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Conference turris::womannotes-v1

Title:ARCHIVE-- Topics of Interest to Women, Volume 1 --ARCHIVE
Notice:V1 is closed. TURRIS::WOMANNOTES-V5 is open.
Moderator:REGENT::BROOMHEAD
Created:Thu Jan 30 1986
Last Modified:Fri Jun 30 1995
Last Successful Update:Fri Jun 06 1997
Number of topics:873
Total number of notes:22329

476.0. "The Argument from Intimidation" by HARRY::HIGGINS (Citizen of Atlantis) Thu Sep 10 1987 18:44

    
    
    There is a certain type of argument which, in fact, is not an
    argument, but a means of forestalling debate and extorting an
    opponent's agreement with one's undiscussed notions.  It is a method
    of bypassing logic by means of psychological pressure.  Since it
    is particularly prevelant in today's culture, one would do well
    to learn to identify it and be on guard against it.
    
    This method bears a certain resemblance to the fallacy "ad hominem",
    and comes from the same psychological root, but is different in
    essential meaning.  The ad hominem fallacy consists of attempting
    to refute an argument by impeaching the character of its proponent.
    Example: "Candidate X is immoral, therefor his argument is false."
    
    But the psychological pressure method consists of threatening to
    impeach an opponents character by means of his argument, thus
    impeaching the argument without debate.  Example: "Only the immoral
    can fail to see that Candidate X's argument is false."
    
    In the first case, Candidate X's immorality (real or invented) is
    offered as proof of the the falsehood of his argument.  In the second
    case, the falsehood of his argument is asserted arbitrarily and
    offered as proof of his immorality.
    
    In todays epistemological jungle, that second method is used more
    frequently than any other type of irrational argument.  It should
    be classified as a logical fallacy and may be designated as "The
    Argument From Intimidation"
    
    The essential characteristic of the Argument From Intimidation is
    its appeal to moral self-doubt and its reliance on the fear, guilt,
    or ignorance of the victim.  It is used in the form of an ultimatum
    demanding that the victim renounce a given idea without discussion,
    under threat of being considered morally unworthy.  The pattern
    is always: "Only those who are evil (dishonest, heartless,
    insensitive,ignorant, etc.) can hold such an idea."
    
    The classic story of the Argument From Intimidation is the story
    "The Emporers New Clothes".
    
    In that story, some charlatans sell nonexistent garments to the
    Emporer by asserting that the garments' unusual beauty makes them
    invisible to those who are morally depraved at heart.  Observe the
    psychological factors required to make this work:  the charlatans
    rely on the Emporer's self-doubt; the Emporer does not question
    their assertion nor their moral authority; he surrenders at once,
    claiming that he does see the garments, -thus denying the evidence
    of his own eyes and invalidating his own consciousness- rather than
    face a threat to his precarious self esteem.  His distance from
    reality may be gauged by the fact that he prefers to walk naked
    down the street, displaying his nonexistent garments to the people--
    rather than risk incurring the moral condemnation of two scoundrels.
     The people, prompted by the same psychological panic, try to surpass
    one another in loud exclamations on the splendor of his clothes-
    until a child cries out that the Emporer is naked.
    
    This is the exact pattern of the working of the Argument From
    Intimidation, as it is being worked all around us today.
    
    We have heard it and are hearing it constantly:
    "Only those who lack finer instincts can fail to accept the morality
    of altruism" -- "Only the ignorant can fail to know that reason
    has been invalidated" -- "Only blackhearted reactionaries can advocate
    Capitalism" -- "Only warmongers can oppose the United Nations" --
    "Only the lunatic fringe can still believe in freedom" -- "Only
    cowards can fail to see that life is a sewer" -- "Only the superficial 
    can seek beauty, happiness, achievement, values, or heroes"
    
    As an example of an entire field of activity based on nothing but
    the Argument From Intimidation, I give you modern art, --where,
    in order to prove that they *do* possess the special insight possessed
    only by the mystic "elite", the populace are trying to surpass one
    another in loud exclamations of some bare (but smudged) piece of
    canvas.
    
