Episode 83
Interview with Marsha Enright
Today we chat with Marsha Enright, President and Program Director of Reliance College. Of the many topics we cover:
- The significance of the name Reliance.
- What is their core program of subjects.
- The Unknown beauty of the city of Chicago.
- Her essay on What Vision Do Young People Need.
- Her time spent with Ayn Rand.
Check out this delightful episode!
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Show notes with links to articles, blog posts, products and services:
- What Vision Do Young People Need? by Marsha Familaro Enright
- Jonathan Haidt
- The Coddling of the American Mind: How Good Intentions and Bad Ideas Are Setting Up a Generation for Failure
- The Anxious Generation How the Great Rewiring of Childhood is Causing an Epidemic of Mental Illness
- Council Oak Montessori School
- College founded on Great Books and Montessori methods slated to open
- Liberal Arts education
- How Do I Use The Great Connections Seminar In My Life?
- Reason & Power Summer Seminar: Chicago, July 22-29, 2023
- Montessori Goes to College: A Vision for Self-Reliance
- Chicago Park District
- Daniel Burnham
- Frank Lloyd Wright
- Louis Sullivan
- Chicago Loop
- Nolan chart
- The Fountainhead
- Leonard Peikoff
- Nathan Blumenthal
- Victor Hugo
- Ayn Rand (1905 - 1982)
- Hans of Iceland
- Ragnar Danneskjöld
- Frank O'Connor
- Facets of Ayn Rand
- Roger Enright
- What's in a Boostagram?
- RandsDay Boostagram
- New Scientific Paper: Life Is Not a Machine or a Ghost
- Jefferson Dinner on May 16, in New York City
- Reliance College
- Marsha Familaro Enright's blog
Episode 83 (36 minutes) was recorded at 2230 Central European Time, on April 26, 2024, with Ringr app. Martin did the editing and post-production with the podcast maker, Alitu. The transcript is generated by Alitu.
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Transcript
Good afternoon, ladies and gentlemen.
Blair:Welcome to the secular Foxhole podcast.
Blair:Today, Martin and I have a great guest with us, Marcia Enright, who is president and
Blair:program director at Reliance College, which is in the planning stage, I understand.
Blair:Is that correct, Marcia?
Marsha:Yes, we're hoping to open in 2025.
Blair:All right.
Blair:Well, that's not too far off, I guess,
Blair:obviously, with the recent publicity that many universities, certainly in America and maybe
Blair:around the world, are the negative publicity.
Blair:That is, at least in my mind.
Blair:Do you think Reliance College will hopefully be an antidote to some of that?
Marsha:Well, I'm sure that the program would be a great antidote to it.
Marsha:And we actually ran a. What's called a concept test on our program, which is a classic
Marsha:marketing test.
Marsha:One of our trustees is a former senior
Marsha:executive from J. Walter Thompson, which was a huge advertising agency.
Marsha:And we ran a classic concept test where you ask, you find your demographic, you ask your
Marsha:market, here's what the concept is of the product, and here's some questions about it.
Marsha:And what do they think about it? Are they interested?
Marsha:That's good.
Marsha:Yeah.
Marsha:And we got.
Marsha:I thought maybe we'd have 10% interest.
Marsha:And the experts said, well, if you got a 40% interest in a product, then you would go to
Marsha:market with it.
Marsha:Well, we got an 82% interest.
Blair:Wow.
Marsha:I think there's a lot of.
Marsha:A lot of people out there, parents and
Marsha:students, looking for an alternative.
Blair:Yes. Yes. I understand many of the western universities have abandoned the great
Blair:books, and there's so many, the dead white author kind of thing.
Blair:What do you propose will be part of your curriculum?
Marsha:Oh, it's a core part of our curriculum, because the writers of the great
Marsha:books are the people who shape the modern world.
Marsha:They're the thinkers whose ideas are still influencing us till today.
Marsha:And not only that, they really help you learn how to think well and how to reason well.
Marsha:So it's very important for people to know about that, to know about the full range of
Marsha:ideas, you know, not just one ideological side or another.
Marsha:But if you want to be very well educated, you want to know the full range, and you want to
Marsha:have thought about it carefully so you can make up your own mind about who you agree
Marsha:with.
Marsha:The core part of our curriculum, and we're
Marsha:going to include important modern works, including those of free society writers of Ayn
Marsha:Rand, people who aren't normally included, but they should be included as equal to the great
Marsha:books.
Blair:Thank you.
