Remembering what Ayn Rand was like


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(Note from MSK, begging Phil's pardon): This post and the rest of the thread was split off from one started by Roger Bissell in Aesthetics called "A Critical Note on the Boeckmann Transcript (2000).") Since the subject of some of the posts overlapped, I repeated the pertinent ones under my own name on that thread, identifying the poster. (I deleted the posts relative to splitting the thread, with thanks to Marsha Enright for providing a suggestion for the split point, leading to the solution.)

I had a chance to listen to the -unedited- tapes of fiction writing and non-fiction writing (much longer than the tapes which were eventually sold) when I lived in NYC. I listened to them in their entirety, start to finish over the course of many months. (Allan Blumenthal if I recall had loaned them to several people and I was allowed to join in listening to them once a week).

What struck me was that editing destroyed lots of little asides and witticisms and insights and tangents on many other issues. When Ayn Rand 'rambled' a bit, she was always illuminating and interesting. It was a great loss to cut -any- of it. She didn't just talk about the weather. You learned how a great mind worked, which to me is at least as valuable as the insights on FW or NFW. (Especially since a number of the insights she has on FW and NFW are not unique to her and can be found in other books on this subject.)

Besides, if you are going to sell the edited form in a book, then the taped form you sell should be -different-, i.e., completely unedited with the explanation attached that if you want writing in a nutshell, get the book, if you want Rand on many things and interactive, get the tapes.

Listening to those tapes, with not a single word changed, was one of the great experiences of my life to that point.

[Also, I find it hard to remember her getting angry at anyone...she was always relaxed and calm and gentle and supportive in those sessions, sort of the ideal teacher, if I recall correctly... another reason to hear the tapes in original form.]

Phil

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Phil writes:

Also, I find it hard to remember her getting angry at anyone...she was always relaxed and calm and gentle and supportive in those sessions, sort of the ideal teacher, if I recall correctly... another reason to hear the tapes in original form.

Phil, Barbara, in her book, if I recall correctly, tells a story about an incident where Rand got angry during the FW class. The incident had to do with Rand giving the class a story to read and asking the class to comment. The class was highly critical of the story, not knowing it was actually one her own early stories. I think it was the light-hearted O'Henryish story about a somewhat staged kidnapping. Rand felt the criticism was misplaced and became angry.

As I recall, when I heard the somewhat-edited tapes, there was reference to this incident, but it was in the form of a calm discussion during the NEXT meeting of what mistakes had been made by the classmembers in the previous meeting. Do you recall this? Just wondering.

Thanks for your comments about the unedited tapes, by the way. I am jealous of you!

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John, I don't remember it. But that may be because if someone gets angry or yells at someone and then it's over soon or a momentary flash in the pan, I tend not to attach much importance to it. People have emotions and they get mad. As a teacher, every once in a while I'm likely to say "goddammit, whatsamatta with you" or "pay attention dammit"...or raise my voice. No big deal. I think emotional volatility is ok. [i know we are too often horrified at this in this WASP culture.] Have you ever raised your voice, etc. with your children?

I don't know if I've ever had a friend or girlfriend who never said "Phil Coates you are a f**** idiot."

(Please don't make the obvious comeback.)

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Have you ever raised your voice, etc. with your children?

That would be a yes, Phil. I have raised my voice with pickpockets, children, dogs, and even cats. I wasn't trying to be critical of Rand. I was just asking out of nosy curiosity. I do think with Rand the anger flashed on and then vanished off a lot of the time. I admire this ability. I can only do that when I'm acting. If I actually get really angry, I tend to stay that way for a while until I "simmer down."

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I thought the story the class read and negatively criticized (on the grounds that its philosophy was off or something like that) was one of Rand's stories, like "The Simplest Thing In The World."

I agree with Phil - and this is part of what I meant about the emptiness of the FW book - even in the somewhat edited tapes I listened to, Rand made many fascinating and valuable comments about the fiction they discussed. She had *first hand* emotional/intellectual experiences with a work and analyzed her responses without preconceived ideas and moral judgments - which allowed her to have the kind of unique and brilliant insights she did. You could hear this in her discussions on the tapes. There was no "this is a good work because it is philosophically correct" kind of stuff. She even analyzed a novel of pulp fiction!

Also, her manner was very kind and patient - excellent teaching manner, despite all kinds of questions one could get impatient with. It gave quite a different picture of her than the kind of volatile anger and quick moral judgments I saw sometimes at Ford Hall Forum, or even in person.

