Egoism without Permission

The Moral Psychology of Ayn Rand's Ethics

Egoism without Permission will make an important and excellent addition to the growing academic literature on Ayn Rand.
Robert Mayhew, Seton Hall University

Ayn Rand controversially defended rational egoism, the idea that people should regard their own happiness as their highest goal. Given that numerous scholars in philosophy and psychology alike are examining the nature of human flourishing and an ethics of well-being, the time is ripe for a close examination of Rand’s theory. Egoism without Permission illuminates Rand’s thinking about how to practice egoism by exploring some of its crucial psychological dimensions. Tara Smith examines the dynamics among four partially subconscious factors in an individual’s well-being: a person’s foundational motivation for being concerned with morality; their attitude toward their desires; their independence; and their self-esteem. A clearer grasp of each, Smith argues, sheds light on the others, and a better understanding of the set, in turn, enriches our understanding of self-interest and its sensible pursuit. Smith then traces the implications for a broader understanding of what a person’s self-interest genuinely is, and, correspondingly, of what its pursuit through rational egoism involves. By highlighting these previously underexplored features of Rand’s conceptions of self-interest and egoism, Smith betters our understanding of how vital these psychological levers are to a person’s genuine flourishing.

288 Pages, 6 x 9 in.

June, 2024

isbn : 9780822948193

about the author

Tara Smith

Tara Smith is professor of philosophy at the University of Texas at Austin, where she holds the Anthem Foundation Fellowship for the Study of Objectivism. She is the author of Moral Rights and Political Freedom, Viable Values: A Study of Life as the Root and Reward of Morality, Ayn Rand’s Normative Ethics—The Virtuous Egoist, and Judicial Review in an Objective Legal System.

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Tara Smith