Taylor, Joan Kennedy,
431n. 59
taxation,
263–64
, 319, 322,
345
,
349
,
441n. 28
technology,
320–22
terrorism,
318
Thales,
121
theater,
417n. 24
thinking.
See
consciousness
Think Twice
(Rand),
417n. 24
Thorslev, Peter L.,
15
,
405nn. 42
,
44
,
46
thought.
See
ideas
Thus Spake Zarathustra
(Nietzsche),
414n. 38
,
416n. 8
,
418n. 40
Toffler, Alvin,
350
Tolstaya, Tatyana,
23
Torres, Louis,
418n. 30
Total Freedom: Toward a Dialectical Libertarianism
(Sciabarra), xi, xii
totalitarianism.
See also
authoritarianism
authoritarianism and,
12–13
,
452n. 53
communism and, 88–89,
94
Objectivism and,
353–55
“The Only Path to Tomorrow” (Rand) and,
105–6
sex and,
37
statism and, 37–38
unity and,
29
Tracinski, Robert,
402n. 5
transcendence,
15–16
,
25–26
,
32
, 50, 119, 148–49, 220–21,
228–29
.
See also
integration; synthesis
Trebesnul, N. A.,
378
truth
epistemology and,
145
intuition and,
34
language and, 291
Objectivism and,
428n. 55
philosophy and,
116
Russian philosophy and,
25
,
26
,
28–29
Tuccille, Jerome,
421n. 6
Tucker, Benjamin,
260
Turgenev, Ivan Sergeevich,
66
“Types of Worldviews” (Lossky),
370
,
396
The Unconquered
(Rand),
417n. 24
unintended consequences,
208–9
,
210–11
,
213–14
United Nations,
451n. 49
unity.
See also
organicism
collectivism and,
37–38
epistemology and, 117
history and,
372–73
in ideal-realism,
34
language and,
294–96
literature and,
197
love and,
239
Marxism and,
37–38
sex and,
32
sobornost’
and,
26
,
37
,
352–53
,
355
statism and,
37–38
totalitarianism and,
29
Val’dgauer, O. F.,
371–72
values
abstraction and,
99–100
art and,
191–92
articulation and,
200
context and,
221–22
definition of, 221–22, 228
epistemology and,
221–22
,
226–27
freedom and,
99–100
happiness and,
240–43
life and,
221–27
productive work as,
240–41
rationality and,
240–42
reason as,
228
religion and,
97
society and,
357
totalitarianism and,
13
unity and,
228
volition and, 224–27
Veatch, Henry,
240
Vilga, Helena Posener,
412n. 11
Vinogradsky, Sergei Nikolaevich,
371
The Virtue of Selfishness
(Rand),
110
,
111
,
235
,
264
visibility,
238–40
Vladimir of Kiev,
409n. 6
The Voice of Reason
(Rand),
111
volition.
See also
autonomy; freedom
articulation and,
200
causality and,
137
as concept,
132
consciousness and,
131
,
137
,
152–54
,
165
,
182
, 201,
252
dialectics and,
16
epistemology and,
152–54
,
161
,
252
ethics and,
224–27
focus and,
152–54
history and,
9–10
, 16
humankind and,
137
life and,
224–27
measurement and,
161
ontology and,
137
, 165
perception and,
154
philosophy and,
201
rationality and,
228
science and,
426n. 24
senses and,
154
sex and,
187–88
values and,
224–27
Volsky, Stanislav,
32–33
Vvedenksy, Aleksandr Ivanovich,
40
,
78
,
81
,
365
, 366, 369,
459n. 6
,
460n. 8
Wallace, George,
330
Walsh, George,
7
,
139
,
139
,
140–41
,
443n. 52
,
448n. 77
Ward, James,
409n. 12
Weber, Max,
435
.
See also
Rand, Ayn, Weberian view of politics
Weidle, Vladimir Vasilyevich,
414n. 35
Weinstein, James,
311
welfare,
259–60
,
265
,
314
,
315–16
,
318
,
329
,
345
We the Living
(film),
417n. 17
We the Living
(Rand)
altruism and,
96–97
as autobiographical,
37–38
,
390
,
393
,
414n. 37
,
463n. 4
,
464n. 7
, 468n. 111
education in,
73
egalitarianism and,
95–96
ethics in,
230
Lossky and,
388–90
,
393
,
468n. 111
Petrograd in,
68
privacy and,
98
purges in,
86–87
statism and,
97–98
, 118,
416n. 71
What is to be done?
(Chernyshevsky),
27
“Who Is Ayn Rand” (Branden),
384
,
395
Who Is Ayn Rand
(Branden and Branden),
395
Widmer, Kingsley,
353
Wilson, Woodrow,
315–16
The World as an Organic Whole
(Lossky),
40
,
42
,
53–54
The World as a Whole
(Strakhov),
27
Wright, Frank Lloyd,
418n. 33
writing.
See also
literature
early years of,
91–92
journals,
78–79
,
91
,
96
,
97
,
98–100
,
418n. 27
,
461n. 19
Wrong, Dennis,
251
Wundt, Wilhelm,
40
You Came Along
(Rand),
106
Zamiatin, Evgeny Ivanovich,
37
,
86
,
104
Zelinsky, Faddei Frantsevich,
371
,
459n. 7
Zemstvo Gymnasium,
382
Zenkovsky, Nicolas,
373
,
411n. 30
,
415n. 55
Zernova, T. Z.,
363
the zero, reification of.
See
reification, of the zero
Zielinsky, Faddei Frantsevich,
77
ILLUSTRATIONS
FIG
. 1 Nicholas Onufrievich Lossky (1870–1965), Ayn Rand’s philosophy teacher at Petrograd University. Photo taken in the United States, 1950. (Courtesy of Boris Lossky)
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FIG
. 2 The Peter and Paul Fortress, St. Petersburg. In 1924, Ayn Rand lectured tourists on the fortress’s history. (Courtesy of Boris Lossky)
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FIG
. 3 Nathaniel and Barbara Branden at their wedding, 1953. (Courtesy of Nathaniel Branden)