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LE4dGOLEM wrote:your ability to tell things from things remains one of your skills.
Weeks wrote:Not only can you tell things from things, you can recognize when a thing is a thing
buddy431 wrote:Not everyone makes judgements quite the way I do, but I think there is sort of a general principle here: ideas are a lot more palatable coming from people who are polite and well spoken. Just some food for though.
IcedT wrote:Also, this raises the important question of whether or not dinosaurs were delicious.
Jonesthe Spy wrote:And regardless of what you think of her philosophy, I'm sorry but if you like her actually writing you do have terrible taste. The woman was a horrible writer - cardboard cut out characters that exist only to exemplify her philosophy, ridiculous dialogue, completely ridiculous plots. I saw the old joke about Rand and Tolkien earlier in the thread ("One has orcs") and if you go back and read the parts of Lord of the Rings where the orcs are talking amongst themselves, they have far more character and depth than Rand's mouthpieces.
LE4dGOLEM wrote:your ability to tell things from things remains one of your skills.
Weeks wrote:Not only can you tell things from things, you can recognize when a thing is a thing
The Mighty Thesaurus wrote:Internal conflict is dramatic. Without drama, your story is pointless bullshit; why the fuck should I spend my time reading pointless bullshit?
RoberII wrote:buddy431 wrote:Not everyone makes judgements quite the way I do, but I think there is sort of a general principle here: ideas are a lot more palatable coming from people who are polite and well spoken. Just some food for though.
Some ideas aren't palatable no matter how polite their proponents are, though. And 90% of the time, when people say "let's have a polite discussion on this topic," what they mean is "Don't call me out on the horrible things I am about to say, that would be impolite."
Gellert1984 wrote:Also, bomb president CIA al qaeda JFK twin towers jupiter moon martians [s]emtex.
The Mighty Thesaurus wrote:Internal conflict is dramatic. Without drama, your story is pointless bullshit; why the fuck should I spend my time reading pointless bullshit?
Puppyclaws wrote:I'm also not too keen on reading about loaves of bread that are just loaves of bread. The reason for cramming things full of meaning is, if you're not doing that, why write it at all?
Steroid wrote:OK, you're not. I am. Does that mean I have bad taste? Should I consider it that you have bad taste because we like different things? Or are you right because what I like is easier for me to enjoy than it is for you, and suffering is virtue? If that's the case, then I think I do have some Objectivist arguments to make.
Puppyclaws wrote:Steroid wrote:OK, you're not. I am. Does that mean I have bad taste? Should I consider it that you have bad taste because we like different things? Or are you right because what I like is easier for me to enjoy than it is for you, and suffering is virtue? If that's the case, then I think I do have some Objectivist arguments to make.
It doesn't mean you have bad taste. It does mean you don't understand literature.
buddy431 wrote:... personally, I find Sanjavalen's posts compelling and enjoyable to read, while yours not at all.
LE4dGOLEM wrote:your ability to tell things from things remains one of your skills.
Weeks wrote:Not only can you tell things from things, you can recognize when a thing is a thing
IcedT wrote:Also, this raises the important question of whether or not dinosaurs were delicious.
Steroid wrote:Personally I think that the popular opinion of what's good in literature is the bad taste, if for no other reason than that it's inversely proportional to how easy it is to read and enjoy. I call this the three D's of Proper Good Literature.
Your work should be difficult. Load your story with symbolism, allegory, and metaphor. Never make a loaf of bread a loaf of bread; make it a person's soul. Use sentences of exceeding length and words that nobody has heard of. Best example: Oscar Wilde
Your work should be dull. If you're writing about a war, don't tell us about the generals and the movement of troops, write from the perspective of two grunts who aren't even sure what side they're on. If it's a love story, don't write about the great love of the protagonist's life; write about the person they met before that and weren't really interested in. Best example: Ernest Hemmingway.
Your work should be depressing. Everyone we care about, kill. Or leave them alive but without hope. Make sure that the two people who love each other wind up with other people who make them miserable. Best examples: Jane Austen, F. Scott Fitzgerald, William Faulkner, Emily Bronte. . . pretty much everyone.