    The Argument from Intimidation dominates todays discussions in two
    forms.  In public speeches and print, it flourishes in the form
    of long, involved, elaborate structures of unintelligible verbiage,
    which convey nothing clearly except a moral threat.  ("only the
    primitive-minded can fail to realize that clarity is
    oversimplification") But in private, day-to-day experience, it comes
    up wordlessly, between the lines, in the form of inarticulate sounds
    conveying unstated implications.  It relies, not on *what* is said,
    but on *how* it is said, --not on content, but on tone of voice.
    
    The tone is usually one of scornful or belligerent incredulity.
    "Surely you are not an advocate of capitalism, are you?"  And if
    this does not intimidate the prospective victim, --who answers
    properly: "I am" -- the ensuing dialogue goes something like this:
    
    "Oh no, you couldn't be!  Not really!"
    "Really"
    "But everybody knows that capitalism is outdated!"
    "I don't"
    "Oh come now!"
    "Since I don't know it, will you tell me the reasons for thinking
    that capitalism is outdated?"
    "Well if you don't know I couldn't possibly tell you!"
    
    All this is accompanied by raised eyebrows, wide eyed stares, grunts,
    snickers and the entire arsenal of nonverbal signals communicating
    ominous innuendos and emotional vibrations of a single kind:
    disapproval.
    
    If those vibrations fail, if such debaters are challenged, one finds
    that they have no arguments, no evidence, no proof, no reasons,
    no ground to stand on --that their noisy aggresiveness serves to
    hide a vacuum -- that the Argument From Intimidation is a confession
    of intellectual impotence.
    
    The primordial archetype of that Argument is obvious ( and so are
    the reasons of its appeal to the neo-mysticism of our age) "To
    those who understand, no explanation is necessary; to those who
    don't, none is possible."
    
    The psychological source of that argument is social metaphysics.
    
    A social metaphysician is one who regards the consciousness of other
    men as superior to his own and to the facts of reality.  It is to
    a social metaphysician that the moral appraisal of himself by others
    is a primary concern which supercedes truth, facts, reason, logic.
    The disapproval of others is so shatteringly terrifying to him that
    nothing can withstand its impact within his consciousness; thus
    he would deny the evidence of his own eyes and invalidate his own
    consciousness for the sake of any stray charlatans moral sanction.
    It is only a social metaphysician who could concieve of such absurdity
    as hoping to win an intellectual argument by hinting: "But people
    won't *like* you!"
    
    Strictly speaking, a social metaphysician does not concieve of his
    Argument in conscious terms: he finds it "instinctively" by
    introspection -- since it represents his psycho-epistemological
    way of life.  We have all met the exasperating type of person who
    does not listen to what one says, but to the emotional vibrations
    of ones voice, anxiously translating them into approval or disapproval,
    then answering accordingly.  This is a kind of self imposed Argument
    from Intimidation, to which a social metaphysician surrenders in
    most of his human encounters.  And thus when he meets an adversary,
    when his premises are challenged, he resorts automatically to the
    weapon that terrifies him the most: the withdrawal of a moral sanction.
    
    Since that kind of terror is unknown to psychologically healthy
    men, they may be taken in by the Argument from Intimidation, precisely
    because of their innocence.  Unable to understand that Arguments
    motive or to believe that it is merely a senseless bluff, they assume
    that its user has some sort of knowledge or reasons to back up his
    seemingly self confident or belligerent assertions; they give him
    the benefit of the doubt -- and are left in helplessly bewildered
    confusion.  It is thus that the social metaphysicians can victimize
    the young, the innocent, the conscientious.
    
