26 Quotes About Hank Rearden

1
Man, whose tool of survival is the mind, does not merely fail to teach a child to think, but devotes the child’s education to the purpose of destroying his brain, of convincing him that thought is futile and evil, before he has started to think. Ayn Rand
2
...they want us to pretend that we see the world as they pretend they see it. They need some sort of sanction from us. Ayn Rand
3
Such was the code that the world had accepted and such was the key to the code: that it hooked man’s love of existence to a circuit of torture, so that only the man who had nothing to offer would have nothing to fear, so that the virtues which made life possible and the values which gave it meaning became the agents of its destruction, so that one’s best became the tool of one’s agony, and man’s life on earth became impractical. Ayn Rand
4
We are those who do not disconnect the values of their minds from the actions of their bodies, those who do not leave their values to empty dreams, but bring them into existence, those who give material form to thoughts, and reality to values. Ayn Rand
5
Joy is the goal of existence, and joy is not to be stumbled upon, but to be achieved, and the act of treason is to let its vision drown in the swamp of the moment’s torture. Ayn Rand
6
He did not know that he was expected to attempt to buy his way into society and that they anticipated the pleasure of rejecting him. He had no time to notice their disappointment. Ayn Rand
7
...there can be no justification for a society in which a man is expected to manufacture the weapons for his own murderers. Ayn Rand
8
Dagny leaned back in her chair. The short sentence was a shock. It was not merely relief: it was the sudden realization that nothing else was necessary to guarantee that it would be done; she needed no proofs, no questions, no explanations; a complex problem could rest safely on three syllables pronounced by a man who knew what he was saying. Ayn Rand
9
If, to him, love was a celebration of one’s self and of existence–then, to the self-haters and life-haters, the pursuit of destruction was the only form and equivalent of love. Ayn Rand
10
It was his self-esteem she had sought to destroy, knowing that a man who surrenders his value is at the mercy of anyone’s will; it was his moral purity she had struggled to breach, it was his confident rectitude she had wanted to shatter by means of the poison of guilt–as if, were he to collapse, his depravity would give her a right to hers. Ayn Rand
11
She had set out to break him, as if, unable to equal his value, she could surpass it by destroying it, as if the measure of his greatness would thus become the measure of hers, as if the vandal who smashed a statue were greater than the artist who had made it, as if the murderer who killed a child were greater than the mother who had given it birth. Ayn Rand
12
The justice which would forgive miles of innocent errors of knowledge, would not forgive a single step taken in conscious evil. Ayn Rand
13
There is no escape from justice, nothing can be unearned and unpaid for in the universe, neither in matter nor in spirit–and if the guilty do not pay, then the innocent have to pay it. Ayn Rand
14
When one acts on pity against justice, it is the good whom one punishes for the sake of the evil; when one saves the guilty from suffering, it is the innocent whom one forces to suffer. Ayn Rand
15
Thought–he told himself quietly–is a weapon one uses in order to act. No action was possible. Thought is the tool by which one makes a choice. No choice was left to him. Thought sets one’s purpose and the way to reach it. In the matter of his life being torn piece by piece out of him, he was to have no voice, no purpose, no way, no defense. Ayn Rand
16
...there was no guilt in his face, no doubt, nothing but the calm of an inviolate self-confidence. Ayn Rand
17
He saw the article...which was not an expression of ideas, but a bucket of slime emptied in public–an article that did not contain a single fact, not even an invented one, but poured a stream of sneers and adjectives in which nothing was clear except the filthy malice of denouncing without considering proof necessary. Ayn Rand
18
...he had never known fear because, against any disaster, he had held the omnipotent cure of being able to act. Ayn Rand
19
He saw for the first time that he had never known fear because, against any disaster, he had held the omnipotent cure of being able to act. Ayn Rand
20
...he had acquired the conviction that one had to concern oneself with the rational, not the insane–that one had to seek that which was right, because the right answer always won–that the senseless, the wrong, the monstrously unjust could not work, could not succeed, could do nothing but defeat itself. Ayn Rand
21
Throughout his life, whenever he became convinced that a course of action was right, the desire to follow it had come automatically. Ayn Rand
22
Are you saying, ” he asked slowly, “that I rose in your estimation when you found that I wanted you?”“ Of course.”“ That’s not the reaction of most people to being wanted.”“ It isn’t.”“ Most people feel that they rise in their own eyes, if others want them.”“ I feel that others live up to me, if they want me.... Ayn Rand
23
Nothing can justify injustice. Ayn Rand
24
Don’t tell me your evaluation. Give me the facts. Ayn Rand
25
You always play it open, don’t you?” he asked.“ I’ve never noticed you doing otherwise.”“ I thought I was the only one who could afford to. Ayn Rand