Rating: Not rated
Tags: Objectivism, Lang:en
Summary
In the tumultuous late 60s and early
70s, a social movement known as the "New Left" emerged as a
major cultural influence, especially on the youth of America.
It was a movement that embraced "flower-power" and psychedelic
"consciousness-expansion, " that lionized Ho Chi Minh and Fidel
Castro and launched the Black Panthers and the Theater of the
Absurd. In "Return Of The Primitive" (originally published in
1971 as "The New Left" ), Ayn Rand, bestselling novelist and
originator of the theory of Objectivism, identified the
intellectual roots of this movement. She urged people to
repudiate its mindless nihilism and to uphold, instead, a
philosophy of reason, individualism, capitalism, and
technological progress. Editor Peter Schwartz, in this new,
expanded version of "The New Left," has reorganized Rand's
essays and added some of his own in order to underscore the
continuing relevance of her analysis of that period. He
examines such current ideologies as environmentalism and
multiculturalism and argues that the same primitive, tribalist,
"anti-industrial" mentality which animated the New Left a
generation ago is shaping society today.