    This is particularly prevelant in college classrooms.  Many professors
    use the Argument from Intimidation to stiffle independant thinking
    among the student, to evade questions they cannot answer, to discourage
    any critical analysis of their arbitrary assumptions or any departure
    from the intellectual status quo.
    
    "Aristotle? My dear fellow--" (a weary sigh) "if you had read Professor
    Spiffkins piece in--" (reverently) "the January 1912 issue of
    "Intellect" magazine, which--" (contemptuously) "you obviously haven't,
    you would know--" (airily) "that Aristotle has been refuted."
    
    "Professor X?" (X standing for the name of a distinguised theorist
    of free enterprise economics) "Are you quoting Professor X? Oh no!
    Not *really*!"--followed by a sarcastic chuckle intented to convey
    that professor X has been thoroughly discredited. (by whom? Blank
    out)
    
    Such teachers are frequently assisted by the "liberal" goon squad
    of the classroom who burst into laughter at appropriate moments.
    
    In our political life, the Argument from Intimidation is the almost
    exclusive method of discussion.  Predominantly, todays political
    debates consist of smears and apologies, or intimidation and
    appeasement.  The first is usually, though not exclusively, practised
    by the "liberals", the second by the "conservatives".  The champions
    in this respect are the "liberal" Republicans who practice both:
    the first toward their "conservative" fellow Republicans, --the second
    towards the Democrats.
    
    All smears are Arguments from Intimidation: they consist of derogatory
    assertions without any evidence or proof, offered as a substitute
    for evidence or proof, aimed at the moral cowardice or unthinking
    credulity of the hearers.
    
    The Argument from Intimidation is not new; it has been used in all
    ages and cultures, but so seldom on so wide a scale as today.  It
    is used more crudely in politics than in other fields of activity,
    but it is not confined to politics.  It permeates our entire culture.
    It is a symptom of cultural bankruptcy.
    
    How does one resist that Argument?  There is only one weapon against
    it: moral certainty.
    
    When one enters any intellectual battle, big or small, public or
    private, one cannot seek, desire, or expect the enemy's sanction.
     Truth or falsehood must be one's sole concern and sole criterion
    of judgement--not anyones approval or disapproval; and, above all,
    *not* the approval of those whose standars are the opposites of
    one's own.
    
    Let me emphasize that the Argument from Intimidation does not consist
    of introducing moral judgement into intellectual issues, but of
    *substituting* moral judgement for intellectual argument.  Moral
    evaluations are implicit in most intellectual issues;  it is not
    merely permissible, but mandatory to pass moral judgement when and
    where appropriate; to suppress such judgement is an act of moral
    cowardice.  But a moral judgement must always follow, not precede
    (or supercede) the reasons on which it is based.
    
    When one gives reasons for ones verdict, one assumes responsibility
    for it and lays oneself open for objective judgement:  if ones reasons
    are wrong or false, one suffers the consequences.  But to condemn
    without giving reasons is an act of irresponsibility, a kind of
    moral "hit and run" driving, which is the essence of the Argument
    from Intimidation.
    
    Observe that the men who use that Argument are the ones who dread
    a reasoned moral attack more than any other kind of battle --and
    when they encounter a morally confident adversary, they are loudest
    in protesting that "moralizing" should be kept out of intellectual
    discussions.  But to discuss evil in a manner implying nuetrality,
    is to sanction it.
    
    The Argument from Intimidation illustrates why it is important
    to be certain of one's premises and of one's moral ground.  It
    illustrates the kind of intellectual pitfall that awaits those who
    venture forth without a full, clear, consistent set of convictions,
    wholly integrated all the way down to fundamentals --those who
    recklessly leap into battle armed with nothing but a few random
    notions floating in the fog of the unknown, the unidentified, the
    undefined, the unproved, and supported by nothing but their feelings,
    hopes, and fears.  The Argument from Intimidation is their Nemesis.
    In moral and intellectual issues, it is not enough to be right,
    one has to *know* one is right.
  
