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[M]Her[/M] two [M]most acclaimed works[/M], The Source (1943) and [M]And the World Trembled[/M] (1957), are ideological political novels that depict the individual's struggle against oppressive authorities and ingrained norms. | Ayn Rand (English: Ayn Rand, February 2, 1905-March 6, 1982), formerly known as "Alyssa Zinovyevna Rosenbaum" (Russian: Алиса Зиновьевна Розенбаум) ), Russian-American philosopher and novelist. Her philosophical theories and novels pioneered the philosophical movement of objectivism. She also wrote several best-selling novels such as "The Source" and "Atlas Shrugged".
Her philosophy and novels emphasize the concept of individualism, rational egoism ("rational self-interest"), and completely laissez-faire capitalism. She believes that people must choose their values and actions rationally; individuals have the absolute right to live only for their own interests, without sacrificing their own interests for others, but cannot force others to sacrifice for themselves; no one has the right Use violence or fraud to seize the property of others, or impose one's own values on others through violence. Her political ideas can be described as petty governmentism and libertarianism, although she has never used the first name to call herself, and she hates the second one.
The goal expressed in Rand's novel is to show her ideal hero: a person who is in conflict with society because of her ability and independent character, but who still struggles unremittingly towards his ideal. | n |
[M]Her[/M] two [M]most acclaimed works[/M], [M]The Source[/M] (1943) and And the World Trembled (1957), are ideological political novels that depict the individual's struggle against oppressive authorities and ingrained norms. | Ayn Rand (English: Ayn Rand, February 2, 1905-March 6, 1982), formerly known as "Alyssa Zinovyevna Rosenbaum" (Russian: Алиса Зиновьевна Розенбаум) ), Russian-American philosopher and novelist. Her philosophical theories and novels pioneered the philosophical movement of objectivism. She also wrote several best-selling novels such as "The Source" and "Atlas Shrugged".
Her philosophy and novels emphasize the concept of individualism, rational egoism ("rational self-interest"), and completely laissez-faire capitalism. She believes that people must choose their values and actions rationally; individuals have the absolute right to live only for their own interests, without sacrificing their own interests for others, but cannot force others to sacrifice for themselves; no one has the right Use violence or fraud to seize the property of others, or impose one's own values on others through violence. Her political ideas can be described as petty governmentism and libertarianism, although she has never used the first name to call herself, and she hates the second one.
The goal expressed in Rand's novel is to show her ideal hero: a person who is in conflict with society because of her ability and independent character, but who still struggles unremittingly towards his ideal. | e |
[M]Rand was[/M] very [M]critical of those who questioned the idea of an objective reality.[/M] | Ayn Rand (English: Ayn Rand, February 2, 1905-March 6, 1982), formerly known as "Alyssa Zinovyevna Rosenbaum" (Russian: Алиса Зиновьевна Розенбаум) ), Russian-American philosopher and novelist. Her philosophical theories and novels pioneered the philosophical movement of objectivism. She also wrote several best-selling novels such as "The Source" and "Atlas Shrugged".
Her philosophy and novels emphasize the concept of individualism, rational egoism ("rational self-interest"), and completely laissez-faire capitalism. She believes that people must choose their values and actions rationally; individuals have the absolute right to live only for their own interests, without sacrificing their own interests for others, but cannot force others to sacrifice for themselves; no one has the right Use violence or fraud to seize the property of others, or impose one's own values on others through violence. Her political ideas can be described as petty governmentism and libertarianism, although she has never used the first name to call herself, and she hates the second one.
The goal expressed in Rand's novel is to show her ideal hero: a person who is in conflict with society because of her ability and independent character, but who still struggles unremittingly towards his ideal. | n |
The economist [M]Milton Friedman[/M] identified her, despite [M]her outspoken opposition to him[/M], as one of libertarianism's two most important intellectual trend breakers (along with Ludwig von Mises). | Ayn Rand (English: Ayn Rand, February 2, 1905-March 6, 1982), formerly known as "Alyssa Zinovyevna Rosenbaum" (Russian: Алиса Зиновьевна Розенбаум) ), Russian-American philosopher and novelist. Her philosophical theories and novels pioneered the philosophical movement of objectivism. She also wrote several best-selling novels such as "The Source" and "Atlas Shrugged".
Her philosophy and novels emphasize the concept of individualism, rational egoism ("rational self-interest"), and completely laissez-faire capitalism. She believes that people must choose their values and actions rationally; individuals have the absolute right to live only for their own interests, without sacrificing their own interests for others, but cannot force others to sacrifice for themselves; no one has the right Use violence or fraud to seize the property of others, or impose one's own values on others through violence. Her political ideas can be described as petty governmentism and libertarianism, although she has never used the first name to call herself, and she hates the second one.
The goal expressed in Rand's novel is to show her ideal hero: a person who is in conflict with society because of her ability and independent character, but who still struggles unremittingly towards his ideal. | n |
The economist [M]Milton Friedman identified[/M] her, despite her outspoken opposition to him, [M]as one of libertarianism's[/M] two [M]most important intellectual trend breakers[/M] (along with [M]Ludwig von Mises[/M]). | Ayn Rand (English: Ayn Rand, February 2, 1905-March 6, 1982), formerly known as "Alyssa Zinovyevna Rosenbaum" (Russian: Алиса Зиновьевна Розенбаум) ), Russian-American philosopher and novelist. Her philosophical theories and novels pioneered the philosophical movement of objectivism. She also wrote several best-selling novels such as "The Source" and "Atlas Shrugged".
Her philosophy and novels emphasize the concept of individualism, rational egoism ("rational self-interest"), and completely laissez-faire capitalism. She believes that people must choose their values and actions rationally; individuals have the absolute right to live only for their own interests, without sacrificing their own interests for others, but cannot force others to sacrifice for themselves; no one has the right Use violence or fraud to seize the property of others, or impose one's own values on others through violence. Her political ideas can be described as petty governmentism and libertarianism, although she has never used the first name to call herself, and she hates the second one.
The goal expressed in Rand's novel is to show her ideal hero: a person who is in conflict with society because of her ability and independent character, but who still struggles unremittingly towards his ideal. | n |
The economist [M]Milton Friedman identified her[/M], despite her outspoken opposition to him, [M]as one of libertarianism's[/M] two [M]most important intellectual trend breakers[/M] (along with Ludwig von Mises). | Ayn Rand (English: Ayn Rand, February 2, 1905-March 6, 1982), formerly known as "Alyssa Zinovyevna Rosenbaum" (Russian: Алиса Зиновьевна Розенбаум) ), Russian-American philosopher and novelist. Her philosophical theories and novels pioneered the philosophical movement of objectivism. She also wrote several best-selling novels such as "The Source" and "Atlas Shrugged".
Her philosophy and novels emphasize the concept of individualism, rational egoism ("rational self-interest"), and completely laissez-faire capitalism. She believes that people must choose their values and actions rationally; individuals have the absolute right to live only for their own interests, without sacrificing their own interests for others, but cannot force others to sacrifice for themselves; no one has the right Use violence or fraud to seize the property of others, or impose one's own values on others through violence. Her political ideas can be described as petty governmentism and libertarianism, although she has never used the first name to call herself, and she hates the second one.
The goal expressed in Rand's novel is to show her ideal hero: a person who is in conflict with society because of her ability and independent character, but who still struggles unremittingly towards his ideal. | n |
[M]The economist Milton Friedman[/M] identified her, despite her outspoken opposition to him, as one of libertarianism's two most important intellectual trend breakers (along with Ludwig von Mises). | Ayn Rand (English: Ayn Rand, February 2, 1905-March 6, 1982), formerly known as "Alyssa Zinovyevna Rosenbaum" (Russian: Алиса Зиновьевна Розенбаум) ), Russian-American philosopher and novelist. Her philosophical theories and novels pioneered the philosophical movement of objectivism. She also wrote several best-selling novels such as "The Source" and "Atlas Shrugged".
Her philosophy and novels emphasize the concept of individualism, rational egoism ("rational self-interest"), and completely laissez-faire capitalism. She believes that people must choose their values and actions rationally; individuals have the absolute right to live only for their own interests, without sacrificing their own interests for others, but cannot force others to sacrifice for themselves; no one has the right Use violence or fraud to seize the property of others, or impose one's own values on others through violence. Her political ideas can be described as petty governmentism and libertarianism, although she has never used the first name to call herself, and she hates the second one.
The goal expressed in Rand's novel is to show her ideal hero: a person who is in conflict with society because of her ability and independent character, but who still struggles unremittingly towards his ideal. | n |
[M]Ayn Rand[/M], born Alisa Zinovievna Rosenbaum on February 2, 1905 in St. Petersburg, Russia, died March 6, 1982 in Manhattan, New York, [M]was a[/M] Russian-American philosopher and [M]author[/M]. | Ayn Rand (English: Ayn Rand, February 2, 1905-March 6, 1982), formerly known as "Alyssa Zinovyevna Rosenbaum" (Russian: Алиса Зиновьевна Розенбаум) ), Russian-American philosopher and novelist. Her philosophical theories and novels pioneered the philosophical movement of objectivism. She also wrote several best-selling novels such as "The Source" and "Atlas Shrugged".
Her philosophy and novels emphasize the concept of individualism, rational egoism ("rational self-interest"), and completely laissez-faire capitalism. She believes that people must choose their values and actions rationally; individuals have the absolute right to live only for their own interests, without sacrificing their own interests for others, but cannot force others to sacrifice for themselves; no one has the right Use violence or fraud to seize the property of others, or impose one's own values on others through violence. Her political ideas can be described as petty governmentism and libertarianism, although she has never used the first name to call herself, and she hates the second one.
The goal expressed in Rand's novel is to show her ideal hero: a person who is in conflict with society because of her ability and independent character, but who still struggles unremittingly towards his ideal. | e |
[M]Ayn Rand[/M], born Alisa Zinovievna Rosenbaum on February 2, 1905 in St. Petersburg, Russia, died March 6, 1982 in Manhattan, New York, [M]was a[/M] Russian-American [M]philosopher[/M] and author. | Ayn Rand (English: Ayn Rand, February 2, 1905-March 6, 1982), formerly known as "Alyssa Zinovyevna Rosenbaum" (Russian: Алиса Зиновьевна Розенбаум) ), Russian-American philosopher and novelist. Her philosophical theories and novels pioneered the philosophical movement of objectivism. She also wrote several best-selling novels such as "The Source" and "Atlas Shrugged".
Her philosophy and novels emphasize the concept of individualism, rational egoism ("rational self-interest"), and completely laissez-faire capitalism. She believes that people must choose their values and actions rationally; individuals have the absolute right to live only for their own interests, without sacrificing their own interests for others, but cannot force others to sacrifice for themselves; no one has the right Use violence or fraud to seize the property of others, or impose one's own values on others through violence. Her political ideas can be described as petty governmentism and libertarianism, although she has never used the first name to call herself, and she hates the second one.
The goal expressed in Rand's novel is to show her ideal hero: a person who is in conflict with society because of her ability and independent character, but who still struggles unremittingly towards his ideal. | e |
[M]Ayn Rand[/M], born Alisa Zinovievna Rosenbaum on February 2, 1905 in St. Petersburg, Russia, died March 6, 1982 in Manhattan, New York, [M]was[/M] a [M]Russian-American[/M] philosopher and author. | Ayn Rand (English: Ayn Rand, February 2, 1905-March 6, 1982), formerly known as "Alyssa Zinovyevna Rosenbaum" (Russian: Алиса Зиновьевна Розенбаум) ), Russian-American philosopher and novelist. Her philosophical theories and novels pioneered the philosophical movement of objectivism. She also wrote several best-selling novels such as "The Source" and "Atlas Shrugged".
Her philosophy and novels emphasize the concept of individualism, rational egoism ("rational self-interest"), and completely laissez-faire capitalism. She believes that people must choose their values and actions rationally; individuals have the absolute right to live only for their own interests, without sacrificing their own interests for others, but cannot force others to sacrifice for themselves; no one has the right Use violence or fraud to seize the property of others, or impose one's own values on others through violence. Her political ideas can be described as petty governmentism and libertarianism, although she has never used the first name to call herself, and she hates the second one.
The goal expressed in Rand's novel is to show her ideal hero: a person who is in conflict with society because of her ability and independent character, but who still struggles unremittingly towards his ideal. | e |
[M]Ayn Rand[/M], born Alisa Zinovievna Rosenbaum on February 2, 1905 in St. Petersburg, Russia, [M]died[/M] March 6, 1982 [M]in Manhattan, New York[/M], was a Russian-American philosopher and author. | Ayn Rand (English: Ayn Rand, February 2, 1905-March 6, 1982), formerly known as "Alyssa Zinovyevna Rosenbaum" (Russian: Алиса Зиновьевна Розенбаум) ), Russian-American philosopher and novelist. Her philosophical theories and novels pioneered the philosophical movement of objectivism. She also wrote several best-selling novels such as "The Source" and "Atlas Shrugged".
Her philosophy and novels emphasize the concept of individualism, rational egoism ("rational self-interest"), and completely laissez-faire capitalism. She believes that people must choose their values and actions rationally; individuals have the absolute right to live only for their own interests, without sacrificing their own interests for others, but cannot force others to sacrifice for themselves; no one has the right Use violence or fraud to seize the property of others, or impose one's own values on others through violence. Her political ideas can be described as petty governmentism and libertarianism, although she has never used the first name to call herself, and she hates the second one.
