Youtube comments of Rotor Air Group (@rotorairgroup8409).
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Rand was intellectually dishonest and my own text below will explain why:
MY COMMENTS ON THE FOUNTAINHEAD’S PLOT:
The interest that this book generated at the time was because it was by Ayn Rand, which leads me to assume that her characters were applying the philosophy that she preached.
The character of Peter Keating is identified in the book as an "anti-hero", weak, false, dependent, hypocritical etc. Howard Roarke was quite the opposite, an upright guy, with great strength, creativity, individual values etc. But from the beginning these two supposedly opposite characters are partners in a deception that gives rise to the entire plot.
The weaknesses of the characters in Rand's novels suffer from immense egos and a false aura of superiority that they fail to truly demonstrate in their participation of the plot.
Roarke had a dream of being able to build his ideal building but had neither the means to do so nor the relationships that would allow him to achieve it.
The idea of allowing someone else to present his design as his own must have been detestable to him, but the eagerness to see it made was stronger than the prudence of biding his time to achieve it. Perhaps it was due to a lack of confidence in his abilities that he preferred to negotiate with Keating in this sterile and immoral way.
The moment he colluded with Keating and let him sign the building plans of his own design he lost any legal or moral connection to them in addition to became exactly what he was criticizing Keating for being.
The agreement they made about not changing the design in the construction was false because it was not Keating's prerogative to make that decision. Roarke pretended to feel cheated, but it was obvious from the beginning that Keating lacked the power to assure him anything.
They both were clear that they were deceiving the architectural firm because the design nor the building plans were made by Keating. If the architectural firm would had known that a madman could dynamite the building if they did it as their needs demanded they would surely not have used that design but any other.
Another important factor is that Keating assumed responsibility for Rourke’s design when he signed the building plans, but after the changes that the architectural firm made it was no longer exactly the same design. To make the changes they necessarily had to make new building plans with such changes so the previous building plans lost relevance and became obsolete.
Once again, Roarke lost any right to demand anything when he let Keating sign the building plans as his.
Analyzing the participation of each one in ensuring that the building existed, it must be made clear that it was constituted by the design’s building plans signed by Keating, the materials with which it was built, the labor necessary to build it, the place where it was built, and the economic investment that allowed integrating all that to its conclusion.
Obviously Roarke never had all that because otherwise he would have made his building without having anything to do with Keating or the architectural firm. Since he did not have all those things and colluded with Keating for him to sign the building plans, he had no right to decide what could happen to the building at all, less than that to dynamite it.
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