Hot Take

The Fountainhead is a legitimately good book.

Neglecting the Ayn Rand-isms of Objectivism, the book itself is a good read. It does battles of ideas in a way I’ve never seen elsewhere.

Imagine Adam and Bob get into an argument. Adam tells Bob to do something. Bob says no.

End scene. There’s not much room to keep going there.

In the Fountainhead, at one point Roarke is trying to get some investors to fund a resort, and Rand talks about a hidden third party, a faceless, voiceless other member of the negotiations who sits in the room with them. The investors are in some way performing for this third party, but there’s no one there. Roarke can’t see what’s happening.

First of all, the leverage of the scene with the hidden agenda is beyond the simple argument and refusal. The investors are bound to something that matters to them in a way that’s significant. The persuasion isn’t unreasonable of inexplicable. You get it. They are completely in their own characters and not talking to the reader at all.

Secondly, I absolutely have conversations with people in the real world who are performing for an audience when it’s just the two of us. I have spoke to someone who made a joke and then looked around as if to see if everyone else noticed how good her joke was. There’s no one else there. We don’t live in the Truman show. It’s not real.

I don’t know if they’re practicing for social media, like they’re going to make a video about this conversation later. I don’t know if they’re showing off for other people they used to know. But the invisible third party is absolutely a real thing people do.

Ayn Rand hits a few things like that, social phenomena that no one else seems to touch. I don’t know if I’ve ever seen social conflict like that anyplace else.

Vacation

I’ll be back in a bit. I just need a break.

Take care, everyone. I’m rooting for you.

Thoughts

I don’t really need this website until I’ve written and published more books/stories.

It takes money, energy, and time. There are evenings when I could be going over a plot thread, and instead I’m trying to put together an update. LC is a distraction.

Thoughts

How many people do you think actually believe the world is flat?

I bet there are two groups. The first is people who never really think about it, but figure it’s probably flat. If you go outside and look, the Earth looks flat. So they just put it in back of head and move on.

The second group is believers who actually think about it, and I bet their argument is ‘The government is lying to us. The government says the Earth is round. Therefore, it is flat.’ Ignoring the logic for a moment, this group is the one that actively believes the Earth has a shape and puts some kind of effort into maintaining the belief that shape is flat. Or anything, really, but a oblate spheroid.

Don’t come at me with oblate ellipsoid arguments. I will hold you in low regard.

Anway, there are probably very few people who actually believe in the flat Earth in any meaningful sense, and I’m certain I spend a lot more time thinking about them then they do about me.

Why can’t I see the Appalachians from the top of Pike’s Peak (if the world was flat)? There’s nothing tall enough to block the view in the way. I was just up Pike’s Peak. I didn’t see the Appalachians. I checked.

They don’t care, but I am so curious.

Acura TLX

I’ve been looking at the Acura TLX type S. I wish there was a way to chop two feet off in the middle, merge the B and C pillars, and make it a coupe.

It’s a handsome car. The grill isn’t that nice, but the interior looks pleasantly mechanical. I guess retractable screens aren’t a thing. They probably break too often. Other than the poorly integrated screen, the inside looks like an excellent place to spend time.

Why do the rear seats exist? People aren’t going back there.