    
    The most illustrious example of the proper answer to the Argument
    from Intimidation was given in American history by the man who,
    rejecting the enemy's moral standards and with full certainty of
    his own rectitude said:
    
    "If this be treason, make the most of it."
    
    
    					essay by Ayn Rand (July 1964)
      
     
    
    
T.RTitleUserPersonal
Name
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476.1thank you, richardTFH::MARSHALLhunting the snarkThu Sep 10 1987 19:596
                                                   
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476.3Ayn Rand. Ugh.DIEHRD::MAHLERDon't touch me. I'm all slimy!Thu Sep 10 1987 21:455
    
    
    	Gnarly Steve!
    
    
476.4take it to TESLA2::OBJECTIVISMSPMFG1::CHARBONNDI sobered up for this?!Fri Sep 11 1987 06:534
    Re .0 The mere fact that the essay was written by a woman in no
    way makes it appropriate for this conference ;-)/2
    
    re.3 What's the matter ? too logical for you ? Try refuting it.
476.5BookishFDCV10::IWANOWICZFri Sep 11 1987 10:358
    Is this not more appropriate for DSSDEV::BOOKS ... ?
    
    Or the Boston Common ?
    
    
                   ........  Would the basenoter please indicate why
    the perambulation was typed in ?
    
476.6Only a fool wouldn't understand :-)CADSYS::SULLIVANKaren - 225-4096Fri Sep 11 1987 14:288
Well, I appreciated .0.  Perhaps .0 is implying that we in womannotes
tend to argue by intimidation.  "What!  You're not a feminist?!"
"I would expect a *man* to say that, not a *woman*!"  :-)

...Karen

p.s.  Did you notice that Ayn was only talking about men having
	this problem? (no "she"'s)   :-)
476.7well, of course.....STUBBI::B_REINKEwhere the sidewalk endsFri Sep 11 1987 14:358
    re .6 I also felt that the basenote writer was indicating
    that we argue by intimidation. (Tho I can think of one other
    file where this is far more prevalent). :-)
    
    Was Ayn Rand a feminist? (I keep thinking of the scene in the
    book about the architect - The Foutainhead? - that the book
    always opened to because everyone wanted to read it :-})
    Bonnie
476.8ARMORY::CHARBONNDI sobered up for this?!Fri Sep 11 1987 15:1012
    Re .6 the p.s. Ayn Rand was not raised speaking english - she
    learned it later. the common usage was the male pronoun to indicate
    either gender.
    
    As for being a feminist, no, she was a people-ist. She held
    that rights derived from our nature as reasoning beings. not
    as males, or whites, or Americans, but as humans. She was
    apalled at the 60's 'Women's Lib" movement - see "The Age
    of Envy" in "The New Left : The Anti-Industrial Revolution".
    
    
    Dana
476.9APEHUB::STHILAIREremembrance of things pastMon Sep 14 1987 13:599
    Re .8, if Ayn Rand was appalled by the women's lib movement it must
    have been because she had no idea what it would have been like to
    have lived her life as an average woman (housewife, mother, secretary,
    waitress, factory worker) instead of as a celebrated author.  It's
    the average woman (average I.Q., average looks, average advantages)
    who really needs women's lib, not a handful of female geniuses.
    
    Lorna
    
476.10She must've been from Lake WobegonVINO::EVANSMon Sep 14 1987 14:1512
    RE: last couple
    
    I doubt very much that Ayn Rand would've considered herself "average"
    in any sense. 
    
    Nor seen any need at all for the feminist movement. (As we know
    she didn't)
    
    I find her theories at once fascinating, attractive, and horrifying.
    
    Dawn
    
476.11ARMORY::CHARBONNDI sobered up for this?!Tue Sep 15 1987 06:586
    RE.9 Been a while since i read her bio, but I recall that as a young
    extra, would_be_actress, etc.. she worked as a waitress. She was
    38 when her third novel, "The Fountainhead", was published. After
    it had been rejected by *twelve* publishers. 
    
