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Wednesday, September 21, 2005 - 1:09pmSanction this postReply
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We are not impressed.

At most Sunwall makes three points:

1. Rand and Averroes show some broad, college-freshman similarities, both having learned from Aristotle.
2. Rand was not much of a scholar.  This freed her up for more important jobs and gave future generations of Objectivists something to do.  Her "Aquinas" conflates a lot of historical details that Copleston was up on and she wasn't.
3. Any two philosophers working centuries apart will show a lot of differences.

He's trying way too hard.

Peter


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Wednesday, September 21, 2005 - 4:56pmSanction this postReply
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"2. Rand was not much of a scholar. This freed her up for more important jobs and gave future generations of Objectivists something to do."

Great point, Peter. I wish more of the current generation would get on with the jobs she left for them, instead of wasting their lives bitching with each other.

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Friday, September 23, 2005 - 9:18amSanction this postReply
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Contrary to the introduction for this thread, Sunwall explicitly states that Rand was Thomist rather than Averroist to the extent that she could be described as either.  Here is the conclusion to Sunwall's article (with my emphasis):
The above "family resemblances" between Randianism and Averroism, like the bold brush strokes on a Cezanne canvas, are doomed to break down when transferred to the Pointillist medium of exact comparison. The thought of Ayn Rand and the philosophical movement intitiated by the commentaries of Ibn Rushd do exhibit some similarities as radical, immanent, and integral Aristotelianism. However, it should be clear that the second A of Rand's self-classification must remain Aquinas rather than Averroës as I have rather fancifully hypothesized. This exercise in trying to get a more exact classification of Rand's philosophy should none the less alert us to the dangers of conflating libertarian ideology with Aristotelian philosophy. There are as many kinds of Aristotelianism as there are libertarianism. The convergences and divergences among these must be worked out on a case by case basis.
In the end I have to wonder what the point of the article was.  Just more proof I suppose that academic credentials are not the end-all and be-all of philosophical genius.

Andy


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