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JoshuaFox comments on Open Thread April 8 - April 14 2014 - Less Wrong Discussion

3 Post author: Tenoke 08 April 2014 11:11AM

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Comment author: JoshuaFox 11 April 2014 08:02:10AM *  0 points [-]

Yes, but some people praise the book itself as utterly exceptional. Atlas Shrugged may introduce people to Objectivism, but even the fanatics who praise the ideas in it don't praise it as literature.

Comment author: fubarobfusco 13 April 2014 04:48:15AM 5 points [-]

"Atlas Shrugged is the greatest novel that has ever been written, in my judgment, so let's let it go at that."
— Nathaniel Branden, quoted in a 1971 interview in Reason magazine.

Comment author: Luke_A_Somers 14 April 2014 12:47:27AM 2 points [-]

In some respects, it is. If you've always been put off by idiot balls or stupid moves or leaving exploits on the table or any number of other things, HPMoR scratches an itch that you've had all along.

Comment author: somervta 12 April 2014 06:31:10AM 1 point [-]

I think those are two separate things - "it changed my life" and "It's exceptional literature" are different, although they're not uncorrelated.

Comment author: JoshuaFox 12 April 2014 06:47:41PM 1 point [-]

Certainly. I'm interested in why people would say either of these things. From my reading, HPMoR is interesting and well-written, but it's hard to see why it would change someone's life or why someone would think it was an utterly new mold-breaking work of literature.

Comment author: somervta 13 April 2014 05:31:46AM 2 points [-]

I think the main effect wrt the former is as a introduction to rationality and the Sequences