    Dana
476.12APEHUB::STHILAIREQuit jammin' meTue Sep 15 1987 13:047
    Re .11, but the average waitress doesn't have a novel in the works.
     The average working woman doesn't finally achieve world recognition
    at the age of 38, thus never having to worry about equal pay or
    sex descrimination, etc.
    
    Lorna
    
476.13We are each exceptional in our own wayARMORY::CHARBONNDI sobered up for this?!Tue Sep 15 1987 13:525
    Nobody who considers herself "average" will *EVER* achieve world
    recognition. The word is a trap. Or an excuse : "I'm just average."
    Consider how much effort you can save by labeling yourself like
    that : you'll never have to excell, or grow, or learn, or achieve,
    or even live up to the potential you *do* have. Just average out.
476.14DFLAT::DICKSONNetwork Design toolsWed Sep 16 1987 11:044
re .6 and .8

When Ayn Rand uses the word "man" or "men" she is using it somewhat in
the way of an anthropologist, meaning "homo sapiens" or "human being".
476.15APEHUB::STHILAIREQuit jammin' meWed Sep 16 1987 14:0318
    Re .13, I agree that people need to have a sense of self-worth in
    order to accomplish goals.  But, I don't think this needs to mean
    that they can't make a realistic appraisal of themselves.  I'd be
    suffering from a delusion of grander if I went around saying that
    I had an above average I.Q., or that I was stunningly beautiful,
    when in fact I know by now that I'm just about average in both brains
    and looks.  But, I don't feel that being average makes me a loser.
     I'm not going to give up and wind up a drunkard sleeping in doorways
    just because I'm average.  However, if I tried my best to write
    a novel I'd consider myself lucky to come up with something to compare
    with Barbara Cartland, never mind Ayn Rand.  I don't underrate average
    people.  All I meant was that the average woman comes up against
    a lot of sexism in their lives that, I imagine, someone like an
    Ayn Rand may not have noticed as much because of superior talent
    (?), and that may be one reason why she wasn't a feminist.
    
    Lorna
    
476.16a feminist, but anti-"Women's Lib"TFH::MARSHALLhunting the snarkWed Sep 16 1987 18:2819
    re .15:
    
    I will try to find the article where she discusses her objections
    to the "Women's Lib" movement of the '60's. But until then, let
    me say that I don't think that she was not a feminist, at least
    in the sense I get from the "Who is not a Feminist" note.
    
    She denounced the Women's Lib movement, not because she didn't think
    that discrimination existed, but because she did not think it was
    right to "fix" it with more discrimination (against men). She also
    objected to anybody demanding things they do not deserve. Thus,
    she felt is was wrong for women to demand certain jobs merely because
    they were women, regardless of their fitness for that position.
                                                   
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476.17I'm surprisedVINO::EVANSThu Sep 17 1987 12:5811
    RE: .16
    
    My goodness, I *AM* surprised that Ayn Rand would make a comment
    showing such ignorange of the issues and goals of feminism, and
    "equal pay/equal work".
    
    She may not have been a feminist, but I thought she would've been
    much better informed on the issues.
    
    Dawn
    
476.18ARMORY::CHARBONNDI sobered up for this?!Fri Sep 18 1987 07:1410
    RE.17 The "equal work/equal pay" issue was not at issue when she
    wrote. She wrote that the Women's Libbers were a caricature of
    feminism, not to be confused with the mainstream. As for ew/ep
    she would have doubtless asked "who decides ?" The answer is
    obviously the free market. When less people compete for a given
    job, the pay rates will go up for that job. As long as there
    are plenty of people willing to work for low wages, wages will
    remain low.
    
