2014 Atlas Winning Essay PDF
2014 Atlas Winning Essay PDF
2014 Atlas Winning Essay PDF
FIRST PLACE
Stephanie Aldrich, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA
In the novel, James Taggarts first words are Dont bother me, dont
bother me, dont bother me. Why is this significant? How do his
first words relate to his thoughts and actions throughout the novel?
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2014 ATLAS SHRUGGED WINNING ESSAY
arrogant creatures who ought to apologize (248) for their successes. Because he
wants to be loved simply for existing, not for anything I do or have or say or think
(809), he argues that it is intrinsically virtuous to love and praise the undeserving. In
Taggarts ideal world, his incompetence in the physical realm would imply a nobility of
spirit; his unhappiness would be the the hallmark of virtue (248); and to admire him
unconditionally would be a supreme gesture of charity (361).
For all his denial of objective reality, however, Taggart is powerless to alter it. Instead,
he constructs the facade of his utopia on the backs of producers. Taggart is able to
leverage his political skills to achieve personal victories at the expense of others, but
depends entirely on the master[s] of reality (1048) to provide the loot. He receives
an unearned position of power in a company built by his ancestors and operated
by his subordinate sister, the Railroad Unification Plan permits him to seize his
competitors profits, and he even wins his wifes admiration by taking credit for his
sisters achievements. Yet his parasitic empire is unsustainable. It can persist only so
long as there is something to steal, and this is yet another truth that Taggart cannot
bear to confront.
As John Galt recruits most of the great producers to his strike, the burden of
humanitys survival falls increasingly heavy on the shoulders of those that are left.
At the same time, Taggart and his fellow pull-peddlers (836) tighten their grip on
the market, redirecting the wealth that remains into their own pockets. Starved of
resources and shackled by increasingly oppressive laws, those men of ability who are
still willing to maintain civilization find themselves unable to do so. Yet Taggart refuses
to see reason. He demands that the producers find some way, in defiance of all logic,
to prop up the cardboard edifice of his utopiaas if, by agreeing to fake the reality he
orders them to fake, men would, in fact, create it (957). I want this kind of world, he
tells his sister; . . . it allows me to feel importantmake it work for me! (839). When
Hank Rearden explains how the Steel Unification Plan will bleed him dry until he and
the looters perish together, and asks why they expect any better outcome, Taggarts
only response is, Oh, youll do something! (902). By this point, the only way to save
human civilization is allow the producers to rebuild it without interference, but this is
an option Taggart will not consider. Rather than bow to reality, rather than admit that
his looters paradise is subject to causality and cannot persist no matter how much he
wishes it could, he clings to its crumbling remnants until there is nothing left to grasp.
This is the truth that lies at James Taggarts core, the truth he is most desperate to
deny: He would rather die alongside the master[s] of reality than live with them.
Although he pretends to be motivated by a desire for money, the trappings of luxury
stir no feeling in him. His rare moments of pleasure are always in reaction to a harm
suffered by a capable, life-loving personeven when the consequences of that harm are
catastrophic for Taggart himself. Every person who embraces reality is a reminder that
Taggart is bound by that same reality, and he responds with mindless spite. Although he
deludes himself about his motives, all of his actionshis business practices, his political
dealings, and even his abuse of his wifeserve his compulsion to kill all that is good
for the sake of killing (827). He is driven solely by the urge to defy reality by the
destruction of every living value (1048), at the inevitable cost of his own survival.
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2014 ATLAS SHRUGGED WINNING ESSAY
Taggarts ultimate goal is so loathsome that the knowledge of it is both his greatest fear
and his eventual downfall. He seeks to bring about a triumph of impotence; to find
proof of the defeat of rational reality (957) in the death throes of human civilization;
to sacrifice all value on the altar of the lack, the fault, the flawthe zero (945). The
cry Dont bother me is the futile demand that Taggart makes of all existence. He
cannot bear to be bothered by anything, and so there is nothing for him to aspire to
but death.
Copyright 19852015 The Ayn Rand Institute (ARI). Reproduction of content and images in whole or in part is prohibited. All rights reserved. ARI is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization. Contributions to ARI in the United States are tax-exempt to the extent provided by law.
Objectivist Conferences (OCON) and the Ayn Rand Institute eStore are operated by ARI. Payments to OCON or the Ayn Rand Institute eStore do not qualify as tax-deductible contributions to The Ayn Rand Institute.
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