Blair:I agree.
Blair:I agree.
Blair:In conjunction with that, you wrote an essay
Blair:called what vision young people need.
Blair:Can you expand on that a little.
Marsha:Well, young people are looking for inspiration.
Marsha:They're looking for what shape do they want to see their life?
Marsha:They want to know what's possible in the future.
Marsha:And today, with all the postmodernist and nihilist influences, they see so much negative
Marsha:ideas about the future.
Marsha:You know, I know young people who don't want
Marsha:to have children because they're afraid that humans are ruining the planet, as if the
Marsha:planet was a living thing, that they were somehow killing.
Marsha:And they see so many movies, plays, artistic portrayals, reports in the news about how
Marsha:terrible human beings are, that it's a very demoralizing vision out there.
Marsha:But what they need is a positive vision.
Marsha:So that's why I think that they need works
Marsha:that show heroic action, show people pursuing important goals, acting with honor and with
Marsha:integrity.
Marsha:And that's very important for young people,
Marsha:because otherwise, I don't know if you realize, but there's been a huge increase in
Marsha:suicides of young people in the last 1520 years.
Marsha:Oh, it's alarming.
Marsha:And Jonathan Haidt, the sociologist who wrote
Marsha:the calling of the american mind, he's now come out with a book where he places a lot of
Marsha:the blame for that on the rise in the use of cell phones and the influences that, the
Marsha:intense influence, social influence that students are, that young people are having
Marsha:from other people.
Marsha:And I'm sure he's right that it's contributing
Marsha:to it.
Marsha:But I think that what's missing in the
Marsha:analysis is all of the negative ideas that are out there that are affecting the young people
Marsha:who are getting them on their phones and videos and from other young people.
Blair:I have to agree, Marcia.
Blair:I mean, philosophy, the science of philosophy
Blair:is basically what moves the world, and for good or ill.
Marsha:Yes.
Blair:And I know, unfortunately, I have experienced some of my family members, my
Blair:brother in laws, children rave about how much better Europe is than America.
Blair:And one of my nieces will not have children because of the very many things you mentioned.
Marsha:Really?
Blair:Yeah. Me, too.
Blair:Me, too.
Blair:And, you know, we can't reach her.
Blair:Kids can't reach them there because they're
Blair:convinced that, you know, anybody over a certain age does, you know, you don't know
Blair:what you're talking about, so on and so forth.
Marsha:The usual.
Blair:Yes, the usual.
Marsha:You know, these kids, they've been exposed to these ideas since they were in
Marsha:first grade.
Blair:That's right.
Blair:Yes.
Marsha:When I founded a Montessori elementary school in 1990, and I ran it for many years,
Marsha:and at one point, I decided that we could not.
Marsha:There's a weekly newspaper for children called
Marsha:Weekly Reader that.
Marsha:And I said, we can't have this anymore,
Marsha:because every week it had some disaster story about the environment in it.
Marsha:Relentless.
Marsha:And this is a newspaper that first graders are
Marsha:reading.
Marsha:So, you know, and they're getting this in
Marsha:school, in the books that are written.
Marsha:So many of the young adult novels which are
Marsha:for, you know, middle school children are about children that come from families that
Marsha:are drunks or they're drug addicts or the child is cutting themselves.
Marsha:And it's just such a. Such a horrifying view of the world.
Marsha:I understand that the reason why they do those, or they say that their motive to write
Marsha:these is so that children who are going through that problem feel understood.
Blair:Oh, dear.
Marsha:But, you know, it's not an inspiring point of view.
Blair:No, no. I think one of the few positive things that have come out of the COVID
Blair:disaster, if you will, was that I think a lot of people, certainly a lot of Americans, woke
Blair:up about the horrors of public education.
Blair:And I think homeschooling increased like 20 or
Blair:30% here in these, here in the states, which I think is a very positive sign.
Marsha:Oh, I agree with you.
Marsha:I think it's probably the best thing that came
Marsha:out of that disaster.
Marsha:That disasters.
Marsha:They got to see what was actually going on in school, and the parents were horrified.
Blair:I think, of course, the battle is still far from over.
Blair:I mean, homeschooling has a long way to go, but I've been a homeschool advocate for since
Blair:the 1980s, especially ending the public government and education.
Blair:What's the word I want?
Marsha:Hegemony.
Blair:Yes. Yeah, that's a good word.
Blair:Yeah.
Blair:Yeah.
