| | Robert Campbell notes: "Mike at Passing Thoughts is continuing his defense of the Ayn Rand Institute and its ways. See http://passingthoughts.blogsome.com/2005/10/08/blog-wars/#comments
"His previous blog entry applied the epithet 'arbitrary gibberish' to the entire contents of 6 1/2 annual volumes of the Journal of Ayn Rand Studies. Then, in the comments section to the selfsame entry, he admitted to never having read a single article that has appeared in JARS."
One of the contributors to NoodleFood (Diana Hsieh's blog) was defending Peter Schwartz's lecture on Contextual Knowledge against my criticism of it by claiming that I wasn't fairly representing Schwartz, even though this person acknowledged that he hadn't actually heard Schwartz's lecture. Of course, that wasn't necessary, since he "knew" that since Schwartz was a principal of ARI, whatever Schwartz said ~must~ be correct and anyone who would dare to criticize it, incorrect.
As for the "arbitrary gibberish" comment, ARI groupies are fond of substituting epithets and hyperbole for rational argument. When I was allowed to post comments on Diana's blog, I made some remarks in defense of compatibilism. Diana quickly put a stop to any discussion of that, and later made the comment that compatibilism was "beyond stupid," while acknowledging that her husband had been a compatibilist until she persuaded him otherwise. Was he "beyond stupid" before he changed his mind? Then, as was noted previously, she had the following to say about Robert Campbell: "Based upon my own personal experience, describing Robert Campbell’s approach to ARI as 'malicious dishonesty' seems too kind." Mind you, Robert's "approach to ARI" is not just wrong, not just mistaken or misguided and not just immoral, but worse than "maliciously dishonest"! I guess that goes along with her "beyond stupid" remark. She also described Chris Wolf who wrote an article critical of Andrew Bernstein's conduct as a "raving lunatic." Do you detect a pattern here?
Robert quotes Mike at Passing Thoughts: "(1) The National Review is a destructive magazine. It actively attacks Objectivism and Ayn Rand, and it actively promotes the religious right. There have been valuable articles written in the National Review, yet somehow I don’t think calling NR a destructive force while conceding that it publishes the occasional insightful piece is a contradiction or problem. I wouldn’t be shocked if there have been some quality articles published in JARS. But that, in and of itself, doesn’t make JARS a worthwhile publication, and it doesn’t change the fact that, as a whole, JARS is a damaging force in Rand scholarship."
Robert comments: I'm curious to know whether there is ever a difference, for the members of ARI, between criticizing Rand's ideas and 'attacking' and 'destroying' them--or her."
This is so funny, because on Diana's blog, she claimed that defending compatibilism would "destroy" Objectivism. That certainly ascribes a lot of intellectual power and influence to an idea that, according to her, is "beyond stupid." It also betrays a rather low opinion of Objectivism's ability to withstand criticism. But that, apparently, is how the supporters of ARI view their philosophy - a weak and fragile system of ideas that is so precarious it is forever on the verge of collapse.
- Bill
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