Marsha

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Marsha:

Also, her manner [in the FW seminar] was very kind and patient - excellent teaching manner, despite all kinds of questions one could get impatient with.  It gave quite a different picture of her than the kind of volatile anger and quick moral judgments I saw sometimes at Ford Hall Forum, or even in person.

In general, judging from Larry's report and those of others who were there, the same was true of the epistemology seminars. Those of course were also significantly longer than the material included in the book. The full transcripts exist, so I'm told by Lee Pierson, who read some sections of them. Maybe eventually those will appear in an extended book form.

Ellen

PS: John, I think part of the difference between people whose anger comes and goes quickly and those who are slow to ignite but then slow to cool down is a temperamental difference. I'm pretty much in the former category, whereas Larry is pretty much in the latter.

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A difference between the seminars (on writing and on epistemology) and circumstances such as the Ford Hall Forum and lectures involving Q and A is that in the former she was dealing with a hand-picked, previously vetted group, all the members of which could be presumed to consider being there a privilege. Nonetheless, there was the occasional sticky wicket, at least in the epistemology seminar, direct reports of which I've heard. One of those was with Larry when he first started attending (he joined the group a few sessions into the sequence). He was introduced to her by Leonard Peikoff -- they were talking privately, before people had taken their seats -- as a physics graduate student who had had a role in helping Leonard during what was called "the Putsch at Poly [brooklyn Polytechnic]" (there'd been one of those incidents, common in those years, of students trying to take over academic offices, etc.). She complimented Larry for his role in that episode. Then she said something about the difficulties pursuing a career in physics because of the intellectual corruption of modern physics. According to Larry's report, she appeared to be expecting affirmation, but he said something about not being so sure of physics being "corrupted." A reply which brought a frown to her face. He backed out of this -- he wasn't eager to be shown the door -- with a mollifying remark along the lines of, well, just because he wasn't sure something was occurring didn't necessarily mean it wasn't. Incident smoothed over. Hearing this tale and similar ones -- including ones said by a friend of John Hospers to have occurred with John in the days when he'd been seeing her regularly -- confirmed my feeling that it wouldn't have gone well if I'd been in circumstances of extended conversation with AR, since I'd have been inclined to stick by my guns and not smooth it over.

Ellen

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Fascinating story and quite revealing! I hope you have many more of those stories, I can't get enough of them.

Hearing this tale and similar ones -- including ones said by a friend of John Hospers to have occurred with John in the days when he'd been seeing her regularly -- confirmed my feeling that it wouldn't have gone well if I'd been in circumstances of extended conversation with AR, since I'd have been inclined to stick by my guns and not smooth it over.

I think my reaction would have been the same as yours.

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Glad you like my little stories, Dragonfly.

Here's a brief comment I've been thinking of making for the last couple days, but I wasn't sure where to make it. Maybe this thread will do, since the section heading is "aesthetics." It's an incident I've been thinking of in regard to your remark about the old woman in one of the Dutch masters paintings, and your liking that so much better than all the heroic-poses stuff O'ism-influenced people produce. I have the same reaction -- and I think that she would have had also. A snippet of evidence was her being irritated when Allan Gotthelf and Harry Binswanger, in a small mimeographed magazine they were editing in their student days (I'm not recalling the magazine's name), wrote a review of "The Sound of Music," extolling it for its "benevolent" sense of life. AR objected in such strenuous terms, they published a retraction! She didn't like what she saw as the "soppy" sentiments of the movie. (I don't recall her exact words; someplace I think we have them, but where?)

Possibly someone else has a reference to this story?

Ellen

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BTW, I love "The Sound of Music," despite its unrealism. (E.g., as my husband's thesis advisor -- who left Austria when the Nazis were coming to power -- commented, "The very idea that they could have sung their way out of the circumstances." He had other comments as well; he shared AR's dislike of the movie.) Plus, I set no store on the "benevolent"-"malevolent" business in any case. But the story (along with others -- I'd expect the FW seminar was full of them) indicates that her artistic responses were more complex than sometimes her admirers have thought they'd be.

Ellen

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Marsha, yes, the short story was "Good Copy," by AR. It appears in "The Early AR". Barbara discusses the incident on p 278 of "The Passion of AR".

Ellen, yes, I'm willing to believe temperamental differences are at play in the fast-fuse vs. slow-fuse aspect of anger. The magazine at MIT was ERGO.

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John:

The magazine at MIT was ERGO.