So clearly Rand's works fail to be Proper Good Literature. Atlas Shrugged should have been about how John Galt, sitting in a factory meeting, hears about a plan based in altruism, but when a butterfly lands on his arm, he understands that the plan will ruin the life of his love Dagny, so he commits suicide. Then it would be good taste to like it.
RoberII wrote:Steroid, you need to read more literature if Oscar Wilde is the most difficult writer you could think of... And actually, also if you think Hemmingway is dull. And you do not understand literature if you can characterize Hemmingway as dull - to do so means that you are, quite literally, unable to read the subtler aspects of Hemmingway. "Old Man and the Sea? Eh, dude goes fishing, comes back home without a fish. Booooriiing."
(For a comparison, it's like saying that Bollywood movies don't make any sense, when in reality, you just don't know the genre well enough to 'read' it - or saying that music videos are bad videos because they do not have a plot. Or like saying that abstract art is bad art because it doesn't have any nude chicks in it.)
The Mighty Thesaurus wrote:Steroid: you wanted to know why a "consistent" character was worse than an inconsistent character. I would prefer the debate be couched in terms of conflict, but I'm happy to go along with any nomenclature you choose. The reason is simple: every major aspect of your story should be interesting in its own right. If your plot is just 600 odd pages of everything just being super, it would be dull and thus bad writing. Similarly, if your character spends 600 odd pages of being just super, they would be dull, regardless of whatever shenanigans they got up to in those 600 pages. If your character has no arc, why did you put them in your story in the first place?
Ghostbear wrote: This seems like the most condescending way to say "I don't like works of literature that are commonly accepted as 'great' literature, nor works that are written in a similar style.". I mean, if that's your cup of tea that's your cup of tea, but you're painting yourself as some enlightened book reader, able to recognize what makes a "good story"(tm) better than all of the ignorant sheep, blindly enjoying their difficult, dull, and depressing works. Have you considered that perhaps those people don't find those stories difficult (maybe their grasp of the language is just better than yours?), dull (they have different tastes than you?), or depressing (a story can be sad without being depressing)? Your taste in literature is not universal.
And maybe, just maybe, people are criticizing Atlas Shrugged as a work of writing not because they thought it lacked appropriate difficulty, dullness, or depression, and they just found it to be a horribly unenjoyable work of fiction? Saying you think their taste in literature is bad does nothing to disprove their point.
Steroid wrote:I think the qualities I mentioned are objective ones. One book can be clearly said to have more or less symbolism than another, or its theme more or less important, or its ending happier or sadder. Which of each you prefer is subjective, but what I don't agree with is that the counterintuitive choices in each case (more symbolism, less important theme, sadder ending) is preferable as an objective measure of taste precisely because they're counterintuitive.
Steroid wrote:Except I never said that. People on this forum, and a fictional comic person who owns a library and has too much time on his hand, have said that I have bad taste in literature. Maybe, just maybe, I'm lauding Atlas Shrugged as a work of literature because I found it to be a thoroughly enjoyable work of fiction?
IcedT wrote:Also, this raises the important question of whether or not dinosaurs were delicious.
Ghostbear wrote:Except what I'm highlighting is that you're just tossing all of those works you don't enjoy as "difficult, dull, and depressing". Saying "I like works with simpler language usage, more exciting themes, and happier endings" is very different from saying "The works you enjoy use unncessarily difficult language, boring themes, and are depressing" especially when there is an implied "and that is why you like them" at the end. That is why I called it unncesarily condescending; you're critiquing the works that other people like (which is fine) but then you imply that the reason people like those works are because of those very disingenuous deconstructions of those works.
Steroid wrote:Except I never said that. People on this forum, and a fictional comic person who owns a library and has too much time on his hand, have said that I have bad taste in literature. Maybe, just maybe, I'm lauding Atlas Shrugged as a work of literature because I found it to be a thoroughly enjoyable work of fiction?
You very much did say it, because you went ahead and deconstructed traditionally accepted "good literature" as all being difficult, dull, and depressing.
