Objectivism Today 1998:
The Real Culture Wars
The Culture of the Enlightenment and
its Enemies
Saturday, October 24 Marriott Marquis Hotel
9:00 a.m. to 7:00 p.m., New York City
Speakers Include:
| David Boaz |
Cato Institute |
| Stephen Hicks |
Rockford College |
| David Kelley |
Institute for Objectivist Studies |
| Charles Murray |
American Enterprise Institute |
| Virginia Postrel |
Reason |
| Fred Smith |
Competitive Enterprise Institute |
Behind the noisy "culture wars" over prayer in
school, sex and violence in the media, gay rights, and other issues is a profound conflict
of values.
The culture that first came to flourish in the Enlightenment
rests on certain timeless values. Reason, science, and technology. The pursuit of
happiness. Respect for individual achievement in every sphere of life. Progress in meeting
human needs. Individualism, including the individual's right to choose his convictions and
mode of life. Political freedom, including the freedom to produce and exchange.
This is the culture that created the American civilization,
yet it is under increasingly explicit attack today not only from post-modern thinkers on
the left but from pre-modern critics on the right.
What are the key issues in this battle? What are the
prospects for the Enlightenment culture? What role can it play in the battle for liberty?
What strategies should its advocates adopt?
The Institute for Objectivist Studies is proud to sponsor a
distinguished group of speakers to examine these questions. Join us for a day of insight
and cultural renewal.
Schedule:
8:30 - 9:00
Registration
9:00 - 9:15
Opening Remarks
Robert Bidinotto, Director of Development and Special Projects, Institute for Objectivist
Studies
9:15 - 10:15
Post Modernism: The Socialist Crisis of Faith
The failures of socialism, both in theory and in practice, have led its intellectual
devotees to adopt post-modern ideas as a defense. Stephen Hicks will show how thinkers on
the cultural left use such ideas to
legitimate their faith in a false ideal, and to vent their hostility to reason,
individualism, and capitalism. Stephen Hicks is chairman of the philosophy department at
Rockford College.
10:15 - 10:45
Break
10:45 - 11:45
Where Progress Comes From, and Why It Is Threatened
Drawing on her forthcoming book, The Future and Its Enemies, Reason
Editor Virginia Postrel will lay out a dynamic view of progress as an open-ended
processbased on experimentation and feedback, dispersed knowledge, combinatoric
innovation, and playand contrast it to the static technocratic and reactionary
visions that threaten it politically.
11:45 - 1:15
Luncheon
1:30 - 2:30
The Real Culture Wars
David Kelley, Executive Director of the Institute for Objectivist Studies, will pinpoint
the issues that separate the Enlightenment culture from its pre-modern opponents, and
discuss the strategies that Objectivists and
their allies can use to garner support from the broad group of Americans whose fundamental
values are pro-Enlightenment.
2:30 - 2:45
Break
2:45 - 3:45
Human Accomplishment
Charles Murray will report on his research for his next book, Truth and Reality: An
Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of Human Accomplishment, which examines the
leading intellectual, artistic, and technological achievements that humans have produced
and seeks to explain why certain cultures have achieved on a scale far greater than
others. Charles Murray is a Senior Fellow at the American Enterprise Institute, and the
author of Losing Ground, What It Means to be a Libertarian, and numerous
other works.
3:45 - 4:15
Break
4:15 - 5:30
Individualism and the Culture Wars
A panel discussion to review the issues of the day and examine the strategic aspects of
the culture wars.
Panelists:
- David Boaz, Executive Vice-President, Cato Institute, author
of Libertarianism
- David Kelley, Institute for Objectivist Studies
- Fred Smith, President, Competitive Enterprise Institute
5:30 - 7:00
Reception
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