    Dana
476.19COLORS::TARBETMargaret MairhiFri Sep 18 1987 10:4413
    <--(.18)
    
    Dana, how does your "free market" theory explain the current situation
    resp. nurses, secretaries, and fast-food workers here in the Boston
    area?  Hospitals, businesses, and the various heartburn emporia are all
    woefully short-staffed in those categories, yet compensation hasn't
    risen in response. 
    
    I would argue that psychosocial rather than economic factors explain at
    least part of the discrepancy.
    
    						=maggie 
    
476.20exageration ?ARMORY::CHARBONNDI sobered up for this?!Fri Sep 18 1987 13:2510
    I would guess that the people who could take those jobs have found
    better alternatives. And that the people who do have those jobs
    are working enough overtime to get the work done. Isn't economics
    a social factor ? If the employers truely needed more help they
    would offer higher wages. I suspect that part of the 'labor
    shortage' is exagertion on the part of managers seeking to expand
    their work force/responsibility. And do we need all those burger
    joints ? If nurses and secretaries' wages rise enough, people may
    be motivated to live on a high_cost_of_living place like Boston.
    Why else would they want to ? Not everyone is into city life.
476.21Affirmative ActionTFH::MARSHALLhunting the snarkMon Sep 21 1987 09:5818
    re .17:
    
    > My goodness, I *AM* surprised that Ayn Rand would make a comment
    > showing such ignorange of the issues and goals of feminism, and
    > "equal pay/equal work".
      
    If you will please read .16 again. you will notice that I was not
    talking about equal-work/equal-pay. I was speaking of affirmative
    action. Ms. Rand opposed this in all forms, whether the beneficiary
    was black, spanish, female, or even white-male.
    
    Still haven't yet had time to find the article. Soon.
                                                   
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476.22VINO::EVANSTue Sep 22 1987 13:1818
    RE: 21
    
    AH! That's much clearer to me, now. I had *thought* she would be
    a "queen-bee", and it seems as though she was indeed.
    
    
    (For those who don't know the term: "Queen-bee"- a woman who "made
    it on her own" and therefore sees no need for ERA, or other feminist
    agenda)
    
    
    BTW - IS there anyoe out there who knows whether there's a "Real*
    difference between a feminist and a "women's-libber", except STRIDENCY
    ???  I always thought they were the same thing, except that if one
    disapproved, you became a "w-l".
    
    Dawn
    
476.23ARMORY::CHARBONNDI sobered up for this?!Wed Sep 23 1987 07:3416
    As I said, Ayn Rand believed that rights derived from the fact
    that people were thinking beings. She would have disapproved
    of any discrimination based on race, gender, etc.. She would
    have seen the ERA as superfluous, affirming rights for the
    wrong reason. When women take their rights *as individuals*
    for granted, and defend them, ERA will become meaningless.
    
    She considered the Women's Lib movement to be caricatures
    of the feminist movement.
    
    Am I repeating myself ?
    
    And if you "made it on your own" would you still use derogatory
    terms towards other women of achievement ? Think about it.
    
    Dana
476.24Women's lib was a term of the early 70'sULTRA::WITTENBERGTheory, vapid theoryWed Sep 23 1987 11:0418
< Note 476.22 by VINO::EVANS >
>    
>    BTW - IS there anyoe out there who knows whether there's a "Real*
>    difference between a feminist and a "women's-libber", except STRIDENCY
>    ???  I always thought they were the same thing, except that if one
>    disapproved, you became a "w-l".
>    
>    Dawn

    I believe  that  "Women's  liberation" was the favored term in the
    early  70's  (at  least  I remember my mother going to Women's lib
    meetings  then),  and it was replaced by feminist by the late 70's
    after  "women's  lib"  had  too  many bad connotations (among them
    stridence).  This  is a case of the general idea that non-dominant
    groups  often  change  their  prefered  name  when  the  old one's
    conotations in the dominant group become offensive.