The goal expressed in Rand's novel is to show her ideal hero: a person who is in conflict with society because of her ability and independent character, but who still struggles unremittingly towards his ideal. | n |
[M]Ayn Rand[/M], born Alisa Zinovievna Rosenbaum on February 2, 1905 in St. Petersburg, Russia, [M]died March 6, 1982[/M] in Manhattan, New York, was a Russian-American philosopher and author. | Ayn Rand (English: Ayn Rand, February 2, 1905-March 6, 1982), formerly known as "Alyssa Zinovyevna Rosenbaum" (Russian: Алиса Зиновьевна Розенбаум) ), Russian-American philosopher and novelist. Her philosophical theories and novels pioneered the philosophical movement of objectivism. She also wrote several best-selling novels such as "The Source" and "Atlas Shrugged".
Her philosophy and novels emphasize the concept of individualism, rational egoism ("rational self-interest"), and completely laissez-faire capitalism. She believes that people must choose their values and actions rationally; individuals have the absolute right to live only for their own interests, without sacrificing their own interests for others, but cannot force others to sacrifice for themselves; no one has the right Use violence or fraud to seize the property of others, or impose one's own values on others through violence. Her political ideas can be described as petty governmentism and libertarianism, although she has never used the first name to call herself, and she hates the second one.
The goal expressed in Rand's novel is to show her ideal hero: a person who is in conflict with society because of her ability and independent character, but who still struggles unremittingly towards his ideal. | e |
[M]Ayn Rand[/M], [M]born[/M] Alisa Zinovievna Rosenbaum on February 2, 1905 [M]in St. Petersburg, Russia[/M], died March 6, 1982 in Manhattan, New York, was a Russian-American philosopher and author. | Ayn Rand (English: Ayn Rand, February 2, 1905-March 6, 1982), formerly known as "Alyssa Zinovyevna Rosenbaum" (Russian: Алиса Зиновьевна Розенбаум) ), Russian-American philosopher and novelist. Her philosophical theories and novels pioneered the philosophical movement of objectivism. She also wrote several best-selling novels such as "The Source" and "Atlas Shrugged".
Her philosophy and novels emphasize the concept of individualism, rational egoism ("rational self-interest"), and completely laissez-faire capitalism. She believes that people must choose their values and actions rationally; individuals have the absolute right to live only for their own interests, without sacrificing their own interests for others, but cannot force others to sacrifice for themselves; no one has the right Use violence or fraud to seize the property of others, or impose one's own values on others through violence. Her political ideas can be described as petty governmentism and libertarianism, although she has never used the first name to call herself, and she hates the second one.
The goal expressed in Rand's novel is to show her ideal hero: a person who is in conflict with society because of her ability and independent character, but who still struggles unremittingly towards his ideal. | n |
[M]Ayn Rand[/M], [M]born[/M] Alisa Zinovievna Rosenbaum [M]on February 2, 1905[/M] in St. Petersburg, Russia, died March 6, 1982 in Manhattan, New York, was a Russian-American philosopher and author. | Ayn Rand (English: Ayn Rand, February 2, 1905-March 6, 1982), formerly known as "Alyssa Zinovyevna Rosenbaum" (Russian: Алиса Зиновьевна Розенбаум) ), Russian-American philosopher and novelist. Her philosophical theories and novels pioneered the philosophical movement of objectivism. She also wrote several best-selling novels such as "The Source" and "Atlas Shrugged".
Her philosophy and novels emphasize the concept of individualism, rational egoism ("rational self-interest"), and completely laissez-faire capitalism. She believes that people must choose their values and actions rationally; individuals have the absolute right to live only for their own interests, without sacrificing their own interests for others, but cannot force others to sacrifice for themselves; no one has the right Use violence or fraud to seize the property of others, or impose one's own values on others through violence. Her political ideas can be described as petty governmentism and libertarianism, although she has never used the first name to call herself, and she hates the second one.
The goal expressed in Rand's novel is to show her ideal hero: a person who is in conflict with society because of her ability and independent character, but who still struggles unremittingly towards his ideal. | e |
[M]Ayn Rand[/M], [M]born Alisa Zinovievna Rosenbaum[/M] on February 2, 1905 in St. Petersburg, Russia, died March 6, 1982 in Manhattan, New York, was a Russian-American philosopher and author. | Ayn Rand (English: Ayn Rand, February 2, 1905-March 6, 1982), formerly known as "Alyssa Zinovyevna Rosenbaum" (Russian: Алиса Зиновьевна Розенбаум) ), Russian-American philosopher and novelist. Her philosophical theories and novels pioneered the philosophical movement of objectivism. She also wrote several best-selling novels such as "The Source" and "Atlas Shrugged".
Her philosophy and novels emphasize the concept of individualism, rational egoism ("rational self-interest"), and completely laissez-faire capitalism. She believes that people must choose their values and actions rationally; individuals have the absolute right to live only for their own interests, without sacrificing their own interests for others, but cannot force others to sacrifice for themselves; no one has the right Use violence or fraud to seize the property of others, or impose one's own values on others through violence. Her political ideas can be described as petty governmentism and libertarianism, although she has never used the first name to call herself, and she hates the second one.
The goal expressed in Rand's novel is to show her ideal hero: a person who is in conflict with society because of her ability and independent character, but who still struggles unremittingly towards his ideal. | e |
[M]Rand claimed[/M] Aristotle as his foremost epistemological [M]role model[/M], and [M]Victor Hugo as his literary[/M]. | Ayn Rand (English: Ayn Rand, February 2, 1905-March 6, 1982), formerly known as "Alyssa Zinovyevna Rosenbaum" (Russian: Алиса Зиновьевна Розенбаум) ), Russian-American philosopher and novelist. Her philosophical theories and novels pioneered the philosophical movement of objectivism. She also wrote several best-selling novels such as "The Source" and "Atlas Shrugged".
Her philosophy and novels emphasize the concept of individualism, rational egoism ("rational self-interest"), and completely laissez-faire capitalism. She believes that people must choose their values and actions rationally; individuals have the absolute right to live only for their own interests, without sacrificing their own interests for others, but cannot force others to sacrifice for themselves; no one has the right Use violence or fraud to seize the property of others, or impose one's own values on others through violence. Her political ideas can be described as petty governmentism and libertarianism, although she has never used the first name to call herself, and she hates the second one.
The goal expressed in Rand's novel is to show her ideal hero: a person who is in conflict with society because of her ability and independent character, but who still struggles unremittingly towards his ideal. | n |
[M]Rand claimed Aristotle as his foremost epistemological role model[/M], and Victor Hugo as his literary. | Ayn Rand (English: Ayn Rand, February 2, 1905-March 6, 1982), formerly known as "Alyssa Zinovyevna Rosenbaum" (Russian: Алиса Зиновьевна Розенбаум) ), Russian-American philosopher and novelist. Her philosophical theories and novels pioneered the philosophical movement of objectivism. She also wrote several best-selling novels such as "The Source" and "Atlas Shrugged".
Her philosophy and novels emphasize the concept of individualism, rational egoism ("rational self-interest"), and completely laissez-faire capitalism. She believes that people must choose their values and actions rationally; individuals have the absolute right to live only for their own interests, without sacrificing their own interests for others, but cannot force others to sacrifice for themselves; no one has the right Use violence or fraud to seize the property of others, or impose one's own values on others through violence. Her political ideas can be described as petty governmentism and libertarianism, although she has never used the first name to call herself, and she hates the second one.
The goal expressed in Rand's novel is to show her ideal hero: a person who is in conflict with society because of her ability and independent character, but who still struggles unremittingly towards his ideal. | n |
[M]Her[/M] philosophy and [M]novels emphasize the concept of[/M] individualism, rational egoism ("rational self-interest"), and [M]completely laissez-faire capitalism[/M]. | Ayn Rand, born Alisa Zinovievna Rosenbaum on February 2, 1905 in St. Petersburg, Russia, died March 6, 1982 in Manhattan, New York, was a Russian-American philosopher and author. She is primarily associated with her own philosophical school of objectivism which advocates rational egoism, individualism, capitalism (laissez faire) and an objective morality.
Her two most acclaimed works, The Source (1943) and And the World Trembled (1957), are ideological political novels that depict the individual's struggle against oppressive authorities and ingrained norms. Rand was also an uncompromising critic of religion, and through her critique of all coercive power as illegitimate (in addition to the necessary and limited coercive power that intended to prevent such), she contributed to the ideological furrow already called neoliberalism.
Rand claimed Aristotle as his foremost epistemological role model, and Victor Hugo as his literary. Rand was very critical of those who questioned the idea of an objective reality.
Rand is widely regarded as one of the leading figures behind the return of classical liberal ideas to the ideological political scene in the 1960s and onwards, and is considered to have inspired the so-called right-wing wave (later neoliberalism) in the 1980s. The economist Milton Friedman identified her, despite her outspoken opposition to him, as one of libertarianism's two most important intellectual trend breakers (along with Ludwig von Mises). | n |
[M]Her[/M] philosophy and [M]novels emphasize the concept of[/M] individualism, [M]rational egoism[/M] ("rational self-interest"), and completely laissez-faire capitalism. | Ayn Rand, born Alisa Zinovievna Rosenbaum on February 2, 1905 in St. Petersburg, Russia, died March 6, 1982 in Manhattan, New York, was a Russian-American philosopher and author. She is primarily associated with her own philosophical school of objectivism which advocates rational egoism, individualism, capitalism (laissez faire) and an objective morality.
Her two most acclaimed works, The Source (1943) and And the World Trembled (1957), are ideological political novels that depict the individual's struggle against oppressive authorities and ingrained norms. Rand was also an uncompromising critic of religion, and through her critique of all coercive power as illegitimate (in addition to the necessary and limited coercive power that intended to prevent such), she contributed to the ideological furrow already called neoliberalism.
Rand claimed Aristotle as his foremost epistemological role model, and Victor Hugo as his literary. Rand was very critical of those who questioned the idea of an objective reality.
Rand is widely regarded as one of the leading figures behind the return of classical liberal ideas to the ideological political scene in the 1960s and onwards, and is considered to have inspired the so-called right-wing wave (later neoliberalism) in the 1980s. The economist Milton Friedman identified her, despite her outspoken opposition to him, as one of libertarianism's two most important intellectual trend breakers (along with Ludwig von Mises). | n |
[M]Her[/M] philosophy and [M]novels emphasize the concept of individualism[/M], rational egoism ("rational self-interest"), and completely laissez-faire capitalism. | Ayn Rand, born Alisa Zinovievna Rosenbaum on February 2, 1905 in St. Petersburg, Russia, died March 6, 1982 in Manhattan, New York, was a Russian-American philosopher and author. She is primarily associated with her own philosophical school of objectivism which advocates rational egoism, individualism, capitalism (laissez faire) and an objective morality.
Her two most acclaimed works, The Source (1943) and And the World Trembled (1957), are ideological political novels that depict the individual's struggle against oppressive authorities and ingrained norms. Rand was also an uncompromising critic of religion, and through her critique of all coercive power as illegitimate (in addition to the necessary and limited coercive power that intended to prevent such), she contributed to the ideological furrow already called neoliberalism.
Rand claimed Aristotle as his foremost epistemological role model, and Victor Hugo as his literary. Rand was very critical of those who questioned the idea of an objective reality.
Rand is widely regarded as one of the leading figures behind the return of classical liberal ideas to the ideological political scene in the 1960s and onwards, and is considered to have inspired the so-called right-wing wave (later neoliberalism) in the 1980s. The economist Milton Friedman identified her, despite her outspoken opposition to him, as one of libertarianism's two most important intellectual trend breakers (along with Ludwig von Mises). | n |
[M]Her philosophy[/M] and novels [M]emphasize the concept of[/M] individualism, rational egoism ("rational self-interest"), and [M]completely laissez-faire capitalism[/M]. | Ayn Rand, born Alisa Zinovievna Rosenbaum on February 2, 1905 in St. Petersburg, Russia, died March 6, 1982 in Manhattan, New York, was a Russian-American philosopher and author. She is primarily associated with her own philosophical school of objectivism which advocates rational egoism, individualism, capitalism (laissez faire) and an objective morality.
Her two most acclaimed works, The Source (1943) and And the World Trembled (1957), are ideological political novels that depict the individual's struggle against oppressive authorities and ingrained norms. Rand was also an uncompromising critic of religion, and through her critique of all coercive power as illegitimate (in addition to the necessary and limited coercive power that intended to prevent such), she contributed to the ideological furrow already called neoliberalism.
Rand claimed Aristotle as his foremost epistemological role model, and Victor Hugo as his literary. Rand was very critical of those who questioned the idea of an objective reality.
Rand is widely regarded as one of the leading figures behind the return of classical liberal ideas to the ideological political scene in the 1960s and onwards, and is considered to have inspired the so-called right-wing wave (later neoliberalism) in the 1980s. The economist Milton Friedman identified her, despite her outspoken opposition to him, as one of libertarianism's two most important intellectual trend breakers (along with Ludwig von Mises). | e |
Her philosophy and novels emphasize the concept of individualism, [M]rational egoism ("rational self-interest")[/M], and completely laissez-faire capitalism. | Ayn Rand, born Alisa Zinovievna Rosenbaum on February 2, 1905 in St. Petersburg, Russia, died March 6, 1982 in Manhattan, New York, was a Russian-American philosopher and author. She is primarily associated with her own philosophical school of objectivism which advocates rational egoism, individualism, capitalism (laissez faire) and an objective morality.
Her two most acclaimed works, The Source (1943) and And the World Trembled (1957), are ideological political novels that depict the individual's struggle against oppressive authorities and ingrained norms. Rand was also an uncompromising critic of religion, and through her critique of all coercive power as illegitimate (in addition to the necessary and limited coercive power that intended to prevent such), she contributed to the ideological furrow already called neoliberalism.
Rand claimed Aristotle as his foremost epistemological role model, and Victor Hugo as his literary. Rand was very critical of those who questioned the idea of an objective reality.
