| | Hi Hong:
You didn't respond to my posts, so I am not sure what you thought of my hero description. Here are some of my reactions to your posts.
> you conveniently omitted those years of struggles, which at times were excruciatingly frustrating, agonizingly painful, and filled with despair and fear that I might eventually fail. It is not a matter of "right time, right place", it was pure brutal force hard work, with both mind and hands.
And I think that is commendable, to work so hard, and it speaks to many good qualities in you to endure that. But I don't think it *necessary* that someone has had a similar experience in order to achieve at the highest levels. I don't always think there is a period of "toughing it out," or "paying your dues" in a miserable "ends justifies the means' type of way. I had pangs about it when I was younger, because I knew that many of my classmates were working far harder than me and yet I performed at a higher level. When I won an opportunity to do my first year at Duke, there were certainly others who worked harder than me for it. I played on a softball team with one of the heads of surgery, and one night at his house, sitting out on his deck next to a firepit, having a beer, he was complimenting me on something I had done clinically, and I expressed thankfulness that I didn't have to endure the agony of the medical students on my team. He told me that he hadn't thought medical school was difficult, even the "brutal" residency years, because he was so excited about each new thing that happened. So for the first time (after many years of my dad wishing I had become a doctor) I saw that some people were just as excited about medicine as I was about language, that for them it was just as gratifying.
Just as I don't think hard work (even excruciating and agonizing work) is a *necessary* component for achieving hero status, I also don't think that flying through things with ease is necessary. The key to me is what it gets you. If you have to work hard for joy, then do it. If it comes more easily, relish it. What is absolutely necessary to be a hero is that a person is thrilled with his own life.
>I'd choose to work with a "bitter, lonely, rude, dull, yet brilliant workaholic" any time over some happy-go-lucky mediocres
Yes, sure, but this wasn't the choice MIchael offered. He said:
>bitter, lonely, rude, dull, yet brilliant workaholic or joyfully successful person in the art of living.
Being "joyfully successful" isn't the same thing as being a "happy-go-lucky mediocre," that's your spin. As I said before, I think there might be "bitter, lonely, rude, dull, yet brilliant workaholics" who may have done some really amazing work, but I would not elevate them to the stature of "hero" because however intelligent and driven, they are not living in a way that brings them satisfaction. If a person is a brilliant worker but it does not bring him happiness, who is he working for?
>Which of the following would describe them better if they were in real life:
I think that your second option describes them more accurately (with the possible exception of Cameron). Although Rand's characters are not the most fully developed beings, they also enjoyed their lives. Of the things I can recall about Howard Roark, some of the most significant descriptions that come to me are of him standing on a cliff's edge diving into water, lying beside the water, enjoying the feeling of grass against his fingers, walking through the woods, hiding out making love to Dominique. In Galt's Gulch you don't read about a bunch of nuts hanging out working feverishly - they are enjoying all the richness of life.
>Actually, this description would fit our last week's seminar speaker to a tee. But his talk on the origin of life was so bloody brilliant, I was completely blown away. I immediately forgave all his annoy habits. Whether he has a great sex life or friendship is really of no concern of me
But is this person one of your heroes?
>Gosh, Michael, look at what you wrote here. What a rosy picture!
Shouldn't any description of (an Objectivist) life be a rosy picture? What other kind of life is worth living? If you said that you had gone through so much hard work, achieved all that you have, and then that you were actually quite miserable at this point, I would find no value in that. What I find value in is that you did go through it and now you post here and have a nice life with a nice husband and a nice kid who listens to Mozart in the car with you. I don't know very much about you but the assumption I make until I am informed (or conclude on my own) about others (Objectivists particularly) is that they are leading way-better-than-average lives. (Edited by Ashley Frazier on 2/04, 6:56pm)
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