--David
476.25VINO::EVANSWed Sep 23 1987 13:3621
    RE: .23,.24
    
    Dana: are you differentiating the "first wave" of feminism from
    the current one, and calling the current one "women's lib"? Or..
    what are your definitions for those terms?
    
    Would a woman who "made it on her own" make deragatory remarks about
    another woman of achievement? Depends entirely on the women and
    the situation. Some might, some might not.
    
    Hi David - Thanks - I *thought* the terms referred to the same thing,
    though, to be precise (your reply jogged my memory) I think the
    original "first wave" of feminism  (turn-ish of century? Ithink.)
    was indeed called a "Feminist" movement. Guess it was decided to
    take back the original name.
    
    Seems to be the term "women's libber" is applied to a feminist of
    whom one disapproves.
    
    Dawn
    
476.26NATASH::BUTCHARTThu Sep 24 1987 17:2632
    I enjoyed the base note immensely.
    
    Why?  Because I plan to make use of Rand's logic the next time I
    am argued at in that manner on _any_ issue.  I didn't feel that
    the base noter was entering it to denounce the way we argue; I was
    pleased that Steve had taken time to write in a very nice treatise
    by a woman that will enable any of us to recognize when we're being 
    put down without any kind of reasoning to back it up.  _We_ can 
    use Ms. Rand's reasoning right back at those who would perhaps 
    say to us, "What??  You still believe in the ERA?  My dear girl, 
    haven't you heard . . ." 
    
    I don't know about the rest of you, but I've been argued at like
    that (by intimidation) by both sexes many times in my life (mostly 
    at parties, I admit, where the free flow of liquor can give anyone 
    CPU difficulties).  I have also been in classes as Rand describes,
    where teachers, both men and women, put down students in that manner.
    Reading Ms. Rand's piece gives me an ounce more courage to be able 
    to stand my ground intellectually and verbally the next time it 
    happens to me.
    
    Is this not a case (however indirect) of a woman, whatever her
    intention, helping another woman (in this case, yours truly)?  I
    don't agree with all Rand's ideas, but I do agree with this particular
    one.  Recognizing the characteristics of this type of intimidation 
    can enable us (both men and women) to overcome it.  To dismiss 
    her ideas just because she was a Queen Bee is to be guilty of the 
    same mental flaw she points out.  Along those lines it was at once 
    sobering and amusing to me that one of the first few replies to 
    the base note was simply "Ayn Rand.  Ugh".
    
    Marcia
476.27credit where credit is dueTFH::MARSHALLhunting the snarkThu Sep 24 1987 19:0921
    re .26:     
    
    > ...I was pleased that Steve had taken time to write in a very nice 
    > treatise by a woman ...
    
    Being one of the "Steve"s in this conference, I would like to point
    out that Richard Higgins took the time and effort to transcribe
    the article.
    
                                                   
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P.S. I just noticed that reply .2 is missing in which Steve Thompson
    offered a beautiful example of the exact techniques discussed in
    .0. Reply .3 (titled "Ayn Rand. Ugh.") then says "Gnarly, Steve!" with 
    no reference to .2. Perhaps this is the source of the confusion as to 
    the name of the transcriber.
  
476.28Her words are powerful HARRY::HIGGINSCitizen of AtlantisFri Sep 25 1987 11:0218
    
    
    >    Why?  Because I plan to make use of Rand's logic the next time I
    >    am argued at in that manner on _any_ issue.
    

    >    Reading Ms. Rand's piece gives me an ounce more courage to be able 
    >    to stand my ground intellectually and verbally the next time it 
    >    happens to me.
    
    >     Marcia

    
    Some noters questioned my motives for entering Ms Rands' article
    as a basenote.  This response serves my motivations exactly. 
    
    richard
476.30Duuhh . . .NATASH::BUTCHARTFri Sep 25 1987 14:515
    Re: .27
    
    Thanks for setting me straight!  (Apologies, Richard.)
    
    Marcia