Chris Matthew Sciabarra

Chris Matthew Sciabarra (born February 17, 1960) is an American political theorist based in Brooklyn, New York.[1] He is the author of three scholarly books—Marx, Hayek, and Utopia; Ayn Rand: The Russian Radical; and Total Freedom: Toward a Dialectical Libertarianism—as well as several shorter works. He is also the co-editor, with Mimi Reisel Gladstein, of Feminist Interpretations of Ayn Rand. His work has focused on topics including Objectivism, libertarianism (particularly the work of Friedrich Hayek and Murray Rothbard), and dialectics.

Life

Sciabarra is a Visiting Scholar at New York University, where he earned his BA in History (with honors) in 1982; his MA in Politics in 1983; and his PhD in Political Philosophy, Theory, and Methodology in 1988, under the supervision of Bertell Ollman.[1] In 1999 he became the co-founder and co-editor of the biannual Journal of Ayn Rand Studies, which has been published by Penn State University Press since 2013, and belongs to Liberty and Power, a group weblog at the History News Network.

He is the author of a trilogy of books on dialectics and libertarianism. The second of these, published in 1995, is Ayn Rand: The Russian Radical, which explores Ayn Rand's college influences and intellectual roots—particularly the role of Rand's philosophy teacher, philosopher Nicholas Onufrievich Lossky—and argued that Rand's philosophical method was dialectical in nature. In 2013, Pennsylvania State University Press published a second expanded edition of Ayn Rand: The Russian Radical, which includes a new preface, three new appendices (Appendices I and II are "The Rand Transcript" and "The Rand Transcript, Revisited," first published in The Journal of Ayn Rand Studies, and Appendix III constitutes a response to Shoshan Milgram, a recent critic of Sciabarra's historical work. The expanded second edition also includes an expanded section in Chapter XII, "The Predatory State," entitled "The Welfare-Warfare State," which explores Rand's radical critique of US foreign policy). For a comparison of the two editions see the links on his Notablog [2]

Sciabarra is openly gay.[3] He is of Sicilian and Greek ancestry.[1]

Reviews of Ayn Rand: The Russian Radical

David M. Brown writes: "Much to my surprise the author of Ayn Rand: The Russian Radical, a comprehensive new study of Rand's thought and its genesis in Russian culture, has persuaded me that something called 'dialectics' is integral to Ayn Rand's philosophic approach and crucial to its success. Russian Radical is a different kind of look at Ayn Rand, a full-fledged 'hermeneutic' on the contours, development, and interpretation of her thought."[4]

According to Lester H. Hunt: "It is indicative of the interest of this book that I have so far engaged in an argument with it instead of saying how good I think it is on the whole. Among other things, it is an excellent synthesis of the Objectivist literature, both the works of Rand and those of her immediate successors. Sciabarra's mastery of enormous amounts of material is almost literally incredible. He also manages to break entirely new ground on several different issues."[5]

While James G. Lennox thoroughly rejects the author's historical conclusions, and he recommends against construing Rand's method of challenging dichotomies or "false alternatives" as "dialectical," he also writes, "[i]ts author has an encyclopedic familiarity with the writings of Ayn Rand and with virtually everyone who has advocated, commented on, or written critically about Objectivism. [...]. He is the first of her commentators to explore the intellectual milieu of Rand's early, formative years, providing a deeper appreciation for her occasional scathing remarks about Russian culture as she had experienced it. All of this material is discussed, and exhaustively referenced, in the interests of providing a comprehensive analysis of Objectivism, not merely as a philosophical system, but as a philosophical and cultural movement."[6] Virtually the same review ran as "Reaching for Roots" in the February 1996 issue of Reason.[7]

John Ridpath, a director of the Ayn Rand Institute, has argued that The Russian Radical is postmodern and deconstructionist in its overall orientation, that it is a "worthless product" of contemporary academia, and that on the whole it was "preposterous in its thesis, destructive in its purpose, and tortuously numbing in its content."[8]

Bibliography

Dialectics and Liberty trilogy

Edited works

Monographs

Dissertation

References

  1. 1 2 3 Sciabarra, Chris Matthew. "Chris Matthew Sciabarra: About the Author". Retrieved 2009-07-29.
  2. Sciabarra, Chris Matthew. "Notablog: Index to a Series of essays explaining the differences between the 1995 and 2013 editions of the book". Retrieved 2015-08-03.
  3. Paul Varnell (2003-12-03). "Ayn Rand and Homosexuality". IGF Culture Watch. Retrieved 2013-12-03.
  4. Brown, David M. (March 1996). "Book Review: Ayn Rand: The Russian Radical". The Freeman. 46 (3).
  5. Hunt, Lester (March 1996). "In Search of Rand's Roots". Liberty. Archived from the original on June 24, 2001.
  6. Lennox, James (Spring 1995). "The Roots of Ayn Rand?". IOS Journal. 5 (4). Archived from the original on March 29, 2008.
  7. "The Roots of Ayn Rand?". Archived from the original on 2008-03-29. Retrieved 2014-05-24.
  8. Ridpath, John (January 1996). "The Academic Deconstruction of Ayn Rand". The Intellectual Activist. 10 (1).

External links

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