By Gregory Salmieri
In her fiction and early journal entries, Ayn Rand frequently refers to valuing as an action that one must "know how to" perform. Such formulations represent the first form in which she grasped the point that she would later formulate by saying that values (and concepts) are objective rather than intrinsic or subjective.
In this course, Salmieri traces the development of Rand's conception of valuing. In the process, he discusses a number of central tenets of the Objectivist ethics, including the values of reason, purpose and self-esteem, the virtues of productiveness, pride and integrity, the argument that Man's Life is the standard of value, and the role played by Rand's view of free will in her new conceptions of egoism and objectivity. Considering these points in the context of Rand's novels and the development of her thought makes them easier to grasp and to apply to one's own life.
This course was recorded at the 2008 Objectivist Summer Conference in Newport Beach, CA.
(MP3 download; 4 hrs., 24 min., with Q & A, 181 MB)
This lecture was adapted into a three-part course, "Ayn Rand’s Conception of Valuing," available for free at the ARI Campus, on the Ayn Rand University mobile app (iOS and Android), and on the Ayn Rand Institute's YouTube Channel.