Allan Gotthelf's short book allows you to hold Ayn Rand's philosophy and sense of life in one breath which makes her philosophy very real to any reader. He starts with what attracts people to Ayn Rand-her benevolent universe premise and her heroic view of man-and establishes that hers is not a universally held view, and even the cause of hostility towards Ayn Rand. He then asks which is true? Is life inherently tragic or can we understand ourselves and the world, establish values, and ultimately succeed? That is what Ayn Rand's philosophy establishes: the supreme power of reason, the supreme power of the individual, the supreme power of capitalism, the supreme power of man to achieve values and happiness-if he fights for reason, individualism, and freedom.
The view that life is inherently miserable and tragic has no philosophic basis. Expressing Ayn Rand's view, he says "the greatest amount of suffering in mankind's history has not been due to anything about the nature of the universe. It has been due to the philosophies men have accepted." That is a powerful message for anyone who wants to improve their life or change the world. That accounts for Ayn Rand's appeal. Ideas matter. Good ideas are vital to human happiness.
His last chapter is like a work of art, in that, you see on one page that each core Objectivist principle is necessary for man to have confidence in himself and the world.
Given the limitations inherent in any introduction, Gotthelf briefly indicates Ayn Rand's revolutionary understanding of the senses. A major epistemological point of Ayn Rand's is that the form of perception (color, flavor, tones, texture) does not negate the fact of perception (sight, taste & smell, hearing, touch.) Form is the *direct* experience of the interaction of our sense organs with the external world-which establishes the fact of touch, taste, sight, smell, and hearing. This truth may seem obvious to most people, but most philosophers have fought against this view (if they know of it at all) which in the end undermines all knowledge, values, moral certainty, and happiness.
This book weaves together the core themes of Ayn Rand's philosophy and is an excellent introduction, worth including in every introductory philosophy course.