Blair:Now, as far as Reliance college, I know that
Blair:you have hosting a fundraiser for it next month.
Blair:Can you delve into that?
Marsha:We are.
Marsha:I was wondering if you wanted me to describe
Marsha:the program a little more.
Blair:Well, yes, please do.
Martin:Please do.
Marsha:Okay, so we have a uniquely designed, very rigorous enlightenment liberal arts
Marsha:program.
Blair:Nice.
Marsha:That all the students would take.
Marsha:And this is so this kind of education, what
Marsha:people don't understand is that the term liberal arts comes from the idea that what
Marsha:kind of education do you need to be a free person?
Marsha:That's why liberal is in there, because it's the same route as liberty.
Blair:Right.
Marsha:When you think of the founding fathers, they were very powerful thinkers,
Marsha:partly because they had gotten this enlightenment education of all the best
Marsha:thinking beforehand and very strong reasoning skills.
Marsha:They were explicitly schooled and strong reasoning skills.
Marsha:And this is going to be a great part of what we're doing.
Marsha:And not only is it the content of what we're studying, but the way that we're going to have
Marsha:the students work, because you can't learn how to be a free and autonomous person if you
Marsha:don't experience it.
Marsha:And if you're in a classroom where somebody's
Marsha:sitting there and they're just lecturing to you and you are supposed to take the
Marsha:information in as if they're an expert and then spit it back to them to get your credit,
Marsha:are you really examining that information? Are you really incorporating it into your
Marsha:thinking? So what I find is if we use this very special
Marsha:form of collaborative seminar in which the students, the teacher is basically the text
Marsha:that we use, and the living teacher is a guide to the discussion, and then we use principles
Marsha:where if you are going to make a comment about the text, you have to use reason and evidence.
Marsha:So the discussion is driven by the questions of the student about what does this text mean
Marsha:and what are its implications and what are its relationship to other things that they've read
Marsha:and to what's going on in the world.
Marsha:And what happens is that the students end up
Marsha:being the directors of their own learning in the classroom, but the teacher keeps them on
Marsha:track by always focusing on, well, what are we learning from this text and how is it related
Marsha:to other things that we've learned and to the world and to your life?
Blair:That's wonderful.
Marsha:We've used this and thank you.
Marsha:We've used this in our summer program.
Marsha:We've been running a summer program since 2009, a week long summer program called the
Marsha:great connection Summer seminar.
Marsha:It's July 20 to the 27th this year in Chicago,
Marsha:and I put everything I knew about optimal education into it.
Marsha:But I have been amazed at the results.
Marsha:The results have been far greater than I
Marsha:thought.
Marsha:The end of one week, I get about 75% of the
Marsha:students telling me my life has been transformed.
Marsha:That's wonderful.
Marsha:I can judge anything for myself, and they keep
Marsha:in touch with me and some of them have worked for me and they keep in touch with each other.
Marsha:It's really interesting what's happened.
Martin:Yeah. Marcia Martin, is that why you have picked or choose the word for the school,
Martin:reliance?
Marsha:Because. Yeah, I'm sorry.
Marsha:Yes, because our aim is to help young people
Marsha:become self reliant, to become the entrepreneurs of their own lives.
Marsha:And I forgot to tell you that.
Marsha:So in addition to this very rigorous liberal
Marsha:arts program, every student every year will do some real world will find a problem in an area
Marsha:of their professional interest and do a research project on that, trying to find a
Marsha:solution to that problem and trying to implement it.
Marsha:We are going to connect them up with accomplished mentors.
Marsha:So if they want to go into an art, we'll find somebody to help them with that.
Marsha:If they want to go into finance, we'll set them up with somebody in finance, in physics,
Marsha:you know, whatever they're interested in.
Marsha:And they'll also be getting a lot of work in
Marsha:economics, personal finance, the arts, and in self awareness, self understanding.
Marsha:So in this way, we have an all required liberal arts program, but then the student
Marsha:picks certain things that they want to study on their own, and we can individualize what
Marsha:we're doing that way.
Marsha:So I don't know if this makes sense, but this
Marsha:is the things we put all together, and it's, the summer program is kind of a compressed
Marsha:version of what we're going to do in the college, so I know it works well.
Blair:Now, do you have many, your summer program, do you have repeat students or are
Blair:they all new every year?
Marsha:Oh, no, I've had some that have come four times.
Marsha:Four or five times.
Blair:Let's see.
Blair:Okay. Yeah, let's do.
Blair:That's great, though.
