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DISCUSSION QUESTIONS
Atlas Shrugged
1.
What and where is the "utopia of greed"?
2.
Why does Dagny Taggart, a woman of ruthless
logic who passionately loves life, chase a
mysterious stranger’s plane in her own plane
when she knows it will lead to her virtually
certain death?
3.
Why do Dagny Taggart and Lillian Rearden—both
highly affluent women—fight over a cheap
metallic bracelet? Who gets to keep the
bracelet, and at what cost? What is
Lillian’s real motive in trapping her
husband Hank in infidelity?
4.
Why does Francisco d’Anconia, heir to the
greatest fortune in the world and a
productive genius with boundless ambition,
seek ever more outrageous ways to destroy
his own business empire? Why does he turn
into a playboy who forsakes the woman he
loves and instead seduces prominent women
who are of no interest to him?
5.
When an entire country tells them that their
railroad bridge, constructed from a new
ultralight metal, won’t stand under the
onrush of a speeding train, why are Dagny
Taggart and Hank Rearden so confident that
it will? Were you convinced by the arguments
offered against them by their opponents?
Whom did you side with? Why?
6.
According to Atlas Shrugged,
selfishness is both moral and practical.
What does Ayn Rand mean by "selfishness"?
Compare the actions and character of James
Taggart, Hank Rearden, Orren Boyle, and
Francisco d’Anconia: Who is selfish and who
is not? Can you present arguments for or
against Ayn Rand’s view of selfishness?
Contrast Ayn Rand’s approach with that of
the ethics of Christianity.
7.
What basic motive unites people who brag
about their sexual promiscuity and people
who demand economic handouts from the
government?
8.
Explain the meaning and wider significance
of the following quote from Atlas
Shrugged: "The words ‘to make money’
hold the essence of human morality."
Explain what ideas underlie the maxim that
"money is the root of all good."
9.
Capitalism is often defended by appeal to
the "public good"; that is, solely because
its economic efficiency benefits society.
Contrast this with Ayn Rand’s defense of
capitalism, as dramatized in Atlas Shrugged. |