Tag Archives: speaker

Lecture: Passing Judgement – Ayn Rand’s View of Justice

In the past 2 weeks, we have discussed Ayn Rand’s view of selfishness and read an introduction to Objectivist Ethics. At the next meeting on October 7th at our usual time & place – 1042 DH, 7:30 pm instead of reading essays, we will watch a 30 minute lecture by Tara Smith followed by 30 minute Q&A session if there is an interest. We will of course be having our own discussion as well.
Summary

It is commonly believed that to be a just person, one who treats others fairly, one must be selfless. Ayn Rand demonstrated that nothing could be further from the truth. She held that justice is a selfish virtue.

In this talk, Dr. Smith, professor of philosophy at the University of Texas and author of Ayn Rand’s Normative Ethics: The Virtuous Egoist, explores Ayn Rand’s unique conception of justice. After explaining why it is in one’s self-interest to be a just person, Dr. Smith explores several related topics, including: the emphatic need to judge other people; how today’s pervasive egalitarianism is completely anti-justice; and when, if ever, forgiveness and mercy are justified.

A fuller understanding of the virtue of justice, Dr. Smith believes, can enable each of us to live more successful, happy lives.

About Tara Smith

Tara Smith is Professor of Philosophy at the University of Texas, where she currently holds the Anthem Foundation Fellowship for the Study of Objectivism. She is the author of Moral Rights & Political Freedom;,Viable Values: A Study of Life as the Root & Reward of Morality (Rowman & Littlefield, 2000); and Ayn Rand’s Normative Ethics: The Virtuous Egoist. Dr. Smith has published articles or lectured on such topics as self-interest, objectivity, individual rights, judicial “activism,” pride, justice, forgiveness, and romantic love. Dr. Smith has also presented seminars on clear thinking to businessmen.


Craig Biddle on Capitalism: The Only Moral Social System

Hello All,

Craig Biddle is the editor of The Objective Standard and the author of Loving Life: The Morality of Self Interest and the Facts that Support It. He will be presenting the talk on Capitalism on

October 23, Thursday
100 Herring Hall
7:30 pm

Summary
Capitalism is widely recognized as the practical social system because, wherever and to the extent that it is implemented, it leads to wealth and prosperity. But this same system is widely regarded as immoral because it enables people to act fully in their own self-interest—that is, to act on their own judgment and to keep, use, and dispose of the product of their own effort. More recently, many politicians and commentators would have you believe that capitalism is neither practical nor moral in light of the recent financial crisis. In fact, it is a return to capitalism that will lead to a healthy economy and prosperity. This talk demonstrates why, far from making capitalism immoral, the fact that it enables everyone to act selfishly and own property is what makes it not only the most practical but also the only moral social system ever devised.

See you all there!

Richard Salsman on Capitalism and Environmentalism: The Virtues of Exploitation

The Rice Objectivism Club is sponsoring yet another speaker this semester! We figure who better to challenge the status quo and to present a rational, this-worldly approach to common philosophical, social, and political issues.This time around, we’re going to challenge the environmentalists! You’ve seen the dire predictions about global warming; you’ve been warned about the evils of fossil fuels; you’ve been encouraged to “go green.” But does any of this make sense? Are these predictions and warnings based upon scientific fact? More importantly, will “going green” actually make your life better or worse?

Our speaker Richard Salsman, an Ayn Rand scholar and economist, will address these issues and more in his talk Capitalism and Environmentalism: The Virtues of Exploitation, taking place next Tues., March 25th, at 7:30 p.m. in 212 Herzstein Hall. Take time out of your studies to get an entirely new perspective on environmentalism, a viewpoint that you probably won’t hear in class.

Summary
Man achieves his survival by using his mind to alter his environment to suit his needs and improve the conditions of his existence. It is this process — expressed in science, technology, and capitalism — that has allowed man to rise from the hunger, drudgery, and misery of primitive existence to the comfort of modern civilization. But it is precisely this process that is under attack by the reactionary “greens” — who want to return man to the pre-industrial era or even to the Stone Age.

In this talk, Mr. Salsman does not merely discredit the scientific claims of environmentalism; he demolishes its moral and philosophical base. He demonstrates that: (1) the doctrine that nature has “intrinsic value,” i.e., some sort of mystical value entirely apart from its relation to man, is nothing but the desire to destroy human values, (2) the improvement of the environment — for man — can be provided for only by laissez-faire capitalism, and (3) that it is the environmentalist movement itself that is today’s greatest danger to human health and happiness.

About Richard Salsman
Richard M. Salsman is president and chief market strategist of InterMarket Forecasting, which provides quantitative research and forecasts of stocks, bonds, and currencies to guide the asset allocation decisions of institutional investment managers, mutual funds, and pension plans. He is the author of numerous books and articles on economics, banking, and forecasting from a free-market perspective, including Breaking the Banks: Central Banking Problems and Free Banking Solutions (American Institute for Economic Research, 1990) and Gold and Liberty (American Institute for Economic Research, 1995). Mr. Salsman’s work has appeared in The Intellectual Activist, the New York Times, Investor’s Business Daily, The Wall Street Journal, Forbes, The Economist and Barron’s. From 1993 to 1999, he was a senior vice president and senior economist at H. C. Wainwright & Co. Economics. Prior to that he was a banker at Citibank and the Bank of New York. Mr. Salsman is an adjunct fellow at the American Institute for Economic Research.

Andrew Bernstein on Religion vs. Morality

Hello All,

Dr. Bernstein is a well known scholar on Objectivism and will be presenting a talk on Religion Vs. Morality

Religion is winning the culture wars because it seems to answer the common misconception that morality is relative and, as such offers us no guidance for living our lives. But religion quite literally gives us no earthly reason to accept its code of morality. Do our options in ethics really boil down to no guidance at all vs. pie in the sky? Or can we discover an absolute morality for living on this earth by means of reason?

In his upcoming lecture, “Religion vs. Morality”, Andrew Bernstein argues that we can, through reason, discover the proper code of morality, and that it offers us practical guidance for living our lives. The talk will be at 7:30 pm at 309 Sewall Hall on Feb 7th, this Thursday.

Summary
Conventionally, most people believe that morality can only be based in religious faith that in a world without God no principles of right and wrong could exist. Related to this, philosophers have long held that no objective, fact-based, rational code of values is possible. Regarding both points, this talk shows that the exact opposite is true. The purpose of morality is to guide human life on earth and religion is utterly incapable of it. Flourishing life requires a code of secularism, rationality, egoism and freedom. Religious faith clashes with every principle of a proper moral code, and, as such, has led, and can only lead to, hell on earth.

About Andrew Bernstein
Dr. Bernstein is a Visiting Professor of Philosophy at Marist College; he also teaches at SUNY Purchase (which selected him Outstanding Teacher for 2004) and formerly at Pace University, and Marymount College (which selected him Outstanding Teacher for 1995). Dr. Bernstein lectures regularly at American universities and appears frequently on the radio talk shows. His op-eds have been published in such newspapers as The San Francisco Chronicle, The Chicago Tribune, The Baltimore Sun, The Atlanta Journal-Constitution, The Washington Times, The Los Angeles Daily News, and The Houston Chronicle. Dr. Bernstein is the author of three Ayn Rand titles for CliffsNotes: Atlas Shrugged, The Fountainhead, and Anthem. He also authored Penguin’s Teacher’s Guide to The Fountainhead, and The Capitalist Manifesto: The Historic, Economic and Philosophic Case for Laissez-Faire.

See you there !
Rice Objectivism Club.