But is that the one Allan Gotthelf and Harry Binswanger wrote in? I thought they had a separte one of their own editing. ERGO, at least for a time, was edited by Erich Vehyl, who I believe was going to school at Harvard (that's what his affiliation was given as in the list of auditors for the epistemology seminar). I vaguely recall there being some kind of philosophic battle between Erich and others at ERGO; don't remember what it was about, and if it was an issue of who was going to control the magazine.

A detail about the epistemology seminars: Although participants were styled as "Prof [letter]," only a few of them could correctly have been described as "profs" at the time (Nelson, Peikoff, Walsh); most were graduate students.

Ellen

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John,

I remember this episode from when I read PAR in Brazil right after it came out. One of the very first things I read in The Early Ayn Rand when it came out was "Good Copy." I wanted to see if it was a great story or not. My own evaluation of the story was similar to Barbara's back then. It probably still it. I might reread it now.

There was a writer of more contemporary fiction, private eye stuff actually, who wrote a series with the kind of character Rand created with "Good Copy." The sense of life of the characters always struck me as very, very similar. And he did it with extreme talent (much more polish than Rand had back when she wrote her story) - Lawrence Sanders with his Archibald McNally series. Also, Sanders created Joshua Bigg in The Tenth Commandment. This little guy is probably one of the most charming and just plain nice private eyes ever created.

I have always wondered if Sanders was influenced by Rand in any way. I wonder if he knew her. I don't imagine that he had read that story, but New York can be a very small town in the publishing world.

Anyway, I have not heard the CD now sold of the fiction writing course, but I would place good money on the "Good Copy" episode being airbrushed out.

Michael

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Ellen, now that you mention it, did they have a magazine named I-rect or something like that? I never actually saw it, but I heard of something like that.

Michael, I think there's a reason she didn't publish Good Copy while she was alive. But probably as early work it held a special place in her memories.

John

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John, there was something I heard of but never saw called "The IREC Review". I don't know who put it out. Two pennies for guessing what the four letters stand for in less than 15 seconds....

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Ellen,

Hi! Good to 'see' you again after all these years.

Regarding Rand's behavior in public and in these private lessons, I do think she tended to be more on the defensive - or offensive, as one might see it - in public where she thought she might be more easily under attack.

Hey, were you listening the time Rand got mad at me and told me I should leave Frank alone? I had been waiting to talk to her during a break at one of those lectures in the '70's (Peikoff or Blumenthal, I don't remember), so I was making conversation with Frank about his painting. He was clearly infirm at that time, aphasic and had difficulty expressing himself. She kept throwing me dagger glances until she finally said in a stern voice to leave him alone, that I shouldn't bother him about Objectivism (which I hadn't), he was just her husband or something like that (John remembers the dialogue better than I!).

So I went away, realizing that she didn't understand what I had been saying to him, and that she was being protective, given his infirmity.

Did I ever tell you that she sought me out at the next break in the lecture and said, in her heavy Russian accent, "Please, dahling, forgive me. I didn't know what you were talking about!"?

Here, I was just some kid she didn't know- but she had done me wrong (obviously Frank had straightened her out), so *she* found *me* to apologize! No standing on ceremony there, or making anything of her position of fame and achievement. I was impressed.

Marsha

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Marsha,

I had a similar experience with her at one of those lectures, but in this case I had actually been rude or obnoxious with her. She took me aside and quietly, gently pointed out where she disagreed with an esthetic position I took...but without mentioning my rudeness or embarassing me. It occurred to me how few people I knew would do this, Objectivist or not.

Phil

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Marsha:

Ellen,

Hi!  Good to 'see' you again after all these years.

Going on for six years. Last we saw you two in person was at the Vancouver TOC Summer Seminar in 2000.

Hey, were you listening the time Rand got mad at me and told me I should leave Frank alone?  I had been waiting to talk to her during a break at one of those lectures in the '70's (Peikoff or Blumenthal, I don't remember), so I was making conversation with Frank about his painting.  He was clearly infirm at that time, aphasic and had difficulty expressing himself.  She kept throwing me dagger glances until she finally said in a stern voice to leave him alone, that I shouldn't bother him about Objectivism (which I hadn't), he was just her husband or something like that (John remembers the dialogue better than I!).

I heard part of that. I think it was during a course LP was giving which was a year or so later than Allan's music course, but I'm not sure which of the two it was. She used a stronger word than "bother." Maybe it was "pester." She sounded as if she thought you were being aggressive in trying to get information from Frank.