Rand is widely regarded as one of the leading figures behind the return of classical liberal ideas to the ideological political scene in the 1960s and onwards, and is considered to have inspired the so-called right-wing wave (later neoliberalism) in the 1980s. The economist Milton Friedman identified her, despite her outspoken opposition to him, as one of libertarianism's two most important intellectual trend breakers (along with Ludwig von Mises). | n |
[M]Her philosophy[/M] and novels [M]emphasize the concept of[/M] individualism, [M]rational egoism[/M] ("rational self-interest"), and completely laissez-faire capitalism. | Ayn Rand, born Alisa Zinovievna Rosenbaum on February 2, 1905 in St. Petersburg, Russia, died March 6, 1982 in Manhattan, New York, was a Russian-American philosopher and author. She is primarily associated with her own philosophical school of objectivism which advocates rational egoism, individualism, capitalism (laissez faire) and an objective morality.
Her two most acclaimed works, The Source (1943) and And the World Trembled (1957), are ideological political novels that depict the individual's struggle against oppressive authorities and ingrained norms. Rand was also an uncompromising critic of religion, and through her critique of all coercive power as illegitimate (in addition to the necessary and limited coercive power that intended to prevent such), she contributed to the ideological furrow already called neoliberalism.
Rand claimed Aristotle as his foremost epistemological role model, and Victor Hugo as his literary. Rand was very critical of those who questioned the idea of an objective reality.
Rand is widely regarded as one of the leading figures behind the return of classical liberal ideas to the ideological political scene in the 1960s and onwards, and is considered to have inspired the so-called right-wing wave (later neoliberalism) in the 1980s. The economist Milton Friedman identified her, despite her outspoken opposition to him, as one of libertarianism's two most important intellectual trend breakers (along with Ludwig von Mises). | e |
[M]Her philosophy[/M] and novels [M]emphasize the concept of individualism[/M], rational egoism ("rational self-interest"), and completely laissez-faire capitalism. | Ayn Rand, born Alisa Zinovievna Rosenbaum on February 2, 1905 in St. Petersburg, Russia, died March 6, 1982 in Manhattan, New York, was a Russian-American philosopher and author. She is primarily associated with her own philosophical school of objectivism which advocates rational egoism, individualism, capitalism (laissez faire) and an objective morality.
Her two most acclaimed works, The Source (1943) and And the World Trembled (1957), are ideological political novels that depict the individual's struggle against oppressive authorities and ingrained norms. Rand was also an uncompromising critic of religion, and through her critique of all coercive power as illegitimate (in addition to the necessary and limited coercive power that intended to prevent such), she contributed to the ideological furrow already called neoliberalism.
Rand claimed Aristotle as his foremost epistemological role model, and Victor Hugo as his literary. Rand was very critical of those who questioned the idea of an objective reality.
Rand is widely regarded as one of the leading figures behind the return of classical liberal ideas to the ideological political scene in the 1960s and onwards, and is considered to have inspired the so-called right-wing wave (later neoliberalism) in the 1980s. The economist Milton Friedman identified her, despite her outspoken opposition to him, as one of libertarianism's two most important intellectual trend breakers (along with Ludwig von Mises). | e |
Her political ideas can be described as petty governmentism and libertarianism, although she has never used the first name to call herself, and [M]she hates the second one.[/M] | Ayn Rand, born Alisa Zinovievna Rosenbaum on February 2, 1905 in St. Petersburg, Russia, died March 6, 1982 in Manhattan, New York, was a Russian-American philosopher and author. She is primarily associated with her own philosophical school of objectivism which advocates rational egoism, individualism, capitalism (laissez faire) and an objective morality.
Her two most acclaimed works, The Source (1943) and And the World Trembled (1957), are ideological political novels that depict the individual's struggle against oppressive authorities and ingrained norms. Rand was also an uncompromising critic of religion, and through her critique of all coercive power as illegitimate (in addition to the necessary and limited coercive power that intended to prevent such), she contributed to the ideological furrow already called neoliberalism.
Rand claimed Aristotle as his foremost epistemological role model, and Victor Hugo as his literary. Rand was very critical of those who questioned the idea of an objective reality.
Rand is widely regarded as one of the leading figures behind the return of classical liberal ideas to the ideological political scene in the 1960s and onwards, and is considered to have inspired the so-called right-wing wave (later neoliberalism) in the 1980s. The economist Milton Friedman identified her, despite her outspoken opposition to him, as one of libertarianism's two most important intellectual trend breakers (along with Ludwig von Mises). | n |
Her political ideas can be described as petty governmentism and libertarianism, although [M]she has never used the first name to call herself[/M], and she hates the second one. | Ayn Rand, born Alisa Zinovievna Rosenbaum on February 2, 1905 in St. Petersburg, Russia, died March 6, 1982 in Manhattan, New York, was a Russian-American philosopher and author. She is primarily associated with her own philosophical school of objectivism which advocates rational egoism, individualism, capitalism (laissez faire) and an objective morality.
Her two most acclaimed works, The Source (1943) and And the World Trembled (1957), are ideological political novels that depict the individual's struggle against oppressive authorities and ingrained norms. Rand was also an uncompromising critic of religion, and through her critique of all coercive power as illegitimate (in addition to the necessary and limited coercive power that intended to prevent such), she contributed to the ideological furrow already called neoliberalism.
Rand claimed Aristotle as his foremost epistemological role model, and Victor Hugo as his literary. Rand was very critical of those who questioned the idea of an objective reality.
Rand is widely regarded as one of the leading figures behind the return of classical liberal ideas to the ideological political scene in the 1960s and onwards, and is considered to have inspired the so-called right-wing wave (later neoliberalism) in the 1980s. The economist Milton Friedman identified her, despite her outspoken opposition to him, as one of libertarianism's two most important intellectual trend breakers (along with Ludwig von Mises). | n |
[M]Her political ideas can be described as[/M] petty governmentism and [M]libertarianism[/M], although she has never used the first name to call herself, and she hates the second one. | Ayn Rand, born Alisa Zinovievna Rosenbaum on February 2, 1905 in St. Petersburg, Russia, died March 6, 1982 in Manhattan, New York, was a Russian-American philosopher and author. She is primarily associated with her own philosophical school of objectivism which advocates rational egoism, individualism, capitalism (laissez faire) and an objective morality.
Her two most acclaimed works, The Source (1943) and And the World Trembled (1957), are ideological political novels that depict the individual's struggle against oppressive authorities and ingrained norms. Rand was also an uncompromising critic of religion, and through her critique of all coercive power as illegitimate (in addition to the necessary and limited coercive power that intended to prevent such), she contributed to the ideological furrow already called neoliberalism.
Rand claimed Aristotle as his foremost epistemological role model, and Victor Hugo as his literary. Rand was very critical of those who questioned the idea of an objective reality.
Rand is widely regarded as one of the leading figures behind the return of classical liberal ideas to the ideological political scene in the 1960s and onwards, and is considered to have inspired the so-called right-wing wave (later neoliberalism) in the 1980s. The economist Milton Friedman identified her, despite her outspoken opposition to him, as one of libertarianism's two most important intellectual trend breakers (along with Ludwig von Mises). | n |
[M]Her political ideas can be described as petty governmentism[/M] and libertarianism, although she has never used the first name to call herself, and she hates the second one. | Ayn Rand, born Alisa Zinovievna Rosenbaum on February 2, 1905 in St. Petersburg, Russia, died March 6, 1982 in Manhattan, New York, was a Russian-American philosopher and author. She is primarily associated with her own philosophical school of objectivism which advocates rational egoism, individualism, capitalism (laissez faire) and an objective morality.
Her two most acclaimed works, The Source (1943) and And the World Trembled (1957), are ideological political novels that depict the individual's struggle against oppressive authorities and ingrained norms. Rand was also an uncompromising critic of religion, and through her critique of all coercive power as illegitimate (in addition to the necessary and limited coercive power that intended to prevent such), she contributed to the ideological furrow already called neoliberalism.
Rand claimed Aristotle as his foremost epistemological role model, and Victor Hugo as his literary. Rand was very critical of those who questioned the idea of an objective reality.
Rand is widely regarded as one of the leading figures behind the return of classical liberal ideas to the ideological political scene in the 1960s and onwards, and is considered to have inspired the so-called right-wing wave (later neoliberalism) in the 1980s. The economist Milton Friedman identified her, despite her outspoken opposition to him, as one of libertarianism's two most important intellectual trend breakers (along with Ludwig von Mises). | n |
[M]Ayn Rand[/M] (English: Ayn Rand, February 2, 1905-March 6, 1982), formerly known as "Alyssa Zinovyevna Rosenbaum" (Russian: Алиса Зиновьевна Розенбаум) ), Russian-American philosopher and [M]novelist[/M]. | Ayn Rand, born Alisa Zinovievna Rosenbaum on February 2, 1905 in St. Petersburg, Russia, died March 6, 1982 in Manhattan, New York, was a Russian-American philosopher and author. She is primarily associated with her own philosophical school of objectivism which advocates rational egoism, individualism, capitalism (laissez faire) and an objective morality.
Her two most acclaimed works, The Source (1943) and And the World Trembled (1957), are ideological political novels that depict the individual's struggle against oppressive authorities and ingrained norms. Rand was also an uncompromising critic of religion, and through her critique of all coercive power as illegitimate (in addition to the necessary and limited coercive power that intended to prevent such), she contributed to the ideological furrow already called neoliberalism.
Rand claimed Aristotle as his foremost epistemological role model, and Victor Hugo as his literary. Rand was very critical of those who questioned the idea of an objective reality.
Rand is widely regarded as one of the leading figures behind the return of classical liberal ideas to the ideological political scene in the 1960s and onwards, and is considered to have inspired the so-called right-wing wave (later neoliberalism) in the 1980s. The economist Milton Friedman identified her, despite her outspoken opposition to him, as one of libertarianism's two most important intellectual trend breakers (along with Ludwig von Mises). | e |
[M]Ayn Rand[/M] (English: Ayn Rand, February 2, 1905-March 6, 1982), formerly known as "Alyssa Zinovyevna Rosenbaum" (Russian: Алиса Зиновьевна Розенбаум) ), Russian-American [M]philosopher[/M] and novelist. | Ayn Rand, born Alisa Zinovievna Rosenbaum on February 2, 1905 in St. Petersburg, Russia, died March 6, 1982 in Manhattan, New York, was a Russian-American philosopher and author. She is primarily associated with her own philosophical school of objectivism which advocates rational egoism, individualism, capitalism (laissez faire) and an objective morality.
Her two most acclaimed works, The Source (1943) and And the World Trembled (1957), are ideological political novels that depict the individual's struggle against oppressive authorities and ingrained norms. Rand was also an uncompromising critic of religion, and through her critique of all coercive power as illegitimate (in addition to the necessary and limited coercive power that intended to prevent such), she contributed to the ideological furrow already called neoliberalism.
Rand claimed Aristotle as his foremost epistemological role model, and Victor Hugo as his literary. Rand was very critical of those who questioned the idea of an objective reality.
Rand is widely regarded as one of the leading figures behind the return of classical liberal ideas to the ideological political scene in the 1960s and onwards, and is considered to have inspired the so-called right-wing wave (later neoliberalism) in the 1980s. The economist Milton Friedman identified her, despite her outspoken opposition to him, as one of libertarianism's two most important intellectual trend breakers (along with Ludwig von Mises). | e |
[M]Ayn Rand[/M] (English: Ayn Rand, February 2, 1905-March 6, 1982), formerly known as "Alyssa Zinovyevna Rosenbaum" (Russian: Алиса Зиновьевна Розенбаум) ), [M]Russian-American[/M] philosopher and novelist. | Ayn Rand, born Alisa Zinovievna Rosenbaum on February 2, 1905 in St. Petersburg, Russia, died March 6, 1982 in Manhattan, New York, was a Russian-American philosopher and author. She is primarily associated with her own philosophical school of objectivism which advocates rational egoism, individualism, capitalism (laissez faire) and an objective morality.
Her two most acclaimed works, The Source (1943) and And the World Trembled (1957), are ideological political novels that depict the individual's struggle against oppressive authorities and ingrained norms. Rand was also an uncompromising critic of religion, and through her critique of all coercive power as illegitimate (in addition to the necessary and limited coercive power that intended to prevent such), she contributed to the ideological furrow already called neoliberalism.
Rand claimed Aristotle as his foremost epistemological role model, and Victor Hugo as his literary. Rand was very critical of those who questioned the idea of an objective reality.
Rand is widely regarded as one of the leading figures behind the return of classical liberal ideas to the ideological political scene in the 1960s and onwards, and is considered to have inspired the so-called right-wing wave (later neoliberalism) in the 1980s. The economist Milton Friedman identified her, despite her outspoken opposition to him, as one of libertarianism's two most important intellectual trend breakers (along with Ludwig von Mises). | e |
Ayn Rand (English: Ayn Rand, February 2, 1905-March 6, 1982), formerly known as "[M]Alyssa Zinovyevna Rosenbaum[/M]" ([M]Russian: Алиса Зиновьевна Розенбаум[/M]) ), Russian-American philosopher and novelist. | Ayn Rand, born Alisa Zinovievna Rosenbaum on February 2, 1905 in St. Petersburg, Russia, died March 6, 1982 in Manhattan, New York, was a Russian-American philosopher and author. She is primarily associated with her own philosophical school of objectivism which advocates rational egoism, individualism, capitalism (laissez faire) and an objective morality.
Her two most acclaimed works, The Source (1943) and And the World Trembled (1957), are ideological political novels that depict the individual's struggle against oppressive authorities and ingrained norms. Rand was also an uncompromising critic of religion, and through her critique of all coercive power as illegitimate (in addition to the necessary and limited coercive power that intended to prevent such), she contributed to the ideological furrow already called neoliberalism.