It's like if I criticized Skyrim (a game I didn't enjoy) as being a game for people that like "shallow, unfocused gameplay tacked onto a cliche narrative" -- I might think that of the game, and maybe even the people that enjoy the game might accept less inflammatory criticisms of it, but what they actually enjoy is the open ended gameplay, the fact that they aren't glued to the developer's whim's, and so on -- a good way for me to criticize it would have been to say "Open ended games just aren't for me, and I also don't like [x], [y], and [z]." instead of the "You guys only like this game because of [terrible x], [terrible y], [terrible z]". By painting people as only seeing works of literature as "great" only because they like their stories to be "difficult, dull, and depressing", you're outright saying that you think their taste in literature is shit.
RoberII wrote:There is no such thing as an objective reading of a text. No text is objectively sad, and symbolism is something that readers bestow upon the work, not the other way around. As for excitement, hell, I've found previously dull books to be exciting on the second read, and vice-versa. So let me just disabuse you of that notion, Steroid.
IcedT wrote:Also, this raises the important question of whether or not dinosaurs were delicious.
Steroid wrote:I'm not implying that it's the reason. I'm saying that it's a reason. There are people who enjoy something specifically because others don't get it, or because others reject it. Literary hipster-ism, if you will. There is plenty of room for different taste in literature. There is no room for, "If you think Atlas Shrugged with its flat-arc characters is good, you have no taste." Or rather, if we make room for that, then we must also make room for, "If you think (insert other work here) is good because the characters arc downward, you have no taste."
Steroid wrote:So, if I replaced "difficult, dull, and depressing" with "complex, accessible, and non-optimistic," I could make the same point without incurring the foul your giving me? If you like that sort of literature, you should own the opinion, regardless of how it's phrased. If you want to call Atlas "simplistic, redundant, and disconnected from reality" versus "easy-to-read, sweepingly epic, and idealistic," the terminology bothers me less than the opinion that preferring those qualities is the essence of bad taste.
(spoiler added)Kaylakaze wrote:Spoiler:
(Edited to make it not so harsh)
Honestly, the fact that you only think people are worth helping because an omnipotent being told you to (and therefore, if it were up to you, you wouldn't even bother) makes me think quite little of you.BlueNight wrote:I, as a Christian, found Atlas Shrugged particularly enjoyable. I should not help people because they need help, letting their needs determine my actions. I should not consider someone who needs help to deserve my help, as if "need" in some way earned the help that is given. I should help others because God told me to care about others as much as I care about myself.
General_Norris, on feminism, wrote:If you lose your six Pokémon, you lost.
Ghostbear wrote:Implying that it is a reason is not significantly less insulting -- you're still making your disingenuous deconstructions of those works, and implying that those people like those works because of their preference for those negative traits is just being condescending. Comparing them to hipsters doesn't help your case at all, in fact it makes you seem more condescending.
Also, I didn't realize that "these other people are critiquing things I like unfairly" is sufficient justification for "I will now critique everything they like unfairly too". Something about two wrongs not making a right.
No, the words are a symptom and a wonderful example of your generally condescending attitude towards people who enjoy those works of literature. Choosing less inflammatory terms wouldn't change the attitude of your comment at all, it just would have forced me to use even more words to point out why it's so condescending. In the end, you're still characterizing all of those works of literature that those people enjoy with loaded and overwhelmingly negative terms. I mean, fuck, just swap those words into my earlier question: can you imagine anyone saying "I love this book, it's so complex, accessible, and non-optimistic!" ? I still can't see that.
Princess Marzipan wrote:I've seen nothing from sanjavalen that gives me enough information to claim he's an asshole, and way too many people here are shoving words so far down his throat that I think his esophagus has probably ruptured by now.
Princess Marzipan wrote:If one want to complain about how he pays his employees, I guess that's doable. But maybe it'd be useful to actual make an argument as opposed to yelling fuckwords? There're definitely arguments to be made that incentive-based pay structures often have the nasty side effect of incentivizing incorrectly, but I'm not seeing anyone make any.
drazen wrote:*I should engage in rational self-interest.
*Accidents happen, and I may become one of the non-producers at any moment.
*Therefore, I should hedge my bets by saving for the future, or joining an independent organization that provides insurance/protection."
*I should engage in rational self-interest.
*People with no money and little hope of getting money tend to commit crimes, even violent crimes.
*While a police force can protect me, they tend to be most effective only after-the-fact.