Blair:Is there, what is the cost for that, by the
Blair:way?
Marsha:Well, the list cost is $2,500, but right now we have a special discount.
Marsha:I think it would be 800 if you sign up now.
Marsha:And we also offer scholarships for people that
Marsha:can't afford that.
Blair:I see.
Blair:Martin, we have to remember to put that, their
Blair:link in the notes for that.
Blair:Yeah.
Blair:Now, again, this is really fascinating.
Blair:I'm very happy to hear this, Marsha.
Blair:I appreciate the work you're doing.
Blair:I know some of that is there has to be
Blair:extension from Montessori as well, I would imagine.
Marsha:Yes. Yeah. I'm very well learned in the Montessori philosophy, which is, of
Marsha:course, developmentally oriented.
Marsha:In other words, what kinds of learning, what
Marsha:format of learning works best for each level of development?
Marsha:And so I'm very focused right now on what do young people need?
Marsha:So your question about the vision, that's one part of it.
Marsha:The other part is they're looking for their place in the world, and they're looking for,
Marsha:well, you brought up philosophy.
Marsha:They're looking for answers to the question of
Marsha:how should I live my life? You know, how should I live with other people?
Marsha:Those are all philosophical questions, and those things are well incorporated in what
Marsha:we're going to have them study.
Blair:That's great.
Blair:Wow. That's great.
Blair:Oh, to be young again, anyway.
Blair:Well, let's see again.
Blair:So you said in our green room that next year this green lights college will be underway.
Blair:So when exactly?
Marsha:Well, we're hoping to open in September of 2025.
Blair:Okay. Okay.
Marsha:And right now we're, what we're doing is we're raising the money to make that
Marsha:possible.
Marsha:And that's one of the reasons why we're having
Marsha:the dinner in New York in May 16.
Marsha:Thursday, May 16.
Marsha:It's to inform people about what our program is like and then also to hopefully get more
Marsha:supporters for it.
Martin:And that will be like physical campus in Chicago.
Martin:How big will it be? How many students and teachers and faculty?
Martin:Could you talk about your plans there?
Marsha:Sure. Sure. So it definitely is going to be in person because young people need
Marsha:that.
Marsha:They need that desperately.
Marsha:I was reading in the Wall Street Journal a few months ago about these young employees who
Marsha:had, you know, gone to college during COVID and they were used to all this remote work.
Marsha:And now they were back in the office and they were having anxiety attacks about going to
Marsha:lunch with each other.
Marsha:But, you know, you, you really need to learn
Marsha:how to interact with other people and knowing what they're like in person.
Marsha:And you can't have that kind of very detailed discussion about things with person when
Marsha:people, when you only do it remotely.
Marsha:It's just very difficult to have those after.
Marsha:You know, you could have students who are in the same class together, but then how do they.
Marsha:They don't have that when you went to college.
Marsha:They don't have those incidental conversations
Marsha:where you pick up on something.
Marsha:Yeah.
Marsha:And you get to know each other really well and you do things together.
Marsha:It's just a whole different experience.
Marsha:So it's going to be in person.
Marsha:We're looking to start with 50 students and they will be in discussion classes of, at
Marsha:maximum, 17 each.
Marsha:And we've got some tutors.
Marsha:We call them tutors, the teachers.
Blair:Okay.
Marsha:Lined up already.
Marsha:Every class would have one or two tutors in it
Marsha:to help guide the discussion.
Marsha:And then they'll also be working very closely
Marsha:with each individual student on that students goals.
Marsha:And what did you ask me? What else did you want to know?
Marsha:I forgot.
Martin:Yeah. How many students and if about the faculty and also about the campus and so
Martin:on.
Martin:And.
Martin:Yeah.
Martin:The plan, what you have?
Marsha:Well, right now there's, we're planning to rent space in downtown Chicago.
Marsha:Downtown Chicago has about 60,000 college students there in different, in different
Marsha:schools down in the downtown area.
Marsha:So it's a good place for young people to be.
Marsha:There's, of course, lots of things to do.
Marsha:There's great transportation.
Marsha:And so if you were starting a small school this way, the students would have a larger,
Marsha:you know, excuse me, social environment in that way.
Marsha:And we want to expand to, at most 1000 for any, for one particular college because that's
Marsha:the best social environment for learning.
Marsha:But what we envision in the long run is to
Marsha:have multiple colleges with slightly different flavors on the same campus, kind of like
Marsha:Oxford and Cambridge.