Rand claimed Aristotle as his foremost epistemological role model, and Victor Hugo as his literary. Rand was very critical of those who questioned the idea of an objective reality.
Rand is widely regarded as one of the leading figures behind the return of classical liberal ideas to the ideological political scene in the 1960s and onwards, and is considered to have inspired the so-called right-wing wave (later neoliberalism) in the 1980s. The economist Milton Friedman identified her, despite her outspoken opposition to him, as one of libertarianism's two most important intellectual trend breakers (along with Ludwig von Mises). | n |
[M]Ayn Rand[/M] (English: Ayn Rand, February 2, 1905-March 6, 1982), [M]formerly known as "Alyssa Zinovyevna Rosenbaum"[/M] (Russian: Алиса Зиновьевна Розенбаум) ), Russian-American philosopher and novelist. | Ayn Rand, born Alisa Zinovievna Rosenbaum on February 2, 1905 in St. Petersburg, Russia, died March 6, 1982 in Manhattan, New York, was a Russian-American philosopher and author. She is primarily associated with her own philosophical school of objectivism which advocates rational egoism, individualism, capitalism (laissez faire) and an objective morality.
Her two most acclaimed works, The Source (1943) and And the World Trembled (1957), are ideological political novels that depict the individual's struggle against oppressive authorities and ingrained norms. Rand was also an uncompromising critic of religion, and through her critique of all coercive power as illegitimate (in addition to the necessary and limited coercive power that intended to prevent such), she contributed to the ideological furrow already called neoliberalism.
Rand claimed Aristotle as his foremost epistemological role model, and Victor Hugo as his literary. Rand was very critical of those who questioned the idea of an objective reality.
Rand is widely regarded as one of the leading figures behind the return of classical liberal ideas to the ideological political scene in the 1960s and onwards, and is considered to have inspired the so-called right-wing wave (later neoliberalism) in the 1980s. The economist Milton Friedman identified her, despite her outspoken opposition to him, as one of libertarianism's two most important intellectual trend breakers (along with Ludwig von Mises). | e |
[M]Ayn Rand[/M] (English: Ayn Rand, [M]February 2, 1905-March 6, 1982[/M]), formerly known as "Alyssa Zinovyevna Rosenbaum" (Russian: Алиса Зиновьевна Розенбаум) ), Russian-American philosopher and novelist. | Ayn Rand, born Alisa Zinovievna Rosenbaum on February 2, 1905 in St. Petersburg, Russia, died March 6, 1982 in Manhattan, New York, was a Russian-American philosopher and author. She is primarily associated with her own philosophical school of objectivism which advocates rational egoism, individualism, capitalism (laissez faire) and an objective morality.
Her two most acclaimed works, The Source (1943) and And the World Trembled (1957), are ideological political novels that depict the individual's struggle against oppressive authorities and ingrained norms. Rand was also an uncompromising critic of religion, and through her critique of all coercive power as illegitimate (in addition to the necessary and limited coercive power that intended to prevent such), she contributed to the ideological furrow already called neoliberalism.
Rand claimed Aristotle as his foremost epistemological role model, and Victor Hugo as his literary. Rand was very critical of those who questioned the idea of an objective reality.
Rand is widely regarded as one of the leading figures behind the return of classical liberal ideas to the ideological political scene in the 1960s and onwards, and is considered to have inspired the so-called right-wing wave (later neoliberalism) in the 1980s. The economist Milton Friedman identified her, despite her outspoken opposition to him, as one of libertarianism's two most important intellectual trend breakers (along with Ludwig von Mises). | e |
[M]She[/M] also [M]wrote[/M] several best-selling [M]novels[/M] such as "The Source" and "[M]Atlas Shrugged[/M]". | Ayn Rand, born Alisa Zinovievna Rosenbaum on February 2, 1905 in St. Petersburg, Russia, died March 6, 1982 in Manhattan, New York, was a Russian-American philosopher and author. She is primarily associated with her own philosophical school of objectivism which advocates rational egoism, individualism, capitalism (laissez faire) and an objective morality.
Her two most acclaimed works, The Source (1943) and And the World Trembled (1957), are ideological political novels that depict the individual's struggle against oppressive authorities and ingrained norms. Rand was also an uncompromising critic of religion, and through her critique of all coercive power as illegitimate (in addition to the necessary and limited coercive power that intended to prevent such), she contributed to the ideological furrow already called neoliberalism.
Rand claimed Aristotle as his foremost epistemological role model, and Victor Hugo as his literary. Rand was very critical of those who questioned the idea of an objective reality.
Rand is widely regarded as one of the leading figures behind the return of classical liberal ideas to the ideological political scene in the 1960s and onwards, and is considered to have inspired the so-called right-wing wave (later neoliberalism) in the 1980s. The economist Milton Friedman identified her, despite her outspoken opposition to him, as one of libertarianism's two most important intellectual trend breakers (along with Ludwig von Mises). | n |
[M]She[/M] also [M]wrote[/M] several best-selling [M]novels[/M] such as "[M]The Source[/M]" and "Atlas Shrugged". | Ayn Rand, born Alisa Zinovievna Rosenbaum on February 2, 1905 in St. Petersburg, Russia, died March 6, 1982 in Manhattan, New York, was a Russian-American philosopher and author. She is primarily associated with her own philosophical school of objectivism which advocates rational egoism, individualism, capitalism (laissez faire) and an objective morality.
Her two most acclaimed works, The Source (1943) and And the World Trembled (1957), are ideological political novels that depict the individual's struggle against oppressive authorities and ingrained norms. Rand was also an uncompromising critic of religion, and through her critique of all coercive power as illegitimate (in addition to the necessary and limited coercive power that intended to prevent such), she contributed to the ideological furrow already called neoliberalism.
Rand claimed Aristotle as his foremost epistemological role model, and Victor Hugo as his literary. Rand was very critical of those who questioned the idea of an objective reality.
Rand is widely regarded as one of the leading figures behind the return of classical liberal ideas to the ideological political scene in the 1960s and onwards, and is considered to have inspired the so-called right-wing wave (later neoliberalism) in the 1980s. The economist Milton Friedman identified her, despite her outspoken opposition to him, as one of libertarianism's two most important intellectual trend breakers (along with Ludwig von Mises). | e |
[M]She[/M] also [M]wrote several best-selling novels[/M] such as "The Source" and "Atlas Shrugged". | Ayn Rand, born Alisa Zinovievna Rosenbaum on February 2, 1905 in St. Petersburg, Russia, died March 6, 1982 in Manhattan, New York, was a Russian-American philosopher and author. She is primarily associated with her own philosophical school of objectivism which advocates rational egoism, individualism, capitalism (laissez faire) and an objective morality.
Her two most acclaimed works, The Source (1943) and And the World Trembled (1957), are ideological political novels that depict the individual's struggle against oppressive authorities and ingrained norms. Rand was also an uncompromising critic of religion, and through her critique of all coercive power as illegitimate (in addition to the necessary and limited coercive power that intended to prevent such), she contributed to the ideological furrow already called neoliberalism.
Rand claimed Aristotle as his foremost epistemological role model, and Victor Hugo as his literary. Rand was very critical of those who questioned the idea of an objective reality.
Rand is widely regarded as one of the leading figures behind the return of classical liberal ideas to the ideological political scene in the 1960s and onwards, and is considered to have inspired the so-called right-wing wave (later neoliberalism) in the 1980s. The economist Milton Friedman identified her, despite her outspoken opposition to him, as one of libertarianism's two most important intellectual trend breakers (along with Ludwig von Mises). | n |
The goal expressed in [M]Rand's[/M] novel is to show her [M]ideal hero[/M]: [M]a person who[/M] is in conflict with society because of her ability and independent character, but who still [M]struggles unremittingly towards his ideal[/M]. | Ayn Rand, born Alisa Zinovievna Rosenbaum on February 2, 1905 in St. Petersburg, Russia, died March 6, 1982 in Manhattan, New York, was a Russian-American philosopher and author. She is primarily associated with her own philosophical school of objectivism which advocates rational egoism, individualism, capitalism (laissez faire) and an objective morality.
Her two most acclaimed works, The Source (1943) and And the World Trembled (1957), are ideological political novels that depict the individual's struggle against oppressive authorities and ingrained norms. Rand was also an uncompromising critic of religion, and through her critique of all coercive power as illegitimate (in addition to the necessary and limited coercive power that intended to prevent such), she contributed to the ideological furrow already called neoliberalism.
Rand claimed Aristotle as his foremost epistemological role model, and Victor Hugo as his literary. Rand was very critical of those who questioned the idea of an objective reality.
Rand is widely regarded as one of the leading figures behind the return of classical liberal ideas to the ideological political scene in the 1960s and onwards, and is considered to have inspired the so-called right-wing wave (later neoliberalism) in the 1980s. The economist Milton Friedman identified her, despite her outspoken opposition to him, as one of libertarianism's two most important intellectual trend breakers (along with Ludwig von Mises). | n |
The goal expressed in [M]Rand's[/M] novel is to show her [M]ideal hero[/M]: [M]a person who is in conflict with society because of her[/M] ability and [M]independent character[/M], but who still struggles unremittingly towards his ideal. | Ayn Rand, born Alisa Zinovievna Rosenbaum on February 2, 1905 in St. Petersburg, Russia, died March 6, 1982 in Manhattan, New York, was a Russian-American philosopher and author. She is primarily associated with her own philosophical school of objectivism which advocates rational egoism, individualism, capitalism (laissez faire) and an objective morality.
Her two most acclaimed works, The Source (1943) and And the World Trembled (1957), are ideological political novels that depict the individual's struggle against oppressive authorities and ingrained norms. Rand was also an uncompromising critic of religion, and through her critique of all coercive power as illegitimate (in addition to the necessary and limited coercive power that intended to prevent such), she contributed to the ideological furrow already called neoliberalism.
Rand claimed Aristotle as his foremost epistemological role model, and Victor Hugo as his literary. Rand was very critical of those who questioned the idea of an objective reality.
Rand is widely regarded as one of the leading figures behind the return of classical liberal ideas to the ideological political scene in the 1960s and onwards, and is considered to have inspired the so-called right-wing wave (later neoliberalism) in the 1980s. The economist Milton Friedman identified her, despite her outspoken opposition to him, as one of libertarianism's two most important intellectual trend breakers (along with Ludwig von Mises). | n |
The goal expressed in [M]Rand's[/M] novel is to show her [M]ideal hero[/M]: [M]a person who is in conflict with society because of her ability[/M] and independent character, but who still struggles unremittingly towards his ideal. | Ayn Rand, born Alisa Zinovievna Rosenbaum on February 2, 1905 in St. Petersburg, Russia, died March 6, 1982 in Manhattan, New York, was a Russian-American philosopher and author. She is primarily associated with her own philosophical school of objectivism which advocates rational egoism, individualism, capitalism (laissez faire) and an objective morality.
Her two most acclaimed works, The Source (1943) and And the World Trembled (1957), are ideological political novels that depict the individual's struggle against oppressive authorities and ingrained norms. Rand was also an uncompromising critic of religion, and through her critique of all coercive power as illegitimate (in addition to the necessary and limited coercive power that intended to prevent such), she contributed to the ideological furrow already called neoliberalism.
Rand claimed Aristotle as his foremost epistemological role model, and Victor Hugo as his literary. Rand was very critical of those who questioned the idea of an objective reality.
Rand is widely regarded as one of the leading figures behind the return of classical liberal ideas to the ideological political scene in the 1960s and onwards, and is considered to have inspired the so-called right-wing wave (later neoliberalism) in the 1980s. The economist Milton Friedman identified her, despite her outspoken opposition to him, as one of libertarianism's two most important intellectual trend breakers (along with Ludwig von Mises). | n |
[M]The goal expressed in Rand's novel is to show her ideal hero[/M]: a person who is in conflict with society because of her ability and independent character, but who still struggles unremittingly towards his ideal. | Ayn Rand, born Alisa Zinovievna Rosenbaum on February 2, 1905 in St. Petersburg, Russia, died March 6, 1982 in Manhattan, New York, was a Russian-American philosopher and author. She is primarily associated with her own philosophical school of objectivism which advocates rational egoism, individualism, capitalism (laissez faire) and an objective morality.
Her two most acclaimed works, The Source (1943) and And the World Trembled (1957), are ideological political novels that depict the individual's struggle against oppressive authorities and ingrained norms. Rand was also an uncompromising critic of religion, and through her critique of all coercive power as illegitimate (in addition to the necessary and limited coercive power that intended to prevent such), she contributed to the ideological furrow already called neoliberalism.
Rand claimed Aristotle as his foremost epistemological role model, and Victor Hugo as his literary. Rand was very critical of those who questioned the idea of an objective reality.
Rand is widely regarded as one of the leading figures behind the return of classical liberal ideas to the ideological political scene in the 1960s and onwards, and is considered to have inspired the so-called right-wing wave (later neoliberalism) in the 1980s. The economist Milton Friedman identified her, despite her outspoken opposition to him, as one of libertarianism's two most important intellectual trend breakers (along with Ludwig von Mises). | n |
[M]She believes[/M] that people must choose their values and actions rationally; individuals have the absolute right to live only for their own interests, without sacrificing their own interests for others, but cannot force others to sacrifice for themselves; [M]no one has the right[/M] Use violence or fraud to seize the property of others, or [M]impose one's own values on others through violence[/M]. | Ayn Rand, born Alisa Zinovievna Rosenbaum on February 2, 1905 in St. Petersburg, Russia, died March 6, 1982 in Manhattan, New York, was a Russian-American philosopher and author. She is primarily associated with her own philosophical school of objectivism which advocates rational egoism, individualism, capitalism (laissez faire) and an objective morality.