I recall your telling how she sought you out the next time and apologized.

In regard to her protectiveness of Frank, something which struck me as poignant and as so indicitive of her feelings toward him was on the Phil Donahue show -- I gather it was the second time she appeared there; I didn't see the first time. Frank had died not long before, and Phil Donahue asked her something about if it didn't tempt her to think of Frank in heaven now. She said that she'd asked herself about this, and that (from memory, probably not exact): "If I thought he were standing someplace now, in front of St. Peter, I would kill myself to be there to tell him how good Frank was."

I was heartwrenched by her loving protectiveness, but at the same time I thought: How unconsciously arrogant!, the presumption that (a) St. Peter couldn't discern Frank's goodness without her help; and (B) that Frank himself wouldn't be able to convince on his own.

Re your comment in another post:

I think she often did takes on how honest and sincere a person was, in the way she treated them.

I think so too. If a person came across a certain way, she would be very benevolent in her treatment. That's why, for instance, I was glad it was that girl Julie who was going to ask the Beethoven question. (I told the story on an earlier thread, I think the one about the AR Questions book.) Julie had (in abundance) just that quality of open innocent questioning which I thought AR would warm to.

She could change her judgment from one time to the next, though, sometimes without apparent carry-over.

Ellen

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>If a person came across a certain way, she would be very benevolent in her treatment...She could change her judgment from one time to the next, though, sometimes without apparent carry-over.

Everyone responds to people based on the attitude they see in front of them: hostile, interrupting, or insensitive begets a negative or angry or contemptuous response; smiling, friendly, respectful, listening begets a very different response. I don't have a problem with this aspect of Rand's behavior. Someone can behave arrogantly or inappropriately and get a negative or abrupt or scowling response from me one time and a different one when their tone or attitude are different.

And, within certain muted or broad limits, they should get that kind of response or feedback. (I would say, though, if you are a role model or someone's hero and you know you are dealing with a socially inept or young or brash subculture, you might take that into account and try to be gentle with them - which she seems to have tried to be. Not always, but there is no perfection in this kind of thing - it's all very instantaneous and spur of the moment.)

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Phil:

Everyone responds to people based on the attitude they see in front of them: hostile, interrupting, or insensitive begets a negative or angry or contemptuous response; smiling, friendly, respectful, listening begets a very different response.  I don't have a problem with this aspect of Rand's behavior.  Someone can behave arrogantly or inappropriately and get a negative or abrupt or scowling response from me one time and a different one when their tone or attitude are different.

That's not quite the same issue I was meaning, Phil. Marsha wrote that she thinks Rand "often did takes on how honest and sincere a person was, in the way she treated them." This isn't an issue just of responding in terms of an attitude someone is conveying at a particular time; it's one of making an overall judgment of character, concluding on the basis of a particular instance more than there's been enough information provided yet to conclude. And then maybe coming to the opposite conclusion about the same person on a later occasion on the basis of how the person presents then.

The context we were talking in was that of people she'd encounter in lecture circumstances. But I've heard some reports from people who knew her well that the same sort of thing would occur in long-standing relationships, as if the "credit" which people would (reasonably) expect would have been built up in her eyes wouldn't carry over. You'd be praised by her one time but then accused of harboring a flaw in your soul on the next occasion you acted in a way or expressed an opinion she didn't like.

Ellen

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(Note from MSK, begging Dragonfly's pardon. Dragonfly's post below was part of several posts devoted to discussing the split of the thread, but the OL plug is so flattering that I am shamelessly leaving it up. The quote below is from a post of mine that was deleted.)

Phil - This is a freeware program with the limitations of that. After things grow, we will get a programmer and make things better. That is in the plans. Until then, sorry for the inconvenience. It is not intentional and it is the best we can manage right now.

Oh no, groan...not a new program! This is the best program I know! It's at least much better than the Solo site (not to mention content of course...), which I find one of the most confusing and chaotic sites I know. When I for example look at "recent" posts, they promise me posts written a few minutes ago, and when I look, the latest post is from the day before, there aren't any new posts, etc. Then I have to look for the latest message below, and the next time the first one is the latest, it's a mess!

In contrast, I find this site very well organized, and it looks good. It's clean and simple. You see at a single glance where the new posts are (the yellow map), and if you want you can also get notices by email (I disabled that, as I seldom read the account I use for that). Formatting the text is also very easy on this site, you don't have to write the codes yourself as in many other sites. Please don't change it!

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