*A perhaps more effective method of curbing crime, and a better use of my money, is to simply purchase a security system / buy a gun and shoot the criminals / learn self-defense / etc.."
(Seriously, you think because people commit crimes, we should capitulate to them and make concessions to them for free? Terrorists would love having people like you in charge.)
*I should engage in rational self-interest.
*Capitalism is the best method for self-interest to find expression.
*Capitalism only functions when there is a small but substantial pool of unemployed to provide mobility in the workforce, so that jobs can shift as needed"
(Admittedly, this isn't happening, but that is because we have a system that allows government regulation to be drawn up by corporations, which is NOT capitalism and is in fact EXACTLY what Ayn Rand was warning people about!)
Steroid wrote:Again, there are perfectly legitimate ways to enjoy the works I don't. But doing so precisely and solely because it makes you feel superior to people like me is not one of them. Yes, I believe there are people like that. And yes, I want to be condescending to them.
Steroid wrote:The problem with that aphorism is that one wrong doesn't make a right either. Do you agree that the comic, and some in this thread, are critiquing my liking of Atlas Shrugged unfairly? If so, how do you suggest that I do right that wrong? If not, then how is it wrong for me to critique others for their taste in exactly the same way?
Steroid wrote:Except that people have said, in this very thread, that complex characters with arcs are objectively superior to flat characters, or at least that I lack understanding for having the opposite premise. So my answer to your question is yes, if they're being honest.
sanjavalen wrote:I mean, my employees are certainly free to go work for someone else if they want, but the plain fact is that I pay better than anyone else I know of for equivalent work. You can see how I would have to smile at being called a parasite and exploiter for that.
Djehutynakht wrote:This should be a fun bookstore. I wonder what happens if someone picks up Twilight...
Princess Marzipan wrote:Actually, the point you're trying to make DOESN'T remain without proof of causation. The correlation can just as easily be explained by how palatable a philosophy Objectivism tends to be for people who do extremely well financially. It allows them to believe they are solely responsible for their success and that people worse off ("parasites" and "looters") aren't discarded or forgotten parts of a system without which the Objectivist would be just as poorly off.Karilyn wrote:Strictly speaking, people who are fans of Atlas Shrugged tend to do extremely well financially, and function very well in the real world. Of course, this is likely correlation, not causation, but the point still remains.John E. wrote:There are two novels that can change a bookish fourteen-year old’s life: The Lord of the Rings and Atlas Shrugged. One is a childish fantasy that often engenders a lifelong obsession with its unbelievable heroes, leading to an emotionally stunted, socially crippled adulthood, unable to deal with the real world. The other, of course, involves orcs.
Gelsamel wrote:If you punch him in the face repeatedly then it's science.
Kaylakaze wrote:[vitriol]
RoberII wrote:LoTR is plenty provincial.
And I don't think Alice in Wonderland has 'more' symbolism than Twilight.
LE4dGOLEM wrote:your ability to tell things from things remains one of your skills.
Weeks wrote:Not only can you tell things from things, you can recognize when a thing is a thing
CorruptUser wrote:
2) If all labor prices drop, so does the sales price.
whateveries wrote:CorruptUser wrote:
2) If all labor prices drop, so does the sales price.
no, the sales price remains rock steady and the profit margin goes up Ker-ching!
I said KER-CHING!
sanjavalen wrote:Incentive structures are a special interest of mine. I understand the pitfalls. Its very interesting, and its actually closely related to the problem of metrics; your task as a competent manager is to ensure that the incentive structure (which can be either flat-out financial or simply what you measure - because what you measure is what you end up judging your direct reports on) is fair and also leads to desired outcomes - the best pay for the best work, and work that is profitable to the company. Its not something you can sit still on; you have to be constantly thinking of ways people could game the system, ways in which the structure would incentivize bad behavior, etc. So far this seems to be the way to go, but hey, we'll see. If someone has an actual better way that they have used or seen used in a labor-intensive job, I'd be interested in discussing tat with them.
I mean, my employees are certainly free to go work for someone else if they want, but the plain fact is that I pay better than anyone else I know of for equivalent work. You can see how I would have to smile at being called a parasite and exploiter for that.
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