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Fore more urdu books visit www.4Urdu.com

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More oxford <strong>books</strong> @ www.OxfordeBook.<strong>com</strong><strong>Fore</strong> <strong>more</strong> <strong>urdu</strong> <strong>books</strong> <strong>visit</strong> <strong>www.4Urdu</strong>.<strong>com</strong>78THE EDUCATION OF AYN RAND, 1905–1943directed at ending the Depression had created a climate of uncertaintythat was further drying up the free flow of capital. Paterson’s prescriptionwas to leave well enough alone; the government should pull outand let the economy recover on its own. Although her solution wasunusual, her sense of the problem was not. Writers like Snyder and evenmembers of Roosevelt’s administration such as Stuart Chase fingeredFederal Reserve policy as a cause of the depression. Most were willing ongrounds of expediency to excuse government action to avert the crisis.Paterson, who set great stock in principles and consistency, was not.Rand’s encounter with Paterson constituted a virtual graduate schoolin American history, politics, and economics. She soaked up Paterson’sopinions, using them to buttress, expand, and shape her already establishedindividualism. Paterson helped shift Rand onto new intellectualterritory, where Nietzsche’s voice was one among many. Now Randcould draw from and react against the British classical liberal traditionand its American variants. Conversations with Paterson made Rand wellversed in the major and minor arguments against the New Deal state.Rand’s relationship with Paterson also reinforced her growing preoccupationwith reason. Both women shared a belief that with the world inpolitical free fall, reason was their only hope and guide. In an episode thateerily mirrored Rand’s break with her agent, Paterson described an argumentshe had with Rose Wilder Lane, another conservative writer. WhenLane told Paterson she sometimes formed a conclusion by a feeling ora hunch, “ . . . Isabel Paterson screamed at her over the phone, practicallycalled her a murderess, explaining to her: how dare she go by feelingsand hunches when the lives of other people are involved, and freedomand dictatorship. How can she go by anything but reason in politics, andwhat disastrous irresponsibility it is.” To Rand, Paterson’s arguments infavor of reason were “marvelous and unanswerable” and her anger inthe face of disagreement understandable, even honorable. 24As her friendship with Paterson developed, Rand continued to workclosely with Pollock and Emery. In October she drew up an “organizationplan” and traded ideas with Emery on a potential name. He proposedAmerican Neighbors, a name Rand rejected as too vague andmeaningless. At one point the trio considered merging their efforts withthe Independent Clubs of America, the group that had grown out ofthe Willkie Clubs. Rand drafted a fund-raising letter, noting that their

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