"I swear - my life and love for it - I will never live for others, nor will I ask other people to live for me" (Rand 979). John Galt published the basic principles of Ayn Rand's objectiveist philosophy in the last line of Atlas Shrugged's speech. Her ideology plays an indispensable role in her literary work and works as the driving force of the hero's behavior, goals, and beliefs. From the first objectiveism she established in her childhood in Russia, Ian Land further developed and raised her ideas in each novel, and finally in her huge Atlas I shrug my shoulders.
Atlas shrugged the shoulder at the Einland Atlas, a writer born in Russia and published by philosopher Ian Land in 1957. This is a popular work if controversial. According to the Library of Congress 1991 report, this novel is considered to be the second most influential book after the Bible in the life of the reader. Over 1,000 pages of novels reflect autho due to the complicated combination of mystery, love story, social criticism, and philosophical concepts.
Ein Land is known as a novel of literary works by his philosophical thought. With her two best-selling novels, The Fountainhead and Atlas Shrugged, Ayn Rand represents a new philosophical idea that challenges the way people think about the basic problems of human life. However, Ian Land wrote a song before she wrote these two major works. Anthem was published in 1938, published by Fountainhead in 1943, and Atlas was shrugging for almost 20 years in 1957. I expressed in more detail with her two major bestsellers. In fact, Rand actually wrote Anthem as a way to get some sort of progress from the plan of The Fountainhead.
A book about post-apocalyptic Chicago may be reminiscent of Veronica's divergent collection at first, but a girl with a city may want to compare themes with the Atlas shroud of Einland. I am not an unobtrusive way of saying - shrugging the shoulder of Atlas is one of this type of burden, but please consider the situation in this children's book. It does not fulfill the definition of the perfect twisted version of the dyspea I am saying, but it is an excellent example of post apocalyptic science fiction. Lisa, a 10-year-old protagonist, had an interesting observation about humanity because he was struggling to survive and defend homes and other children in Chicago near the Chicago to prevent looting of the gang before pre-puberty. By so doing she began to notice the desire for freedom. And it made this freedom very timely and easy to read.