Her two most acclaimed works, The Source (1943) and And the World Trembled (1957), are ideological political novels that depict the individual's struggle against oppressive authorities and ingrained norms. Rand was also an uncompromising critic of religion, and through her critique of all coercive power as illegitimate (in addition to the necessary and limited coercive power that intended to prevent such), she contributed to the ideological furrow already called neoliberalism.
Rand claimed Aristotle as his foremost epistemological role model, and Victor Hugo as his literary. Rand was very critical of those who questioned the idea of an objective reality.
Rand is widely regarded as one of the leading figures behind the return of classical liberal ideas to the ideological political scene in the 1960s and onwards, and is considered to have inspired the so-called right-wing wave (later neoliberalism) in the 1980s. The economist Milton Friedman identified her, despite her outspoken opposition to him, as one of libertarianism's two most important intellectual trend breakers (along with Ludwig von Mises). | n |
[M]She believes[/M] that people must choose their values and actions rationally; individuals have the absolute right to live only for their own interests, without sacrificing their own interests for others, but cannot force others to sacrifice for themselves; [M]no one has the right Use[/M] violence or [M]fraud to seize the property of others[/M], or impose one's own values on others through violence. | Ayn Rand, born Alisa Zinovievna Rosenbaum on February 2, 1905 in St. Petersburg, Russia, died March 6, 1982 in Manhattan, New York, was a Russian-American philosopher and author. She is primarily associated with her own philosophical school of objectivism which advocates rational egoism, individualism, capitalism (laissez faire) and an objective morality.
Her two most acclaimed works, The Source (1943) and And the World Trembled (1957), are ideological political novels that depict the individual's struggle against oppressive authorities and ingrained norms. Rand was also an uncompromising critic of religion, and through her critique of all coercive power as illegitimate (in addition to the necessary and limited coercive power that intended to prevent such), she contributed to the ideological furrow already called neoliberalism.
Rand claimed Aristotle as his foremost epistemological role model, and Victor Hugo as his literary. Rand was very critical of those who questioned the idea of an objective reality.
Rand is widely regarded as one of the leading figures behind the return of classical liberal ideas to the ideological political scene in the 1960s and onwards, and is considered to have inspired the so-called right-wing wave (later neoliberalism) in the 1980s. The economist Milton Friedman identified her, despite her outspoken opposition to him, as one of libertarianism's two most important intellectual trend breakers (along with Ludwig von Mises). | n |
[M]She believes[/M] that people must choose their values and actions rationally; individuals have the absolute right to live only for their own interests, without sacrificing their own interests for others, but cannot force others to sacrifice for themselves; [M]no one has the right Use violence[/M] or fraud [M]to seize the property of others[/M], or impose one's own values on others through violence. | Ayn Rand, born Alisa Zinovievna Rosenbaum on February 2, 1905 in St. Petersburg, Russia, died March 6, 1982 in Manhattan, New York, was a Russian-American philosopher and author. She is primarily associated with her own philosophical school of objectivism which advocates rational egoism, individualism, capitalism (laissez faire) and an objective morality.
Her two most acclaimed works, The Source (1943) and And the World Trembled (1957), are ideological political novels that depict the individual's struggle against oppressive authorities and ingrained norms. Rand was also an uncompromising critic of religion, and through her critique of all coercive power as illegitimate (in addition to the necessary and limited coercive power that intended to prevent such), she contributed to the ideological furrow already called neoliberalism.
Rand claimed Aristotle as his foremost epistemological role model, and Victor Hugo as his literary. Rand was very critical of those who questioned the idea of an objective reality.
Rand is widely regarded as one of the leading figures behind the return of classical liberal ideas to the ideological political scene in the 1960s and onwards, and is considered to have inspired the so-called right-wing wave (later neoliberalism) in the 1980s. The economist Milton Friedman identified her, despite her outspoken opposition to him, as one of libertarianism's two most important intellectual trend breakers (along with Ludwig von Mises). | n |
[M]She believes[/M] that people must choose their values and actions rationally; [M]individuals[/M] have the absolute right to live only for their own interests, without sacrificing their own interests for others, but [M]cannot force others to sacrifice for themselves[/M]; no one has the right Use violence or fraud to seize the property of others, or impose one's own values on others through violence. | Ayn Rand, born Alisa Zinovievna Rosenbaum on February 2, 1905 in St. Petersburg, Russia, died March 6, 1982 in Manhattan, New York, was a Russian-American philosopher and author. She is primarily associated with her own philosophical school of objectivism which advocates rational egoism, individualism, capitalism (laissez faire) and an objective morality.
Her two most acclaimed works, The Source (1943) and And the World Trembled (1957), are ideological political novels that depict the individual's struggle against oppressive authorities and ingrained norms. Rand was also an uncompromising critic of religion, and through her critique of all coercive power as illegitimate (in addition to the necessary and limited coercive power that intended to prevent such), she contributed to the ideological furrow already called neoliberalism.
Rand claimed Aristotle as his foremost epistemological role model, and Victor Hugo as his literary. Rand was very critical of those who questioned the idea of an objective reality.
Rand is widely regarded as one of the leading figures behind the return of classical liberal ideas to the ideological political scene in the 1960s and onwards, and is considered to have inspired the so-called right-wing wave (later neoliberalism) in the 1980s. The economist Milton Friedman identified her, despite her outspoken opposition to him, as one of libertarianism's two most important intellectual trend breakers (along with Ludwig von Mises). | n |
[M]She believes[/M] that people must choose their values and actions rationally; [M]individuals have the absolute right to live[/M] only for their own interests, [M]without sacrificing their own interests for others[/M], but cannot force others to sacrifice for themselves; no one has the right Use violence or fraud to seize the property of others, or impose one's own values on others through violence. | Ayn Rand, born Alisa Zinovievna Rosenbaum on February 2, 1905 in St. Petersburg, Russia, died March 6, 1982 in Manhattan, New York, was a Russian-American philosopher and author. She is primarily associated with her own philosophical school of objectivism which advocates rational egoism, individualism, capitalism (laissez faire) and an objective morality.
Her two most acclaimed works, The Source (1943) and And the World Trembled (1957), are ideological political novels that depict the individual's struggle against oppressive authorities and ingrained norms. Rand was also an uncompromising critic of religion, and through her critique of all coercive power as illegitimate (in addition to the necessary and limited coercive power that intended to prevent such), she contributed to the ideological furrow already called neoliberalism.
Rand claimed Aristotle as his foremost epistemological role model, and Victor Hugo as his literary. Rand was very critical of those who questioned the idea of an objective reality.
Rand is widely regarded as one of the leading figures behind the return of classical liberal ideas to the ideological political scene in the 1960s and onwards, and is considered to have inspired the so-called right-wing wave (later neoliberalism) in the 1980s. The economist Milton Friedman identified her, despite her outspoken opposition to him, as one of libertarianism's two most important intellectual trend breakers (along with Ludwig von Mises). | n |
[M]She believes[/M] that people must choose their values and actions rationally; [M]individuals have the absolute right to live only for their own interests[/M], without sacrificing their own interests for others, but cannot force others to sacrifice for themselves; no one has the right Use violence or fraud to seize the property of others, or impose one's own values on others through violence. | Ayn Rand, born Alisa Zinovievna Rosenbaum on February 2, 1905 in St. Petersburg, Russia, died March 6, 1982 in Manhattan, New York, was a Russian-American philosopher and author. She is primarily associated with her own philosophical school of objectivism which advocates rational egoism, individualism, capitalism (laissez faire) and an objective morality.
Her two most acclaimed works, The Source (1943) and And the World Trembled (1957), are ideological political novels that depict the individual's struggle against oppressive authorities and ingrained norms. Rand was also an uncompromising critic of religion, and through her critique of all coercive power as illegitimate (in addition to the necessary and limited coercive power that intended to prevent such), she contributed to the ideological furrow already called neoliberalism.
Rand claimed Aristotle as his foremost epistemological role model, and Victor Hugo as his literary. Rand was very critical of those who questioned the idea of an objective reality.
Rand is widely regarded as one of the leading figures behind the return of classical liberal ideas to the ideological political scene in the 1960s and onwards, and is considered to have inspired the so-called right-wing wave (later neoliberalism) in the 1980s. The economist Milton Friedman identified her, despite her outspoken opposition to him, as one of libertarianism's two most important intellectual trend breakers (along with Ludwig von Mises). | n |
[M]She believes[/M] that [M]people must choose their[/M] values and [M]actions rationally[/M]; individuals have the absolute right to live only for their own interests, without sacrificing their own interests for others, but cannot force others to sacrifice for themselves; no one has the right Use violence or fraud to seize the property of others, or impose one's own values on others through violence. | Ayn Rand, born Alisa Zinovievna Rosenbaum on February 2, 1905 in St. Petersburg, Russia, died March 6, 1982 in Manhattan, New York, was a Russian-American philosopher and author. She is primarily associated with her own philosophical school of objectivism which advocates rational egoism, individualism, capitalism (laissez faire) and an objective morality.
Her two most acclaimed works, The Source (1943) and And the World Trembled (1957), are ideological political novels that depict the individual's struggle against oppressive authorities and ingrained norms. Rand was also an uncompromising critic of religion, and through her critique of all coercive power as illegitimate (in addition to the necessary and limited coercive power that intended to prevent such), she contributed to the ideological furrow already called neoliberalism.
Rand claimed Aristotle as his foremost epistemological role model, and Victor Hugo as his literary. Rand was very critical of those who questioned the idea of an objective reality.
Rand is widely regarded as one of the leading figures behind the return of classical liberal ideas to the ideological political scene in the 1960s and onwards, and is considered to have inspired the so-called right-wing wave (later neoliberalism) in the 1980s. The economist Milton Friedman identified her, despite her outspoken opposition to him, as one of libertarianism's two most important intellectual trend breakers (along with Ludwig von Mises). | n |
[M]She believes[/M] that [M]people must choose their values[/M] and actions [M]rationally[/M]; individuals have the absolute right to live only for their own interests, without sacrificing their own interests for others, but cannot force others to sacrifice for themselves; no one has the right Use violence or fraud to seize the property of others, or impose one's own values on others through violence. | Ayn Rand, born Alisa Zinovievna Rosenbaum on February 2, 1905 in St. Petersburg, Russia, died March 6, 1982 in Manhattan, New York, was a Russian-American philosopher and author. She is primarily associated with her own philosophical school of objectivism which advocates rational egoism, individualism, capitalism (laissez faire) and an objective morality.
Her two most acclaimed works, The Source (1943) and And the World Trembled (1957), are ideological political novels that depict the individual's struggle against oppressive authorities and ingrained norms. Rand was also an uncompromising critic of religion, and through her critique of all coercive power as illegitimate (in addition to the necessary and limited coercive power that intended to prevent such), she contributed to the ideological furrow already called neoliberalism.
Rand claimed Aristotle as his foremost epistemological role model, and Victor Hugo as his literary. Rand was very critical of those who questioned the idea of an objective reality.
Rand is widely regarded as one of the leading figures behind the return of classical liberal ideas to the ideological political scene in the 1960s and onwards, and is considered to have inspired the so-called right-wing wave (later neoliberalism) in the 1980s. The economist Milton Friedman identified her, despite her outspoken opposition to him, as one of libertarianism's two most important intellectual trend breakers (along with Ludwig von Mises). | n |
[M]Her philosophical theories and novels pioneered the philosophical movement of objectivism[/M]. | Ayn Rand, born Alisa Zinovievna Rosenbaum on February 2, 1905 in St. Petersburg, Russia, died March 6, 1982 in Manhattan, New York, was a Russian-American philosopher and author. She is primarily associated with her own philosophical school of objectivism which advocates rational egoism, individualism, capitalism (laissez faire) and an objective morality.
Her two most acclaimed works, The Source (1943) and And the World Trembled (1957), are ideological political novels that depict the individual's struggle against oppressive authorities and ingrained norms. Rand was also an uncompromising critic of religion, and through her critique of all coercive power as illegitimate (in addition to the necessary and limited coercive power that intended to prevent such), she contributed to the ideological furrow already called neoliberalism.
Rand claimed Aristotle as his foremost epistemological role model, and Victor Hugo as his literary. Rand was very critical of those who questioned the idea of an objective reality.
Rand is widely regarded as one of the leading figures behind the return of classical liberal ideas to the ideological political scene in the 1960s and onwards, and is considered to have inspired the so-called right-wing wave (later neoliberalism) in the 1980s. The economist Milton Friedman identified her, despite her outspoken opposition to him, as one of libertarianism's two most important intellectual trend breakers (along with Ludwig von Mises). | e |
Police responded to reports of gunshots around 2:25 p.m. in the parking lot of 3470 Fostoria Way, near the Iron Horse Regional Trail, where they found [M]John Moore., of Danville[/M], shot to death. | KANE COUNTY, IL — A Dublin man wanted in connection with the Feb. 24 homicide of Danville resident John Moore died Wednesday of an apparent self-inflicted gunshot wound outside his parents' Illinois home, the Kane County Sheriff's Office said. Hours before the shooting, police warned residents that 51-year-old Mark Sypien could be headed from California to his native Illinois.
Around 3 p.m., Illinois police including Kane County Sheriff's deputies and St. Charles officers, responded to a home in the 3N600 block of Bittersweet Road in St. Charles Township for a reported sighting of Sypien. The sheriff's office said upon arrival, officers heard a gunshot and found a man, identified as Sypien, on the front lawn suffering from what appeared to be a self-inflicted gunshot wound.
Kane County Sheriff Ron Hain confirmed to Patch that Sypien was pronounced dead shortly after he arrived at Delnor hospital in Geneva. No one else was injured in the incident.
The DeKalb Daily Chronicle reported Wednesday that police warned Sypien might be headed back to Illinois from California. Police told the Chronicle he showed up outside his parents' home in St. Charles Township, prompting his parents to barricade themselves in the basement. He shot himself a short time later, according to police.
