Subj: sorry bout the color and spacing Date: 3/5/01 10:33:55 PM Eastern Standard Time Fear. It oozes from the hearts of every character in Ayn Rands Anthem. It is a fear comparative to that of the thousands of slaves kept by a single master, or the millions in concentration camps that were maintained by a measly hundred or thousand. It is the the fear to rebel against an already accepted fate. Once this fear is instilled, it condemns generation after generation, and unless it is stopped it will be accepted as the only way to live. Luckily, there are exceptions.
Lights at the end of the eternally dark tunnels. Great thinkers that, under the right circumstances, could expand and reach heights like the great minds we know today; Albert Einstein, Plato, Malcolm X, Mahatma Ghandi. While reading about Equality in Anthem, many questions are repeatedly presented. How does the collectivist society maintain control over its subjects? Where does Equalitys drive to free himself from collectivism come from? What makes it so easy for him to do so? The appeal in a collectivist society lies in its seemingly harmless outer beauty. Ideas like having respect for fellow humans are intensified, thus creating mass appeal. Once this appeal is instilled it deteriorates, a society is left dragging its weak and stifling its strong.
The Essay on Interplay Between Fear And Foreplay
It seems that all fears are based on illusion and future thinking. The future is unpredictable, and few have the courage to go explore the unpredictable. In the story “On the Rainy River”, Tim O’Brien, which is the author of the story as well, receives his draft notice to fight in the Vietnam War. The war seems wrong to him, and the fear of the uncertainty of its outcomes determine O’Brien to ...
The strong or intelligent are shunned, and forced to degrade themselves in order to fit in with their brothers. It is clear that the society is maintained by fear and ignorance. The people in the novel know no other way of life. The existence of individual thoughts and ideas has disappeared from their society. These mindless zombies are only certain that it is evil to think or be alone. Even Equality, the most unique individual in the dark times, believes it is a sin to be alone until the very end of the novel. Ignorance and fear shut down the minds of the individuals in the book and enables them to only think collectively, but few still see the importance of individuality.
The battle Equality faces is basically an internal one. Each new discovery or realization that comes to him brings on a new conflict. Things that were viewed as evil all of his life suddenly seem pure and Equality is forced to reinvent his entire way of thinking. He must conquer the fear and ignorance that engulfs his brothers. Yet, deep within his soul, his entire life has been a constant search, leading to individuality. Equality always knew there was something more meaningful for him alone.
It seems that throughout the entire book the word I is on the tip of his tongue. Slowly, but surely, each collectivist idea is overcome, leaving one man, one soul, and one idea. Victory was simple yet sweet for Equality. Once away from the rest of society, he was able to truly discover solidarity. He saw his face. He felt love for only one other individual, he made his own decisions for his own well being. The discovery of the word I in the books he read was indeed monumental to the plot in the novel, but the feeling the word induced already existed.
He reeked the benefits of being alone, having his own home, and someone to love, and his own possessions. Once he experienced these things, the collectivist values that were instilled in him no longer existed. He had his own ego, which can be smothered and denied, but never expelled from mankind. In the foreword to Anthem, Ayn Rand writes, The greatest guilt today is that of the people who accept collectivism by moral default; the people who seek protection from the necessity of taking a stand, by refusing to admit to themselves the nature of that which they are accepting… She goes on to give us a novel that embodies these thoughts. Living in a world like that of Anthems would be bitter and cold, without individuality or creativity.
The Essay on Share Jesus Without Fear Book Critique
Share Jesus Without Fear is a book which reminds its reader of their call for evangelism while providing practical and comprehensive instructions on how to share their faith. The book confronts the sin of silence which many Christians are guilty of committing. Instead of talking about the lost, it encourages readers to begin talking to the lost. (p. 7) The authors provide compelling testimonies to ...
The last resort? Ayn Rand, and others who would be strong enough to be heroes, just like Equality 7-2521. They are the lights at the ends of the eternally dark