a struggling Rust Belt city, Mr. Stack says, 
he took action like a hero out of “Atlas.” He created an “open book” company in 
which employees were transparently working in their own interest.

Mr. Stack says that he assigned every job a bottom line value and that every 
salary, including his own, was posted on a company ticker daily. Workplaces, he 
said, are notoriously undemocratic, emotionally charged and political.

Mr. Stack says his free market replaced all that with rational behavior. A 
machinist knew exactly what his working hour contributed to the bottom line, 
and therefore the cost of slacking off. This, Mr. Stack said, was a 
manifestation of the philosophy of objectivism in “Atlas”: people guided by 
reason and self-interest.

“There is something in your inner self that Rand draws out,” Mr. Stack said. 
“You want to be a hero, you want to be right, but by the same token you have to 
question yourself, though you must not listen to interference thrown at you by 
the distracters. The lawyers told me not to open the books and share equity.” 
He said he defied them. “ ‘Atlas’ helped me pursue this idiot dream that became 
SRC.”

Mr. Stack said he was 19 and working in a factory when a manager gave him a 
copy of the book. “It’s the best business book I ever read,” he said. “I didn’t 
do well in school because I was a big dreamer. To get something that tells you 
to take your dreams seriously, that’s an eye opener.”

Mr. Stack said he gave a copy to his son, Tim Stack, 25, who was so inspired 
that he went to work for a railroad, just like the novel’s heroine, Dagny 
Taggart.

Every year, 400,000 copies of Rand’s novels are offered free to Advanced 
Placement high school programs. They are paid for by the Ayn Rand Institute, 
whose director, Yaron Brook, said the mission was “to keep Rand alive.”

Last year, bookstores sold 150,000 copies of the book. It continues to hold 
appeal, even to a younger generation. Mark Cuban 
<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/c/mark_cuban/index.html?inline=nyt-per>
 , the owner of the Dallas Mavericks, who was born in 1958, and John P. Mackey 
<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/m/john_p_mackey/index.html?inline=nyt-per>
 , the chief executive of Whole Foods 
<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/news/business/companies/whole_foods_market_inc/index.html?inline=nyt-org>
 , who was 3 when the book was published, have said they consider Rand crucial 
to their success.

The book’s hero, John Galt, also continues to live on. The subcontractor hired 
to demolish the former Deutsche Bank building 
<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/subjects/d/deutsche_bank_building_130_liberty_street_nyc/index.html?inline=nyt-classifier>
 , which was damaged when the World Trade Center towers fell, was the John Galt 
Corporation. It was removed from the job last month after a fire at the 
building killed two firefighters.

In Chicago, there is John Galt Solutions, a producer of software for supply 
chain companies like Tastykake. The founder and chief executive of the company, 
Annemarie Omrod, said she considered the character an inspiration. 

“We were reading the book,” she said, when she and Kai Trepte were thinking of 
starting the company. “For us, the book symbolized the importance of growing 
yourself and bettering yourself without hindering other people. John Galt took 
all the great minds and started a new society.

“Some of our customers don’t know the name, though after they meet us, they 
want to read the book,” she went on. “Our sales reps have a problem, however. 
New clients usually ask: ‘Hey, where is John Galt? How come I’m not important 
enough to rate a visit from John Galt?’ ”

 

Copyright <http://www.nytimes.com/ref/membercenter/help/copyright.html>  2007 
The New York Times Company <http://www.nytco.com/> 

http://www.nytimes.com/2007/09/15/business/15atlas.html?ei=5088&en=8fc42c352603df91&ex=1347508800&partner=rssnyt&emc=rss&pagewanted=print



[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

Одговори путем е-поште