Marsha:Okay, you get the advantage of the small, the
Marsha:small school experience, but you have a larger environment if you want to go do other things,
Marsha:you know, if you want to learn other things.
Marsha:So that's the vision.
Marsha:And we plan to start a continuing education program fairly soon after we start the college
Marsha:because we know that there are a lot of retired people who are, in some respects
Marsha:asking the same questions of themselves as young people and who are looking to discover
Marsha:what's their next career.
Marsha:And we want to create a nice, we want to
Marsha:create a cultural mecca for people who are looking for inspiration.
Marsha:Great, wonderful art, good learning, great other great people to interact with.
Blair:Well, here's a question out of left field, so to speak.
Blair:Do you have any germ of an idea for an athletic program like volleyball or track and
Blair:field or anything like that? And down the road?
Marsha:Well, yeah, sure.
Marsha:I'm sure we'll want to expand, right?
Marsha:I mean, if we start in the rented quarters, we'd probably use Chicago park district.
Marsha:And because they're quite extensive, Chicago has an amazing park district itself.
Marsha:So with volleyball, tennis, pickleball is very big these days.
Marsha:Track, you know, all those things.
Marsha:And I think, you know, part of it will be to
Marsha:try to see, well, what are students most interested in doing kind of sports, especially
Marsha:if you're starting small, you want to find sports that that's good for a small cohort of
Marsha:people.
Marsha:So.
Blair:True, true, true.
Blair:Now, are you a native Chicagoan by any chance?
Marsha:I am.
Blair:Yes, I am.
Blair:Obviously, the only news we see out of Chicago
Blair:is negative.
Blair:And I know that there's some beautiful museums
Blair:there.
Blair:What else can you.
Blair:What other positive aspects of Chicago can you enlighten our audience with, if you would?
Marsha:Sure. Just to put this out there.
Marsha:So there's a famous italian jewelry company
Marsha:named Buselatti.
Marsha:I don't know if you've ever heard of it, very,
Marsha:very high end jewelry.
Marsha:And the head of that company said that Chicago
Marsha:is the most beautiful city in North America.
Marsha:And interestingly, it's one of the most man
Marsha:made because it was originally, the reason it was founded was because the Chicago river goes
Marsha:into the Lake Michigan, and Lake Michigan is connected to all the other lakes and then to
Marsha:the St. Lawrence Seaway and to Europe, basically on the west.
Marsha:It was connected.
Marsha:You could portage from the Chicago river to
Marsha:the Illinois river very easily and then go to the Mississippi and down to New Orleans.
Marsha:So it was really always been a great transportation area, but it was a scrubby,
Marsha:kind of a scrubby beach with a flat plain.
Marsha:That's all it was.
Marsha:Right.
Marsha:And over the years, the city, different groups
Marsha:in the city have just done an amazing job on building it so that now we have 29 miles of
Marsha:beaches, mostly from sand.
Marsha:That was from the sand dunes that they took
Marsha:down to build the Gary steelworks.
Marsha:We have a gorgeous layout of the city that was
Marsha:designed by Daniel Burnham, who was the architect of the world's fair in 1893.
Blair:Wow.
Marsha:And they did things like raise the reverse, the flow of the river so that sewage
Marsha:would not go out into the.
Marsha:Into the lake, raise this downtown area by
Marsha:20ft so that it would be away from any problems with the river.
Marsha:It's just an amazing city.
Marsha:And it has some of the most beautiful
Marsha:architecture in the world because we had a fire here in 1871 and the people here were
Marsha:very.
Marsha:A lot of go getters and they sent word out to
Marsha:the east that there was a lot of work to be done.
Marsha:And this is one of the reasons why people like Frank Lloyd Wright and Daniel Burnham and
Marsha:Frank Lloyd Wright's mentor, Louis Cameron, not Louis.
Marsha:Louis Sullivan.
Blair:Yeah.
Marsha:So we have some of the most interesting architecture here.
Marsha:And the city's really, really beautiful because of the Burnham plan.
Blair:Well, good.
Blair:That's great to know.
Marsha:I just want to mention one other thing.
Marsha:And unlike some of the more sprawling, more modern cities, it's got a kind of concentrated
Marsha:area downtown.
Marsha:So you have a lot of museums and parks and
Marsha:music and restaurants and all kinds of things to do.
Marsha:Very easy to go their way.
Marsha:The great transportation system, the loop.
Marsha:Yes, exactly.
