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  • (tone music)

  • (tape rewinding)

  • (tape recorder clicks)

  • (beeping)

  • - [Mike Wallace] Who are you, Ayn Rand?

  • You have an accent which is...

  • - [Rand] Russian.

  • - [Wallace] Russian. You were born in Russia?

  • - [Rand] Yes.

  • - [Wallace] Came here?

  • - [Rand] Oh, about 30 years ago.

  • - [Wallace] And whence did this philosophy

  • of yours come?

  • - [Rand] Out of my own mind.

  • With the sole acknowledgement of a debt

  • to Aristotle, who was the only philosopher

  • that ever influenced me.

  • I devised the rest of my philosophy myself.

  • (quiet piano music and mumbling)

  • (beeping)

  • - [Wallace] You are married?

  • - [Rand] Yes.

  • - [Wallace] Your husband, is he an industrialist?

  • - [Rand] No, he's an artist. His name is Frank O'Connor.

  • - [Wallace] Does he live from his painting?

  • - [Rand] He's just beginning to study painting.

  • He was a designer before.

  • - [Wallace] Is he supported in his efforts by the state?

  • - [Rand] Most certainly not.

  • - [Wallace] He's supported by you for the time being?

  • - [Rand] No, by his own work, actually, in the past.

  • - [Wallace] Well, I know that-

  • - [Rand] By me, if necessary

  • but that isn't quite necessary.

  • - [Wallace] And there is no contradiction here

  • in that you help him?

  • - [Rand] No, because you see, I am in love

  • with him selfishly.

  • It is to my own interest to help him

  • if he ever needed it.

  • I would not call that a sacrifice because

  • I take selfish pleasure in it.

  • (quiet piano music)

  • I say that man is entitled to his own happiness

  • and that he must achieve it himself

  • but that he cannot demand that others

  • give up their lives to make him happy

  • nor should he wish to sacrifice himself

  • for the happiness of others.

  • I hold that man should have self-esteem.

  • - [Wallace] And cannot man have self-esteem

  • if he loves his fellow man?

  • Christ and every important modern leader

  • in man's history has taught us that we should

  • love one another.

  • Why then is this kind of love, in your mind, immoral?

  • - [Rand] It is immoral if it is a love placed above oneself

  • because more than immoral, it's impossible

  • because when you are asked to love

  • everybody indiscriminately

  • that is, to love people without any standard

  • to love them regardless of whether

  • they have any value or virtue

  • you are asked to love nobody.

  • - [Wallace] But in a sense, in your book

  • you talk about love as if it were

  • a business deal of some kind.

  • Isn't the essence of love that it is

  • above self-interest?

  • - [Rand] Well, what would it mean to have love

  • above self interest?

  • It would mean, for instance, that the husband

  • would tell his wife, if he were moral

  • according to the conventional morality

  • that I am marrying you just for your own sake.

  • I have no personal interest in it

  • but I am so unselfish that I am marrying you

  • only for your own good.

  • - [Wallace] Well, should husbands and wives tally up-

  • - [Rand] Would any woman like that?

  • I agree with you that it should be treated

  • like a business deal

  • but every business has to have its own terms

  • and its own kind of currency

  • and in love, the currency's virtue.

  • You love people, not for what you do for them

  • or what they do for you.

  • You love them for their values, their virtues.

  • You don't love causelessly.

  • You don't love everybody indiscriminately.

  • You love only those who deserve it.

  • Man has free will.

  • If a man wants love, he should correct his flaws

  • and he may deserve it

  • but he cannot expect the unearned.

  • - [Wallace] There are very few of us then

  • in this world by your standards

  • who are worthy of love.

  • - [Rand] Unfortunately, yes, very few.

  • But it is open to everybody

  • to make themselves worthy of it

  • and that is all that my morality offers them.

  • - [Wallace] If they will-

  • - [Rand] A way to make themselves worthy of love

  • although that's not the primary motive.

  • (quiet piano music)

  • - [Wallace] Isn't it possible that we are all

  • basically lonely people

  • and we are basically our brother's keepers?

  • - [Rand] Nobody has ever given a reason

  • why man should be their brother's keepers

  • and you see the examples around you

  • of men perishing by the attempt

  • to be their brother's keepers.

  • - [Wallace] You have no faith in anything?

  • - [Rand] Faith? Oh no.

  • - [Wallace] Only in your mind?

  • - [Rand] That is not faith. That is a conviction.

  • Yes, I have no faith at all.

  • I only hold conviction.

  • (slow piano music)

  • - [Wallace] As we said at the outset

  • if Ayn Rand's ideas were ever to take hold

  • they would revolutionize the world.

  • And to those who would reject her philosophy

  • Miss Rand hurls this challenge.

  • For the past 2,000 years the world has been

  • dominated by other philosophies.

  • Look around you.

  • Consider the results.

  • We thank Ayn Rand for adding

  • her portrait to our gallery.

  • One of the people other people are interested in.

  • Mike Wallace, goodbye.

  • (smooth piano music)

  • (tape rewinding)

(tone music)

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艾恩-蘭德的愛與幸福|空白的空白|PBS數字工作室 (Ayn Rand on Love and Happiness | Blank on Blank | PBS Digital Studios)

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