The Contra Costa County Coroner's Office in California identified a man found dead Sunday afternoon, Feb. 24, as 76-year-old Moore. | e |
[M]Police[/M] responded to reports of gunshots around 2:25 p.m. in the parking lot of 3470 Fostoria Way, near the Iron Horse Regional Trail, where they [M]found John Moore[/M]., of Danville, [M]shot to death[/M]. | KANE COUNTY, IL — A Dublin man wanted in connection with the Feb. 24 homicide of Danville resident John Moore died Wednesday of an apparent self-inflicted gunshot wound outside his parents' Illinois home, the Kane County Sheriff's Office said. Hours before the shooting, police warned residents that 51-year-old Mark Sypien could be headed from California to his native Illinois.
Around 3 p.m., Illinois police including Kane County Sheriff's deputies and St. Charles officers, responded to a home in the 3N600 block of Bittersweet Road in St. Charles Township for a reported sighting of Sypien. The sheriff's office said upon arrival, officers heard a gunshot and found a man, identified as Sypien, on the front lawn suffering from what appeared to be a self-inflicted gunshot wound.
Kane County Sheriff Ron Hain confirmed to Patch that Sypien was pronounced dead shortly after he arrived at Delnor hospital in Geneva. No one else was injured in the incident.
The DeKalb Daily Chronicle reported Wednesday that police warned Sypien might be headed back to Illinois from California. Police told the Chronicle he showed up outside his parents' home in St. Charles Township, prompting his parents to barricade themselves in the basement. He shot himself a short time later, according to police.
The Contra Costa County Coroner's Office in California identified a man found dead Sunday afternoon, Feb. 24, as 76-year-old Moore. | n |
[M]Police responded to reports of gunshots[/M] around 2:25 p.m. in the parking lot of 3470 Fostoria Way, [M]near the Iron Horse Regional Trail[/M], where they found John Moore., of Danville, shot to death. | KANE COUNTY, IL — A Dublin man wanted in connection with the Feb. 24 homicide of Danville resident John Moore died Wednesday of an apparent self-inflicted gunshot wound outside his parents' Illinois home, the Kane County Sheriff's Office said. Hours before the shooting, police warned residents that 51-year-old Mark Sypien could be headed from California to his native Illinois.
Around 3 p.m., Illinois police including Kane County Sheriff's deputies and St. Charles officers, responded to a home in the 3N600 block of Bittersweet Road in St. Charles Township for a reported sighting of Sypien. The sheriff's office said upon arrival, officers heard a gunshot and found a man, identified as Sypien, on the front lawn suffering from what appeared to be a self-inflicted gunshot wound.
Kane County Sheriff Ron Hain confirmed to Patch that Sypien was pronounced dead shortly after he arrived at Delnor hospital in Geneva. No one else was injured in the incident.
The DeKalb Daily Chronicle reported Wednesday that police warned Sypien might be headed back to Illinois from California. Police told the Chronicle he showed up outside his parents' home in St. Charles Township, prompting his parents to barricade themselves in the basement. He shot himself a short time later, according to police.
The Contra Costa County Coroner's Office in California identified a man found dead Sunday afternoon, Feb. 24, as 76-year-old Moore. | n |
[M]Police responded to[/M] reports of [M]gunshots[/M] around 2:25 p.m. [M]in the parking lot of 3470 Fostoria Way[/M], near the Iron Horse Regional Trail, where they found John Moore., of Danville, shot to death. | KANE COUNTY, IL — A Dublin man wanted in connection with the Feb. 24 homicide of Danville resident John Moore died Wednesday of an apparent self-inflicted gunshot wound outside his parents' Illinois home, the Kane County Sheriff's Office said. Hours before the shooting, police warned residents that 51-year-old Mark Sypien could be headed from California to his native Illinois.
Around 3 p.m., Illinois police including Kane County Sheriff's deputies and St. Charles officers, responded to a home in the 3N600 block of Bittersweet Road in St. Charles Township for a reported sighting of Sypien. The sheriff's office said upon arrival, officers heard a gunshot and found a man, identified as Sypien, on the front lawn suffering from what appeared to be a self-inflicted gunshot wound.
Kane County Sheriff Ron Hain confirmed to Patch that Sypien was pronounced dead shortly after he arrived at Delnor hospital in Geneva. No one else was injured in the incident.
The DeKalb Daily Chronicle reported Wednesday that police warned Sypien might be headed back to Illinois from California. Police told the Chronicle he showed up outside his parents' home in St. Charles Township, prompting his parents to barricade themselves in the basement. He shot himself a short time later, according to police.
The Contra Costa County Coroner's Office in California identified a man found dead Sunday afternoon, Feb. 24, as 76-year-old Moore. | n |
[M]Police responded to reports of gunshots around 2:25 p.m.[/M] in the parking lot of 3470 Fostoria Way, near the Iron Horse Regional Trail, where they found John Moore., of Danville, shot to death. | KANE COUNTY, IL — A Dublin man wanted in connection with the Feb. 24 homicide of Danville resident John Moore died Wednesday of an apparent self-inflicted gunshot wound outside his parents' Illinois home, the Kane County Sheriff's Office said. Hours before the shooting, police warned residents that 51-year-old Mark Sypien could be headed from California to his native Illinois.
Around 3 p.m., Illinois police including Kane County Sheriff's deputies and St. Charles officers, responded to a home in the 3N600 block of Bittersweet Road in St. Charles Township for a reported sighting of Sypien. The sheriff's office said upon arrival, officers heard a gunshot and found a man, identified as Sypien, on the front lawn suffering from what appeared to be a self-inflicted gunshot wound.
Kane County Sheriff Ron Hain confirmed to Patch that Sypien was pronounced dead shortly after he arrived at Delnor hospital in Geneva. No one else was injured in the incident.
The DeKalb Daily Chronicle reported Wednesday that police warned Sypien might be headed back to Illinois from California. Police told the Chronicle he showed up outside his parents' home in St. Charles Township, prompting his parents to barricade themselves in the basement. He shot himself a short time later, according to police.
The Contra Costa County Coroner's Office in California identified a man found dead Sunday afternoon, Feb. 24, as 76-year-old Moore. | n |
Police are seeking a Dublin man they say fatally shot a 76-year-old man in a parking lot on Sunday afternoon in what is [M]Danville’s first homicide in roughly three years.[/M] | KANE COUNTY, IL — A Dublin man wanted in connection with the Feb. 24 homicide of Danville resident John Moore died Wednesday of an apparent self-inflicted gunshot wound outside his parents' Illinois home, the Kane County Sheriff's Office said. Hours before the shooting, police warned residents that 51-year-old Mark Sypien could be headed from California to his native Illinois.
Around 3 p.m., Illinois police including Kane County Sheriff's deputies and St. Charles officers, responded to a home in the 3N600 block of Bittersweet Road in St. Charles Township for a reported sighting of Sypien. The sheriff's office said upon arrival, officers heard a gunshot and found a man, identified as Sypien, on the front lawn suffering from what appeared to be a self-inflicted gunshot wound.
Kane County Sheriff Ron Hain confirmed to Patch that Sypien was pronounced dead shortly after he arrived at Delnor hospital in Geneva. No one else was injured in the incident.
The DeKalb Daily Chronicle reported Wednesday that police warned Sypien might be headed back to Illinois from California. Police told the Chronicle he showed up outside his parents' home in St. Charles Township, prompting his parents to barricade themselves in the basement. He shot himself a short time later, according to police.
The Contra Costa County Coroner's Office in California identified a man found dead Sunday afternoon, Feb. 24, as 76-year-old Moore. | n |
[M]Police[/M] are [M]seeking[/M] a Dublin [M]man they say fatally shot a 76-year-old man in a parking lot[/M] on [M]Sunday afternoon[/M] in what is Danville’s first homicide in roughly three years. | KANE COUNTY, IL — A Dublin man wanted in connection with the Feb. 24 homicide of Danville resident John Moore died Wednesday of an apparent self-inflicted gunshot wound outside his parents' Illinois home, the Kane County Sheriff's Office said. Hours before the shooting, police warned residents that 51-year-old Mark Sypien could be headed from California to his native Illinois.
Around 3 p.m., Illinois police including Kane County Sheriff's deputies and St. Charles officers, responded to a home in the 3N600 block of Bittersweet Road in St. Charles Township for a reported sighting of Sypien. The sheriff's office said upon arrival, officers heard a gunshot and found a man, identified as Sypien, on the front lawn suffering from what appeared to be a self-inflicted gunshot wound.
Kane County Sheriff Ron Hain confirmed to Patch that Sypien was pronounced dead shortly after he arrived at Delnor hospital in Geneva. No one else was injured in the incident.
The DeKalb Daily Chronicle reported Wednesday that police warned Sypien might be headed back to Illinois from California. Police told the Chronicle he showed up outside his parents' home in St. Charles Township, prompting his parents to barricade themselves in the basement. He shot himself a short time later, according to police.
The Contra Costa County Coroner's Office in California identified a man found dead Sunday afternoon, Feb. 24, as 76-year-old Moore. | n |
[M]Police[/M] are [M]seeking[/M] a Dublin [M]man they say fatally shot a 76-year-old man in a parking lot[/M] on Sunday afternoon in what is Danville’s first homicide in roughly three years. | KANE COUNTY, IL — A Dublin man wanted in connection with the Feb. 24 homicide of Danville resident John Moore died Wednesday of an apparent self-inflicted gunshot wound outside his parents' Illinois home, the Kane County Sheriff's Office said. Hours before the shooting, police warned residents that 51-year-old Mark Sypien could be headed from California to his native Illinois.
Around 3 p.m., Illinois police including Kane County Sheriff's deputies and St. Charles officers, responded to a home in the 3N600 block of Bittersweet Road in St. Charles Township for a reported sighting of Sypien. The sheriff's office said upon arrival, officers heard a gunshot and found a man, identified as Sypien, on the front lawn suffering from what appeared to be a self-inflicted gunshot wound.
Kane County Sheriff Ron Hain confirmed to Patch that Sypien was pronounced dead shortly after he arrived at Delnor hospital in Geneva. No one else was injured in the incident.
The DeKalb Daily Chronicle reported Wednesday that police warned Sypien might be headed back to Illinois from California. Police told the Chronicle he showed up outside his parents' home in St. Charles Township, prompting his parents to barricade themselves in the basement. He shot himself a short time later, according to police.
The Contra Costa County Coroner's Office in California identified a man found dead Sunday afternoon, Feb. 24, as 76-year-old Moore. | n |
[M]Police[/M] are [M]seeking[/M] a Dublin [M]man they say fatally shot a 76-year-old man[/M] in a parking lot on Sunday afternoon in what is Danville’s first homicide in roughly three years. | KANE COUNTY, IL — A Dublin man wanted in connection with the Feb. 24 homicide of Danville resident John Moore died Wednesday of an apparent self-inflicted gunshot wound outside his parents' Illinois home, the Kane County Sheriff's Office said. Hours before the shooting, police warned residents that 51-year-old Mark Sypien could be headed from California to his native Illinois.
Around 3 p.m., Illinois police including Kane County Sheriff's deputies and St. Charles officers, responded to a home in the 3N600 block of Bittersweet Road in St. Charles Township for a reported sighting of Sypien. The sheriff's office said upon arrival, officers heard a gunshot and found a man, identified as Sypien, on the front lawn suffering from what appeared to be a self-inflicted gunshot wound.
Kane County Sheriff Ron Hain confirmed to Patch that Sypien was pronounced dead shortly after he arrived at Delnor hospital in Geneva. No one else was injured in the incident.
The DeKalb Daily Chronicle reported Wednesday that police warned Sypien might be headed back to Illinois from California. Police told the Chronicle he showed up outside his parents' home in St. Charles Township, prompting his parents to barricade themselves in the basement. He shot himself a short time later, according to police.
The Contra Costa County Coroner's Office in California identified a man found dead Sunday afternoon, Feb. 24, as 76-year-old Moore. | n |
[M]Police are seeking a Dublin man[/M] they say fatally shot a 76-year-old man in a parking lot on Sunday afternoon in what is Danville’s first homicide in roughly three years. | KANE COUNTY, IL — A Dublin man wanted in connection with the Feb. 24 homicide of Danville resident John Moore died Wednesday of an apparent self-inflicted gunshot wound outside his parents' Illinois home, the Kane County Sheriff's Office said. Hours before the shooting, police warned residents that 51-year-old Mark Sypien could be headed from California to his native Illinois.
Around 3 p.m., Illinois police including Kane County Sheriff's deputies and St. Charles officers, responded to a home in the 3N600 block of Bittersweet Road in St. Charles Township for a reported sighting of Sypien. The sheriff's office said upon arrival, officers heard a gunshot and found a man, identified as Sypien, on the front lawn suffering from what appeared to be a self-inflicted gunshot wound.
Kane County Sheriff Ron Hain confirmed to Patch that Sypien was pronounced dead shortly after he arrived at Delnor hospital in Geneva. No one else was injured in the incident.
The DeKalb Daily Chronicle reported Wednesday that police warned Sypien might be headed back to Illinois from California. Police told the Chronicle he showed up outside his parents' home in St. Charles Township, prompting his parents to barricade themselves in the basement. He shot himself a short time later, according to police.
The Contra Costa County Coroner's Office in California identified a man found dead Sunday afternoon, Feb. 24, as 76-year-old Moore. | n |
The DeKalb Daily Chronicle reported Wednesday that police warned [M]Sypien might be headed back to Illinois from California[/M]. | Police are seeking a Dublin man they say fatally shot a 76-year-old man in a parking lot on Sunday afternoon in what is Danville’s first homicide in roughly three years.
