Andrew Bernstein's Articles
Arts & Culture, Reviews
Review: Act of Valor
Andrew Bernstein May 20, 2012
Andrew Bernstein reviews Act of Valor, directed by Mike McCoy and Scott Waugh.
Ayn Rand & Objectivism
Objectivism vs. Kantianism in The Fountainhead
Andrew Bernstein February 20, 2012
Examines these opposing philosophies in the story, characters, and theme of Ayn Rand’s great novel.
Education & Parenting
The Educational Bonanza in Privatizing Government Schools
Andrew Bernstein November 20, 2010
Surveys the ills of government-run schools, shows the general superiority of private schools, zeros in on the reason for the difference, and proposes a radical change from which everyone would benefit.
Arts & Culture
The Exalted Heroism of Alistair MacLean's Novels
Andrew Bernstein February 20, 2008
Surveys MacLean’s major works (including The Guns of Navarone and Where Eagles Dare); indicates their value to readers who love men of intelligence, ability, and courage; and incites a keyboard stampede to Amazon.com for the used copies of MacLean’s books, which are tragically out of print.
Arts & Culture, Ayn Rand & Objectivism
Transfiguring the Novel: The Literary Revolution in Atlas Shrugged
Andrew Bernstein August 20, 2007
Celebrates the fiftieth anniversary of Ayn Rand's magnum opus (which was published on October 10, 1957) by examining key aspects of the book's artistic elements. Focusing on Rand's dramatization of the plot-theme, her use of literary techniques, and the nature and significance of key figures in the story, Bernstein shows how Rand employed such elements to tap the full potential of this supremely conceptual art form and thus to create a thoroughly integrated novel.
History, Philosophy
The Tragedy of Theology: How Religion Caused and Extended the Dark Ages
Andrew Bernstein November 20, 2006
Critiques Rodney Stark’s best-selling book The Victory of Reason: How Christianity Led to Freedom, Capitalism, and Western Success. Bernstein’s analysis proves Stark’s thesis to be historically false and philosophically impossible. The fundamental factor that led to freedom, capitalism, and Western success, Bernstein shows, was not the Christian, scripture-based approach of applying “reason” to the goal of understanding “super-nature,” but rather the Aristotelian, observation-based method of applying reason to the goal of understanding actual nature.