A Quote by Rand Paul

I read all of Ayn Rand's novels when I was 17. — © Rand Paul
I read all of Ayn Rand's novels when I was 17.

Quote Topics

Ayn Rand is a rhetorician who writes novels I have never been able to read.
I reject her [Ayn Rand's] philosophy. It's an atheist philosophy. It reduces human interactions down to mere contracts and it is antithetical to my worldview. If somebody is going to try to paste a person's view on epistemology to me, then give me Thomas Aquinas. Don't give me Ayn Rand.
I am concerned that people who admire [Ayn] Rand are not often critical enough of the extent to which she has abridged the implications of [her] novels.
And when you look at the twentieth-century experiment with collectivism-that Ayn Rand, more than anybody else, did such a good job of articulating the pitfalls of statism and collectivism-you can't find another thinker or writer who did a better job of describing and laying out the moral case for capitalism than Ayn Rand.
I think Republicans need to have their staffers reading less Ayn Rand and having them read Dr. Viktor Frankl's Man's Search For Meaning more.
... there is an irrational, cultish tendency in many intellectual movements, and Objectivism, alas, is no exception. Ayn Rand's personal obsession with loyalty did little to discourage this trend.... Rand had often protested, 'Protect me from my followers!'
The worst thing you can say about libertarians is that they are intellectually immature, frozen in the worldview many of them absorbed from reading Ayn Rand novels in high school. Like other ideologues, libertarians react to the world's failing to conform to their model by asking where the world went wrong.
I give people Ayn Rand with trappings.
Ayn Rand is a bloody socialist compared to me.
Most of Ayn Rand's major characters are already formed at the start of the stories.
I tend to really be partial to Ayn Rand, and to The Fountainhead and Atlas Shrugged.
Madonna taught me more philosophy than Ayn Rand.
Every stylish man should have a copy of 'The Fountainhead' by Ayn Rand on his bookshelf.
When I was younger, I was drawn to Ayn Rand books and other works of fiction celebrating individualism.
I was ahead of my classmates in some ways. While they were enjoying Mills & Boons, I was reading Ayn Rand.
Can someone explain the vitriol whenever Ayn Rand comes up? 'Atlas' is the greatest motivator for the individual that I can imagine.
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