This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 67.90.197.194 (talk) at 20:23, 21 July 2006 (rvv). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.
Revision as of 20:23, 21 July 2006 by 67.90.197.194 (talk) (rvv)(diff) ← Previous revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)Ayn Rand | |||||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Bibliography |
| ||||||||||||||
Adaptations |
| ||||||||||||||
Philosophy | |||||||||||||||
Influence | |||||||||||||||
Depictions |
Objectivism is a philosophy created by Ayn Rand, which some gay and lesbian people have been interested in for its celebration of personal freedom and individuality at the expense of government power. However, Rand's personal views of homosexuality were unambiguously negative and her political views were incompatible with those of the mainstream gay rights movement.
Ayn Rand
Public statements
In 1971, Rand published The New Left, a collection of essays which directly attacked the feminist and sexual liberation movements, including the gay rights movement. She called them "hideous" for their demand for what she considered "special privileges" from the government. She also addressed homosexuality itself, writing that "o proclaim spiritual sisterhood with lesbians... is so repulsive a set of premises from so loathsome a sense of life that an accurate commentary would require the kind of language I do not like to see in print." ("The Age of Envy")
In response to questions from the audience at the two Ford Hall Forum lectures she gave at Northeastern University, Rand explained her stance in more detail. In her 1968 lecture, she said, "I do not approve of such practices or regard them as necessarily moral, but it is improper for the law to interfere with a relationship between consenting adults." (Ayn Rand Answers, p. 18) In 1971, Rand repeated this stance, then explained that homosexuality "involves psychological flaws, corruptions, errors, or unfortunate premises", concluding that homosexuality "is immoral, and more than that; if you want my really sincere opinion, it's disgusting."
While Rand resisted the label of libertarian, her views were consistent with a form of libertarianism called minarchism. Her stance on the legalities of homosexuality likewise matched the mainstream libertarian perspective, leading to support of certain rights but not others. In specific, while she endorsed rights that protect gays from discrimination by the government, she rejected the "right" to be protected from discrimination in the private sector.
On sex roles
Rand asserted that the "the essence of femininity is hero worship — the desire to look up to man" and that "an ideal woman is a man-worshiper, and an ideal man is the highest symbol of mankind." In other words, Rand felt that it was part of human nature for a psychologically healthy woman to want to be ruled in sexual matters by a man worthy of ruling her. In an authorized article in The Objectivist, psychiatrist Nathaniel Branden, Rand's extramarital lover and onetime "intellectual heir," explains Rand's view as the idea that "man experiences the essence of his masculinity in the act of romantic dominance; woman experiences the essence of her femininity in the act of romantic surrender." (1968)
Reactions
In 1983, Nathaniel Branden wrote that she was "absolutely and totally ignorant” about homosexuality. Branden added that he saw her perspective "as calamitous, as wrong, as reckless, as irresponsible, and as cruel, and as one which I know has hurt too many people who ... looked up to her and assumed that if she would make that strong a statement she must have awfully good reasons."
Barbara Branden, Branden's wife and Rand's biographer, "considered her profoundly negative judgment to be rash and unreasonable." Noted gay Objectivist writer Arthur Silber summed the issue up by saying, "Rand did have an extremely unfortunate tendency to moralize in areas where moral judgments were irrelevant and unjustified. ... especially in ... aesthetics and sexuality."
Harry Binswanger, of the Ayn Rand Institute writes that, while Rand generally condemned homosexuality, she would adopt a more tolerant view of it "when she was in an especially good mood." He also noted that he "asked her privately (circa 1980) specifically whether she thought it was immoral. She said that we didn't know enough about the development of homosexuality in a person's psychology to say that it would have to involve immorality."
Post Rand
After Rand's death in 1982, Objectivist organizations have generally had little to say about homosexuality or gay rights. While some notable Objectivists believed that homosexuality was a mental illness that needed to be cured, being homosexual was never grounds for exclusion from the ARI, and contemporary Objectivists generally continue to support the view that the government must allow anyone other than itself to discriminate against homosexuals.
For example, according to Objectivist Damian Moskovitz:
- While many conservatives believe that homosexuality should be outlawed and many liberals believe that homosexuals should be given special rights, Objectivism holds that as long as no force is involved, people have the right to do as they please in sexual matters, whether or not their behavior is considered by others to be or is in fact moral. And since individual rights are grounded in the nature of human beings as human beings, homosexuals do not deserve any more or less rights than heterosexuals.
Like Rand, leading Objectivist psychologist Michael Hurd supports gay marriage as falling under the rights of individuals to associate voluntarily. Unlike Rand, however, he does not view homosexuality as immoral, stating that "a gay marriage... though unconventional and highly controversial, can be a loving and highly satisfying union between two individuals ."
Notes
References
- Rand, Ayn, Homosexuality and Human Liberation (2003)
- "The Female Hero: A Randian-Feminist Synthesis", Thomas Gramstad (1999)