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Friday, January 30, 2015

Super early bird deals: Atlas Summit 2015


 

Atlas Summit 2015:
Super early bird deals are here

 

On Twitter: #AtlasSummit
 

 

We will hold our annual conference of open Objectivism, the Atlas Summit, June 18-21, 2015, in the elegant and convenient Crowne Plaza Hotel in Nashua, New Hampshire.
 

Registration is now open. Super early bird discounts are available through February 16.
 

Don't miss the conviviality, the ideas, the passion, and the inspiration of the Atlas Summit!


Find out more here.

 

Students: Scholarships to attend the Atlas Summit are available.

 

 


2015: Our 25th Anniversary

 

Some twenty-five years ago, on February 24, 1990, George Walsh and David Kelley stood before a crowded lecture hall in New York City to announce the birth of the Institute for Objectivist Studies, now named The Atlas Society.
 

As the late Professor Walsh pointed out in introducing Dr. Kelley's talk that evening, this was the first time in the history of Objectivist excommunications that the heretics did not simply walk away. Rather, it signaled the beginning of a new, independent, and open Objectivist movement, one that appreciates the fact that individuals must come to the truth in their own way and that takes a tolerant, rational attitude toward intellectual debate.
 

Since that day, we have worked to eliminate from Objectivism the closed and dogmatic attitudes that had kept it from spreading its life-affirming message.   Read more >

 

                                    

The Atlas Society

PO Box 7601 #94614
Washington, DC 20044
 

tas@atlassociety.org

www.atlassociety.org



"Fascinating and provocative." 

—Lester Hunt, professor of philosophy, University of Wisconsin-Madison

 

 

 

 

Recent blog posts:

Holocaust Remembrance Day, 2015  by Ed Hudgins

Ed Hudgins opines on "What should the remembrance of the Holocaust teach us?

 

 

A Concrete-Bound State of the Union - by William R Thomas

The concrete-bound mentality, Ayn Rand explained, is one that focuses on what can be seen and eschews thinking in the abstract about long-range consequences that can't be seen.



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