Thursday, October 02, 2008

Who is John Galt?

He is every one of us who believes in creation, ingenuity, thought, reason, value, workmanship - in essence, who chooses to be a human. After all, don't all these attributes contribute to the "humanness" of a human being? The answer is of course, Yes. After reading Atlas Shrugged the answer has got so well ingrained in my mind, I don't think anything will ever be able to cast a shadow of uncertainty on it.

I have to thank the anonymous reader who recommended it while commenting on one of my older posts. Reading the book is such a blissful experience. Ayn Rand presents the true human values with such clarity and with a multitude of characters that probably sums up the various kinds of people around us. As you read the book and think about the situations unfolding, you can't escape noticing the resemblance they have to the world around. The contexts may vary, but the way people behave in those situations is very similar to the way Rand's characters behave. And I think that is the reason the book grips the mind of its reader. It is a work of fiction, and yet it is so real.

I don't think I have ever thought about my workplace and the people I work with so much as I did while I was reading the book. The situation there is no different. We have those select few who give it their all to make a project successful, without ever thinking about what they are going to gain. Then there are those who always think about how best can they use the success of the project, just by sticking to the real hard workers. Then again there are a few who don't care about the project, don't want to put even the effort of sticking to the propellers, but yet want to reap the rewards. There are a few leaders who will take the credit of every success, and blame the failure on the team and avoid any kind of responsibility. There are few more categories people will fit into. What's interesting is their thought processes match to at least one character in Atlas Shrugged.

As Rand says in the book, life is a matter of choices. What differentiates man from the other animals is his ability to think, but to exercise this ability is a choice every man has to make. Also, to what extent he exercises it will determine the heights he will achieve. So, on one extreme we will have someone who chooses to think and reason, act on his thoughts and do so without exception never letting his decision be based on anything but reason. He will be perfectly in peace with his mind, probably the kind that is described in the Gita and can be achieved by the way of Karma. On the other extreme we will have someone who chooses not to think at all thereby resigning completely to external forces, always in confusion and acting on the other person's reason, thereby never at peace with his mind. Always living in a state of denial, such a man will eventually bring his own downfall.

All of us lie somewhere between these two extremes. Which way we want to move is again a matter of individual choice!

1 comment:

Sumit said...

Very true....reason should be the sole "reason" behind your actions!

I liked Atals Shrugged but I liked "The Fountainhead" better! The concept of Atlantis in Atlas... I have always found hard to grasp! Howard Roark always worked, failed and succeeded in the real world! Atlantis sounds like a dreamland, a myth....and that's why it seems so incongruous in a book which tries to extol the virtues of dealing with reality, sound reasoning and solid facts through its major characters!

I have not read Geeta. I do want to but I would like to do it through a book which will explain the meaning of the verses clearly! From what I know of it though, I agree with the concept of Karma. The one who focuses on the task in hand rather than the end goal will be free not only from disappointment and sadness of the failure but also from satisfaction and the glory of the success! A truly balanced mind! Now everyone wants to be free from the disappointment of failure but how many will be ready to give the pleasure of the success? You cannot have one and give up the other! So the true measure of the balanced mind is not the absence of tears of failure, it is the presence of a straight, calm face in success!