First:
Second:
The first is from QueerSingularity, one of those "more-Eganesque than thou" transhumanist sites that provide me with fodder for stories (indeed, a huge raft of stuff is there for Fallen Angel, if I ever get back to writing), and is a paraphrase of Karl Marx. The second is from National Review, and is a paraphrase of the ideals of Ayn Rand.
They weren't so different.
I define the revolutionary spirit as the belief that we can and should radically transform the world for the better. It spurns compromise and necessary evils, opting instead for creative solutions and consistent morality. It ever struggles against restraints and limitations.
Second:
Her hero must not place his wish primarily within others or attempt or desire anything that requires primarily the exercise of the will of others. If he attempts that, he is out of a creator's province and in that of the second-hander. This is not, properly speaking, a moral imperative, because no obligation has been established to try to be creative. But her hero is creative, and that is why, in addition to never sacrificing his interests for another's, he will never ask others to sacrifice their interests for his. Much like the Nietzschean superman, the hero cannot be predatory or exploitative; this would not give him what he wants, because no one outside himself has it to give.
The first is from QueerSingularity, one of those "more-Eganesque than thou" transhumanist sites that provide me with fodder for stories (indeed, a huge raft of stuff is there for Fallen Angel, if I ever get back to writing), and is a paraphrase of Karl Marx. The second is from National Review, and is a paraphrase of the ideals of Ayn Rand.
They weren't so different.