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box_in_the_box ([info]box_in_the_box) wrote in [info]scans_daily,
@ 2009-08-28 14:38:00

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Entry tags:creator: steve ditko, theme: objectivism

"If only that Ditko fellow was less subtle and more overt regarding his personal politics ..."
For as much fail as it churns out, Big Hollywood occasionally offers some genuine gems.

I can't stand Objectivism, but I find Steve Ditko's treatment of it irresistibly compelling, perhaps because the comic book medium is a far more appropriate venue for such a Manichean philosophy than the thousand-page rape-justifying tomes that Ayn Rand routinely shat out (it certainly helps that none of Ditko's characters ever barfed up a 70-page screed like John Galt, not to mention the fact that Ditko actually managed to create characters who were more believable as human beings than any of Rand's strawmen or Mary Sues, even when his characters were radioactivity-powered superheroes).

The following four pages constitute "In Principle: The Unchecked Premise," a short story originally published in the 160-page graphic novel Steve Ditko's Static in 1988:






As crudely simplistic as it is, it's still better than either reading or watching the "fireplace scene" between Howard Roark and Dominique Francon in The Fountainhead, but then again, so is getting punched in the crotch until you hemorrhage internally and die.


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Re: An even darker view:
[info]runespoor7
2009-08-29 10:53 am UTC (link)
And the name "Israel", which God bestowed upon Jacob means "the one who who struggled with God", or even "he who fights victoriousy with God".

As for Abraham, he also directly went against God's orders when God told him he should sacrifice his son, and that turned out to have been the right choice.

I'd argue that arguing with God and religion is an important part of what Judaism is about.

(Reply to this) (Parent) (Thread)

Re: An even darker view:
[info]janegray
2009-08-29 09:50 pm UTC (link)
As for Abraham, he also directly went against God's orders when God told him he should sacrifice his son, and that turned out to have been the right choice.

Wait, what? Wasn't Abraham right about to stab the kid, when the God-sent angel stopped him?

(Reply to this) (Parent) (Thread)

No, you're entirely right.
[info]runespoor7
2009-08-29 10:01 pm UTC (link)
No, you're entirely right. That was the last time I ever tried to make any sort of point past five in the morning. I misremembered, and I'm ashamed I didn't check before posting it.

(Reply to this) (Parent)


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