Police responded to reports of gunshots around 2:25 p.m. in the parking lot of 3470 Fostoria Way, near the Iron Horse Regional Trail, where they found John Moore., of Danville, shot to death. | n |
[M]The DeKalb Daily Chronicle reported Wednesday that police warned Sypien might be headed back to Illinois from California[/M]. | Police are seeking a Dublin man they say fatally shot a 76-year-old man in a parking lot on Sunday afternoon in what is Danville’s first homicide in roughly three years.
Police responded to reports of gunshots around 2:25 p.m. in the parking lot of 3470 Fostoria Way, near the Iron Horse Regional Trail, where they found John Moore., of Danville, shot to death. | n |
[M]The DeKalb Daily Chronicle reported[/M] Wednesday [M]that police warned Sypien might be headed back to Illinois from California[/M]. | Police are seeking a Dublin man they say fatally shot a 76-year-old man in a parking lot on Sunday afternoon in what is Danville’s first homicide in roughly three years.
Police responded to reports of gunshots around 2:25 p.m. in the parking lot of 3470 Fostoria Way, near the Iron Horse Regional Trail, where they found John Moore., of Danville, shot to death. | n |
[M]He shot himself[/M] a short time later, according to police. | Police are seeking a Dublin man they say fatally shot a 76-year-old man in a parking lot on Sunday afternoon in what is Danville’s first homicide in roughly three years.
Police responded to reports of gunshots around 2:25 p.m. in the parking lot of 3470 Fostoria Way, near the Iron Horse Regional Trail, where they found John Moore., of Danville, shot to death. | n |
[M]He shot himself a short time later, according to police[/M]. | Police are seeking a Dublin man they say fatally shot a 76-year-old man in a parking lot on Sunday afternoon in what is Danville’s first homicide in roughly three years.
Police responded to reports of gunshots around 2:25 p.m. in the parking lot of 3470 Fostoria Way, near the Iron Horse Regional Trail, where they found John Moore., of Danville, shot to death. | n |
Kane County Sheriff Ron Hain confirmed to Patch that [M]Sypien was pronounced dead shortly after he arrived at Delnor hospital in Geneva[/M]. | Police are seeking a Dublin man they say fatally shot a 76-year-old man in a parking lot on Sunday afternoon in what is Danville’s first homicide in roughly three years.
Police responded to reports of gunshots around 2:25 p.m. in the parking lot of 3470 Fostoria Way, near the Iron Horse Regional Trail, where they found John Moore., of Danville, shot to death. | n |
Kane County Sheriff Ron Hain confirmed to Patch that [M]Sypien was pronounced dead[/M] shortly after he arrived at Delnor hospital in Geneva. | Police are seeking a Dublin man they say fatally shot a 76-year-old man in a parking lot on Sunday afternoon in what is Danville’s first homicide in roughly three years.
Police responded to reports of gunshots around 2:25 p.m. in the parking lot of 3470 Fostoria Way, near the Iron Horse Regional Trail, where they found John Moore., of Danville, shot to death. | n |
Kane County Sheriff [M]Ron Hain confirmed to Patch that Sypien was pronounced dead[/M] shortly after he arrived at Delnor hospital in Geneva. | Police are seeking a Dublin man they say fatally shot a 76-year-old man in a parking lot on Sunday afternoon in what is Danville’s first homicide in roughly three years.
Police responded to reports of gunshots around 2:25 p.m. in the parking lot of 3470 Fostoria Way, near the Iron Horse Regional Trail, where they found John Moore., of Danville, shot to death. | n |
[M]Kane County Sheriff Ron Hain[/M] confirmed to Patch that Sypien was pronounced dead shortly after he arrived at Delnor hospital in Geneva. | Police are seeking a Dublin man they say fatally shot a 76-year-old man in a parking lot on Sunday afternoon in what is Danville’s first homicide in roughly three years.
Police responded to reports of gunshots around 2:25 p.m. in the parking lot of 3470 Fostoria Way, near the Iron Horse Regional Trail, where they found John Moore., of Danville, shot to death. | n |
[M]The[/M] sheriff's office said upon arrival, officers heard a gunshot and found a [M]man, identified as Sypien, on the front lawn suffering from what appeared to be a self-inflicted gunshot wound[/M]. | Police are seeking a Dublin man they say fatally shot a 76-year-old man in a parking lot on Sunday afternoon in what is Danville’s first homicide in roughly three years.
Police responded to reports of gunshots around 2:25 p.m. in the parking lot of 3470 Fostoria Way, near the Iron Horse Regional Trail, where they found John Moore., of Danville, shot to death. | n |
[M]The sheriff's office said upon arrival, officers[/M] heard a gunshot and [M]found a man[/M], identified as Sypien, [M]on the front lawn[/M] suffering from what appeared to be a self-inflicted gunshot wound. | Police are seeking a Dublin man they say fatally shot a 76-year-old man in a parking lot on Sunday afternoon in what is Danville’s first homicide in roughly three years.
Police responded to reports of gunshots around 2:25 p.m. in the parking lot of 3470 Fostoria Way, near the Iron Horse Regional Trail, where they found John Moore., of Danville, shot to death. | n |
[M]The sheriff's office said upon arrival, officers heard a gunshot[/M] and found a man, identified as Sypien, on the front lawn suffering from what appeared to be a self-inflicted gunshot wound. | Police are seeking a Dublin man they say fatally shot a 76-year-old man in a parking lot on Sunday afternoon in what is Danville’s first homicide in roughly three years.
Police responded to reports of gunshots around 2:25 p.m. in the parking lot of 3470 Fostoria Way, near the Iron Horse Regional Trail, where they found John Moore., of Danville, shot to death. | n |
Hours before the shooting, police warned residents that [M]51-year-old Mark Sypien[/M] could be headed from California to his native Illinois. | Police are seeking a Dublin man they say fatally shot a 76-year-old man in a parking lot on Sunday afternoon in what is Danville’s first homicide in roughly three years.
Police responded to reports of gunshots around 2:25 p.m. in the parking lot of 3470 Fostoria Way, near the Iron Horse Regional Trail, where they found John Moore., of Danville, shot to death. | e |
Hours before the shooting, police warned residents that 51-year-old [M]Mark Sypien[/M] could be headed from California to his [M]native Illinois[/M]. | Police are seeking a Dublin man they say fatally shot a 76-year-old man in a parking lot on Sunday afternoon in what is Danville’s first homicide in roughly three years.
Police responded to reports of gunshots around 2:25 p.m. in the parking lot of 3470 Fostoria Way, near the Iron Horse Regional Trail, where they found John Moore., of Danville, shot to death. | n |
[M]Hours before the shooting, police warned residents that[/M] 51-year-old [M]Mark Sypien could be headed from California to his native Illinois[/M]. | Police are seeking a Dublin man they say fatally shot a 76-year-old man in a parking lot on Sunday afternoon in what is Danville’s first homicide in roughly three years.
Police responded to reports of gunshots around 2:25 p.m. in the parking lot of 3470 Fostoria Way, near the Iron Horse Regional Trail, where they found John Moore., of Danville, shot to death. | n |
[M]No one else was injured in the incident.[/M] | Police are seeking a Dublin man they say fatally shot a 76-year-old man in a parking lot on Sunday afternoon in what is Danville’s first homicide in roughly three years.
Police responded to reports of gunshots around 2:25 p.m. in the parking lot of 3470 Fostoria Way, near the Iron Horse Regional Trail, where they found John Moore., of Danville, shot to death. | n |
[M]Around 3 p.m.[/M], Illinois police including Kane County Sheriff's deputies and St. Charles officers, responded to [M]a home in the 3N600 block of Bittersweet Road in St. Charles Township for a reported sighting of Sypien[/M]. | Police are seeking a Dublin man they say fatally shot a 76-year-old man in a parking lot on Sunday afternoon in what is Danville’s first homicide in roughly three years.
Police responded to reports of gunshots around 2:25 p.m. in the parking lot of 3470 Fostoria Way, near the Iron Horse Regional Trail, where they found John Moore., of Danville, shot to death. | n |
[M]Around 3 p.m.[/M], Illinois police including Kane County Sheriff's deputies and [M]St. Charles officers, responded to a home in the 3N600 block of Bittersweet Road in St. Charles Township for a reported sighting of Sypien[/M]. | Police are seeking a Dublin man they say fatally shot a 76-year-old man in a parking lot on Sunday afternoon in what is Danville’s first homicide in roughly three years.
Police responded to reports of gunshots around 2:25 p.m. in the parking lot of 3470 Fostoria Way, near the Iron Horse Regional Trail, where they found John Moore., of Danville, shot to death. | n |
[M]Around 3 p.m.[/M], Illinois police including [M]Kane County Sheriff's deputies[/M] and St. Charles officers, [M]responded to a home in the 3N600 block of Bittersweet Road in St. Charles Township for a reported sighting of Sypien[/M]. | Police are seeking a Dublin man they say fatally shot a 76-year-old man in a parking lot on Sunday afternoon in what is Danville’s first homicide in roughly three years.
Police responded to reports of gunshots around 2:25 p.m. in the parking lot of 3470 Fostoria Way, near the Iron Horse Regional Trail, where they found John Moore., of Danville, shot to death. | n |
[M]Around 3 p.m., Illinois police[/M] including Kane County Sheriff's deputies and St. Charles officers, [M]responded to a home in the 3N600 block of Bittersweet Road in St. Charles Township for a reported sighting of Sypien[/M]. | Police are seeking a Dublin man they say fatally shot a 76-year-old man in a parking lot on Sunday afternoon in what is Danville’s first homicide in roughly three years.
Police responded to reports of gunshots around 2:25 p.m. in the parking lot of 3470 Fostoria Way, near the Iron Horse Regional Trail, where they found John Moore., of Danville, shot to death. | n |
The [M]Contra Costa County Coroner's Office[/M] in [M]California identified a man found dead Sunday afternoon[/M], Feb. 24, [M]as 76-year-old Moore.[/M] | Police are seeking a Dublin man they say fatally shot a 76-year-old man in a parking lot on Sunday afternoon in what is Danville’s first homicide in roughly three years.
Police responded to reports of gunshots around 2:25 p.m. in the parking lot of 3470 Fostoria Way, near the Iron Horse Regional Trail, where they found John Moore., of Danville, shot to death. | n |
The [M]Contra Costa County Coroner's Office[/M] in California [M]identified a man found dead[/M] Sunday afternoon, [M]Feb. 24, as 76-year-old Moore.[/M] | Police are seeking a Dublin man they say fatally shot a 76-year-old man in a parking lot on Sunday afternoon in what is Danville’s first homicide in roughly three years.
Police responded to reports of gunshots around 2:25 p.m. in the parking lot of 3470 Fostoria Way, near the Iron Horse Regional Trail, where they found John Moore., of Danville, shot to death. | n |
The [M]Contra Costa County Coroner's Office[/M] in California [M]identified a man found dead Sunday afternoon[/M], Feb. 24, [M]as 76-year-old Moore.[/M] | Police are seeking a Dublin man they say fatally shot a 76-year-old man in a parking lot on Sunday afternoon in what is Danville’s first homicide in roughly three years.
Police responded to reports of gunshots around 2:25 p.m. in the parking lot of 3470 Fostoria Way, near the Iron Horse Regional Trail, where they found John Moore., of Danville, shot to death. | n |
[M]Police told the Chronicle[/M] he showed up outside his parents' home in St. Charles Township, prompting [M]his parents to barricade themselves in the basement[/M]. | Police are seeking a Dublin man they say fatally shot a 76-year-old man in a parking lot on Sunday afternoon in what is Danville’s first homicide in roughly three years.
Police responded to reports of gunshots around 2:25 p.m. in the parking lot of 3470 Fostoria Way, near the Iron Horse Regional Trail, where they found John Moore., of Danville, shot to death. | n |
[M]Police told the Chronicle he showed up outside his parents' home in St. Charles Township[/M], prompting his parents to barricade themselves in the basement. | Police are seeking a Dublin man they say fatally shot a 76-year-old man in a parking lot on Sunday afternoon in what is Danville’s first homicide in roughly three years.
Police responded to reports of gunshots around 2:25 p.m. in the parking lot of 3470 Fostoria Way, near the Iron Horse Regional Trail, where they found John Moore., of Danville, shot to death. | n |
KANE COUNTY, IL — A Dublin man wanted in connection with the Feb. 24 homicide of Danville resident [M]John Moore died[/M] Wednesday of an apparent self-inflicted gunshot wound [M]outside his parents' Illinois home, the Kane County Sheriff's Office said.[/M] | Police are seeking a Dublin man they say fatally shot a 76-year-old man in a parking lot on Sunday afternoon in what is Danville’s first homicide in roughly three years.
Police responded to reports of gunshots around 2:25 p.m. in the parking lot of 3470 Fostoria Way, near the Iron Horse Regional Trail, where they found John Moore., of Danville, shot to death. | n |
KANE COUNTY, IL — A Dublin man wanted in connection with the Feb. 24 homicide of Danville resident [M]John Moore died[/M] Wednesday [M]of an apparent self-inflicted gunshot wound[/M] outside his parents' Illinois home, [M]the Kane County Sheriff's Office said[/M]. | Police are seeking a Dublin man they say fatally shot a 76-year-old man in a parking lot on Sunday afternoon in what is Danville’s first homicide in roughly three years.
Police responded to reports of gunshots around 2:25 p.m. in the parking lot of 3470 Fostoria Way, near the Iron Horse Regional Trail, where they found John Moore., of Danville, shot to death. | n |
KANE COUNTY, IL — A Dublin man wanted in connection with the Feb. 24 homicide of Danville resident [M]John Moore died Wednesday[/M] of an apparent self-inflicted gunshot wound outside his parents' Illinois home, the Kane County Sheriff's Office said. | Police are seeking a Dublin man they say fatally shot a 76-year-old man in a parking lot on Sunday afternoon in what is Danville’s first homicide in roughly three years.
