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  1. The gender pronouns may have been changed, but the wisdom of the author is eternal, and never more relevant than today, on this so called “Day Without Woman.” Ayn Rand was not just a philosopher who celebrated productive work as the purpose of a human being’s life, she herself was an enormously hard working novelist, philosopher and ...

  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Ayn_RandAyn Rand - Wikipedia

    Early life. [edit] Rand was born Alisa Zinovyevna Rosenbaum on February 2, 1905, into a Jewish bourgeois family living in Saint Petersburg in what was then the Russian Empire. [ 6 ] She was the eldest of three daughters of Zinovy Zakharovich Rosenbaum, a pharmacist, and Anna Borisovna (née Kaplan). [ 7 ]

  3. Ayn Rand (1905-1982) was born Alissa Rosenbaum in St. Petersburg, Russia in 1905. The daughter of a successful pharmacist, she enjoyed a comfortable life for the first twelve years of her life.

  4. For a woman qua woman, the essence of femininity is hero-worship—the desire to look up to man. “To look up” does not mean dependence, obedience or anything implying inferiority.

  5. Feb 2, 2024 · I believe they are all examples of Ayn Rand in the original “sacrificing content for style.” (1) Thus did Liberty 5–3000 walk toward us in the field that day, as a thin flame in the wind, as a swaying white mist, as a scourge, as a miracle.

  6. Aug 26, 2023 · Ayn Rand: The Female Founder of Objectivism. Alice O’Connor, better known as Ayn Rand, was a 20th-century Russian-born American novelist and philosopher who promoted the superiority of reason over religion.

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  8. Jun 8, 2010 · Ayn Rand (1905–1982) was a novelist-philosopher who outlined a comprehensive philosophy, including an epistemology and a theory of art, in her novels and essays. Early in her career she also wrote short stories, plays, and screenplays. Rand’s first and most autobiographical novel, We the Living (1936), set in the Soviet Union, was published ...

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