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On Mar 17, 10:51*am, Frogwatch wrote:
I was talked into reading Ayn Rand's "Atlas Shrugged" recently and started it reluctantly. *In the past, I tried reading "The Fountainhead" and was bored stiff by it so never tried to read "Atlas Shrugged". *"Atlas" starts slow but does get better. In the book, Rand's protagonist is an engineer who builds a railroad and while she is riding on it for the first time, she looks at the motors on the locomotive and thinks of them as "morality cast in steel", a line that appeals to me. *Building something that is useful is truly meaningful which is why so many of us are driven to do so. Rand posits that it is sinful to have a purposeless life, something to which I can agree but so many people have not yet found a purpose. People who write software probably get the same good feeling when their code runs well. *Cabinet makers probably take pride in seeing their work used. *Artists take pride in seeing their work done. *It seems to be a human impulse to build things, to take raw materials from nature and make something distinctly human. *It is now clear to me why I build so many boats, campers, spectrometers (work), etc. However, this leaves me wondering how Jackson Pollock ever knew when one of his paintings was finished. I agree. There is nothing like sense of accomplishment. I don't understand how people who cannot, and won't do something for themselves are ever happy. Some people, no matter what the task, simply have someone do it for them. |
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