Police responded to reports of gunshots around 2:25 p.m. in the parking lot of 3470 Fostoria Way, near the Iron Horse Regional Trail, where they found John Moore., of Danville, shot to death. | n |
KANE COUNTY, IL — A [M]Dublin man wanted in connection with[/M] the Feb. 24 [M]homicide of Danville resident[/M] John Moore died Wednesday of an apparent self-inflicted gunshot wound outside his parents' Illinois home, the Kane County Sheriff's Office said. | Police are seeking a Dublin man they say fatally shot a 76-year-old man in a parking lot on Sunday afternoon in what is Danville’s first homicide in roughly three years.
Police responded to reports of gunshots around 2:25 p.m. in the parking lot of 3470 Fostoria Way, near the Iron Horse Regional Trail, where they found John Moore., of Danville, shot to death. | e |
[M]KANE COUNTY, IL[/M] — A Dublin [M]man wanted in connection with[/M] the [M]Feb. 24 homicide[/M] of Danville resident John Moore died Wednesday of an apparent self-inflicted gunshot wound outside his parents' Illinois home, the Kane County Sheriff's Office said. | Police are seeking a Dublin man they say fatally shot a 76-year-old man in a parking lot on Sunday afternoon in what is Danville’s first homicide in roughly three years.
Police responded to reports of gunshots around 2:25 p.m. in the parking lot of 3470 Fostoria Way, near the Iron Horse Regional Trail, where they found John Moore., of Danville, shot to death. | n |
[M]KANE COUNTY, IL[/M] — A [M]Dublin man wanted in connection with[/M] the Feb. 24 [M]homicide[/M] of Danville resident John Moore died Wednesday of an apparent self-inflicted gunshot wound outside his parents' Illinois home, the Kane County Sheriff's Office said. | Police are seeking a Dublin man they say fatally shot a 76-year-old man in a parking lot on Sunday afternoon in what is Danville’s first homicide in roughly three years.
Police responded to reports of gunshots around 2:25 p.m. in the parking lot of 3470 Fostoria Way, near the Iron Horse Regional Trail, where they found John Moore., of Danville, shot to death. | e |
[M]Star Wars Resistance is[/M] an American animated series, inspired by Japanese animes and [M]produced by Lucasfilm Animation.[/M] | Star Wars Resistance is an American animated series created by Dave Filoni, produced by Lucasfilm and Lucasfilm Animation. The series is set in the sci-fi universe of Star Wars during the events of the sequel trilogy, and is the successor to Star Wars Rebels, as well as the universe's fourth canonical series after The Clone Wars, Rebels and Forces of Destiny.
Officially announced on April 26, 2018, series creator Dave Filoni said the series was influenced by the experiences of his grandfather, a pilot in World War II, and especially anime. It centers on the character of Kazuda Xiono, a young Resistance pilot of General Organa, who is tasked with spying on the growing threat of the First Order.
The series premiered on the Disney Channel on October 7, 2018 and premiered on Disney XD the next day in the United States and later around the world. Twelve shorts aired on Disney Channel's YouTube channel in December 2018. On January 9, 2019, Resistance was renewed for a second and final season, consisting of 19 episodes, which premiered October 6, 2019 on Disney Channel, Disney XD and DisneyNow. It ended on January 26, 2020. In Italy the first episodes were broadcast starting from October 13, 2018 on Disney XD.
Resistance received generally positive reviews from critics, but mixed reactions from fans. | e |
[M]Star Wars Resistance is[/M] an American animated series, [M]inspired by Japanese animes[/M] and produced by Lucasfilm Animation. | Star Wars Resistance is an American animated series created by Dave Filoni, produced by Lucasfilm and Lucasfilm Animation. The series is set in the sci-fi universe of Star Wars during the events of the sequel trilogy, and is the successor to Star Wars Rebels, as well as the universe's fourth canonical series after The Clone Wars, Rebels and Forces of Destiny.
Officially announced on April 26, 2018, series creator Dave Filoni said the series was influenced by the experiences of his grandfather, a pilot in World War II, and especially anime. It centers on the character of Kazuda Xiono, a young Resistance pilot of General Organa, who is tasked with spying on the growing threat of the First Order.
The series premiered on the Disney Channel on October 7, 2018 and premiered on Disney XD the next day in the United States and later around the world. Twelve shorts aired on Disney Channel's YouTube channel in December 2018. On January 9, 2019, Resistance was renewed for a second and final season, consisting of 19 episodes, which premiered October 6, 2019 on Disney Channel, Disney XD and DisneyNow. It ended on January 26, 2020. In Italy the first episodes were broadcast starting from October 13, 2018 on Disney XD.
Resistance received generally positive reviews from critics, but mixed reactions from fans. | n |
[M]Star Wars Resistance is an American animated series[/M], inspired by Japanese animes and produced by Lucasfilm Animation. | Star Wars Resistance is an American animated series created by Dave Filoni, produced by Lucasfilm and Lucasfilm Animation. The series is set in the sci-fi universe of Star Wars during the events of the sequel trilogy, and is the successor to Star Wars Rebels, as well as the universe's fourth canonical series after The Clone Wars, Rebels and Forces of Destiny.
Officially announced on April 26, 2018, series creator Dave Filoni said the series was influenced by the experiences of his grandfather, a pilot in World War II, and especially anime. It centers on the character of Kazuda Xiono, a young Resistance pilot of General Organa, who is tasked with spying on the growing threat of the First Order.
The series premiered on the Disney Channel on October 7, 2018 and premiered on Disney XD the next day in the United States and later around the world. Twelve shorts aired on Disney Channel's YouTube channel in December 2018. On January 9, 2019, Resistance was renewed for a second and final season, consisting of 19 episodes, which premiered October 6, 2019 on Disney Channel, Disney XD and DisneyNow. It ended on January 26, 2020. In Italy the first episodes were broadcast starting from October 13, 2018 on Disney XD.
Resistance received generally positive reviews from critics, but mixed reactions from fans. | e |
[M]The series[/M] premiered in the United States on October 7, 2018, on the Disney Channel channel, and [M]was later released on Disney XD[/M] in the United States and [M]the rest of the world[/M]. | Star Wars Resistance is an American animated series created by Dave Filoni, produced by Lucasfilm and Lucasfilm Animation. The series is set in the sci-fi universe of Star Wars during the events of the sequel trilogy, and is the successor to Star Wars Rebels, as well as the universe's fourth canonical series after The Clone Wars, Rebels and Forces of Destiny.
Officially announced on April 26, 2018, series creator Dave Filoni said the series was influenced by the experiences of his grandfather, a pilot in World War II, and especially anime. It centers on the character of Kazuda Xiono, a young Resistance pilot of General Organa, who is tasked with spying on the growing threat of the First Order.
The series premiered on the Disney Channel on October 7, 2018 and premiered on Disney XD the next day in the United States and later around the world. Twelve shorts aired on Disney Channel's YouTube channel in December 2018. On January 9, 2019, Resistance was renewed for a second and final season, consisting of 19 episodes, which premiered October 6, 2019 on Disney Channel, Disney XD and DisneyNow. It ended on January 26, 2020. In Italy the first episodes were broadcast starting from October 13, 2018 on Disney XD.
Resistance received generally positive reviews from critics, but mixed reactions from fans. | e |
[M]The series[/M] premiered in the United States on October 7, 2018, on the Disney Channel channel, and [M]was later released on Disney XD in the United States[/M] and the rest of the world. | Star Wars Resistance is an American animated series created by Dave Filoni, produced by Lucasfilm and Lucasfilm Animation. The series is set in the sci-fi universe of Star Wars during the events of the sequel trilogy, and is the successor to Star Wars Rebels, as well as the universe's fourth canonical series after The Clone Wars, Rebels and Forces of Destiny.
Officially announced on April 26, 2018, series creator Dave Filoni said the series was influenced by the experiences of his grandfather, a pilot in World War II, and especially anime. It centers on the character of Kazuda Xiono, a young Resistance pilot of General Organa, who is tasked with spying on the growing threat of the First Order.
The series premiered on the Disney Channel on October 7, 2018 and premiered on Disney XD the next day in the United States and later around the world. Twelve shorts aired on Disney Channel's YouTube channel in December 2018. On January 9, 2019, Resistance was renewed for a second and final season, consisting of 19 episodes, which premiered October 6, 2019 on Disney Channel, Disney XD and DisneyNow. It ended on January 26, 2020. In Italy the first episodes were broadcast starting from October 13, 2018 on Disney XD.
Resistance received generally positive reviews from critics, but mixed reactions from fans. | e |
[M]The series premiered[/M] in the United States on October 7, 2018, [M]on the Disney Channel channel[/M], and was later released on Disney XD in the United States and the rest of the world. | Star Wars Resistance is an American animated series created by Dave Filoni, produced by Lucasfilm and Lucasfilm Animation. The series is set in the sci-fi universe of Star Wars during the events of the sequel trilogy, and is the successor to Star Wars Rebels, as well as the universe's fourth canonical series after The Clone Wars, Rebels and Forces of Destiny.
Officially announced on April 26, 2018, series creator Dave Filoni said the series was influenced by the experiences of his grandfather, a pilot in World War II, and especially anime. It centers on the character of Kazuda Xiono, a young Resistance pilot of General Organa, who is tasked with spying on the growing threat of the First Order.
The series premiered on the Disney Channel on October 7, 2018 and premiered on Disney XD the next day in the United States and later around the world. Twelve shorts aired on Disney Channel's YouTube channel in December 2018. On January 9, 2019, Resistance was renewed for a second and final season, consisting of 19 episodes, which premiered October 6, 2019 on Disney Channel, Disney XD and DisneyNow. It ended on January 26, 2020. In Italy the first episodes were broadcast starting from October 13, 2018 on Disney XD.
Resistance received generally positive reviews from critics, but mixed reactions from fans. | e |
[M]The series premiered in the United States on October 7, 2018[/M], on the Disney Channel channel, and was later released on Disney XD in the United States and the rest of the world. | Star Wars Resistance is an American animated series created by Dave Filoni, produced by Lucasfilm and Lucasfilm Animation. The series is set in the sci-fi universe of Star Wars during the events of the sequel trilogy, and is the successor to Star Wars Rebels, as well as the universe's fourth canonical series after The Clone Wars, Rebels and Forces of Destiny.
Officially announced on April 26, 2018, series creator Dave Filoni said the series was influenced by the experiences of his grandfather, a pilot in World War II, and especially anime. It centers on the character of Kazuda Xiono, a young Resistance pilot of General Organa, who is tasked with spying on the growing threat of the First Order.
The series premiered on the Disney Channel on October 7, 2018 and premiered on Disney XD the next day in the United States and later around the world. Twelve shorts aired on Disney Channel's YouTube channel in December 2018. On January 9, 2019, Resistance was renewed for a second and final season, consisting of 19 episodes, which premiered October 6, 2019 on Disney Channel, Disney XD and DisneyNow. It ended on January 26, 2020. In Italy the first episodes were broadcast starting from October 13, 2018 on Disney XD.
Resistance received generally positive reviews from critics, but mixed reactions from fans. | e |
The [M]series takes place three decades after the events of the Star Wars: Return of the Jedi movie[/M], [M]in the sequel to Star Wars trilogy.[/M] | Star Wars Resistance is an American animated series created by Dave Filoni, produced by Lucasfilm and Lucasfilm Animation. The series is set in the sci-fi universe of Star Wars during the events of the sequel trilogy, and is the successor to Star Wars Rebels, as well as the universe's fourth canonical series after The Clone Wars, Rebels and Forces of Destiny.
Officially announced on April 26, 2018, series creator Dave Filoni said the series was influenced by the experiences of his grandfather, a pilot in World War II, and especially anime. It centers on the character of Kazuda Xiono, a young Resistance pilot of General Organa, who is tasked with spying on the growing threat of the First Order.
The series premiered on the Disney Channel on October 7, 2018 and premiered on Disney XD the next day in the United States and later around the world. Twelve shorts aired on Disney Channel's YouTube channel in December 2018. On January 9, 2019, Resistance was renewed for a second and final season, consisting of 19 episodes, which premiered October 6, 2019 on Disney Channel, Disney XD and DisneyNow. It ended on January 26, 2020. In Italy the first episodes were broadcast starting from October 13, 2018 on Disney XD.
Resistance received generally positive reviews from critics, but mixed reactions from fans. | n |
The [M]series takes place three decades after the events of the Star Wars: Return of the Jedi movie[/M], in the sequel to Star Wars trilogy. | Star Wars Resistance is an American animated series created by Dave Filoni, produced by Lucasfilm and Lucasfilm Animation. The series is set in the sci-fi universe of Star Wars during the events of the sequel trilogy, and is the successor to Star Wars Rebels, as well as the universe's fourth canonical series after The Clone Wars, Rebels and Forces of Destiny.
Officially announced on April 26, 2018, series creator Dave Filoni said the series was influenced by the experiences of his grandfather, a pilot in World War II, and especially anime. It centers on the character of Kazuda Xiono, a young Resistance pilot of General Organa, who is tasked with spying on the growing threat of the First Order.
The series premiered on the Disney Channel on October 7, 2018 and premiered on Disney XD the next day in the United States and later around the world. Twelve shorts aired on Disney Channel's YouTube channel in December 2018. On January 9, 2019, Resistance was renewed for a second and final season, consisting of 19 episodes, which premiered October 6, 2019 on Disney Channel, Disney XD and DisneyNow. It ended on January 26, 2020. In Italy the first episodes were broadcast starting from October 13, 2018 on Disney XD.
Resistance received generally positive reviews from critics, but mixed reactions from fans. | n |