Blair:Okay. Well, that's cool.
Blair:I see.
Blair:I didn't know about some of those things.
Blair:That's great to know.
Blair:My wife briefly worked there in Chicago for a long back in the day, so to speak.
Blair:Let's, if we can do a little more personal exploration with you, Marcia, you were
Blair:involved in the early days of objectivism, perhaps with NBI and so on.
Blair:Could you relate some of that to us?
Marsha:Sure. Actually, not NBI.
Marsha:I got interested.
Marsha:I had a high school teacher who had the Nolan chart.
Marsha:Do you know what that is? That's that graph that shows personal freedom
Marsha:on one side and economic freedom on the other side.
Blair:I do know that, yeah.
Marsha:Then you plot, you know, authoritarians are at the zero zero line, and
Marsha:the old style democrats were high on personal freedom and lower on economic freedom, and the
Marsha:old style conservatives were high on economic freedom and low on personal freedom.
Marsha:And at that time, the only person in the total Freedom quadrant was Ayn Rand.
Marsha:And he wanted us to read a novel from two of the quadrants.
Marsha:So I read the fountainhead, and I said, wow, this is what I've always thought, but
Marsha:explained a lot better than I could.
Blair:Well, yeah, I know what you mean.
Blair:I know what you mean.
Marsha:So then I got.
Marsha:So that was 1969, and I got very interested in
Marsha:her ideas, and then ended up reading everything that she wrote.
Marsha:And in the seventies, I moved to with my husband.
Marsha:Well, he wasn't my husband at the time.
Marsha:With my partner, too, New York City to go to
Marsha:graduate school.
Marsha:And at that point, Peekoff and Blumenthal were
Marsha:giving lectures at the Stantler Hilton, where NBI had been.
Marsha:I see town, New York.
Marsha:Ok. We attended those, and Ayn Rand was always
Marsha:there.
Marsha:She was in the audience.
Blair:Nice.
Marsha:Yeah, it was fairly easy to go up to her.
Marsha:Like, a lot of people were not going up to her to talk to her, you know, so.
Marsha:So I just went up and was asking her questions all the time.
Marsha:And I had a wonderful experience with her because she would listen very carefully to my
Marsha:questions, and then she would try to answer them.
Marsha:I asked her questions about everything from do the higher animals have a kind of free will?
Marsha:Because it seemed like she was implying that in one of her essays, or how should we cast
Marsha:Atlas Shrugged? And when that up, she.
Marsha:She said, now, this is the kind of conversation I like.
Marsha:Yeah.
Marsha:And I talked to her about my cats.
Marsha:She looked pictures of my cats.
Marsha:We talked about jewelry.
Marsha:We talked about, oh, I had discovered that the first novel written by Victor Hugo when he was
Marsha:19, is called Hans of Iceland.
Marsha:The hero of the book becomes the first of the
Marsha:counts of Danischld.
Blair:Okay.
Marsha:So I said to her, oh, I saw that you named Ragnar after this character in the book.
Marsha:And do you know what she said to me? Well, there really were counts of danish gold.
Blair:Okay.
Marsha:Know how I took this? I took it as she didn't want to.
Marsha:Looked like she was riding on Victor Hugo's coattails.
Marsha:I took it as she was giving a tribute to him.
Marsha:Right.
Marsha:But she was very concerned about whether she did the right thing.
Marsha:And she was like that.
Marsha:That was my experience of her.
Marsha:You know, I never felt like she was talking to me as if she was the great thinker, and I was,
Marsha:you know, just a nobody.
Marsha:It was always mind to mind.
Marsha:She was very serious and very.
Marsha:But fun, too, to talk to.
Blair:Yeah.
Marsha:And so I had a great experience with her.
Marsha:Oh, and there was one time when I was waiting to talk to her, and she was sitting in a row
Marsha:with her husband.
Marsha:Frank was on the outside.
Marsha:I was in the aisle.
Marsha:She was next to Frank.
Marsha:And then she was talking to somebody on the right side of her.
Marsha:Now, Frank had obviously something.
Marsha:She had had a stroke or something because he
Marsha:was aphasic at this point, which means that he could understand what you were saying, but he
Marsha:had a hard time talking.
Marsha:That's typical.
Marsha:Is a very common stroke that men can get.
Marsha:Especially.
Marsha:That leaves you like that.
Marsha:And so I was making conversation with him, and
Marsha:I was asking him about his paintings and things like that, and she was very protective
Marsha:of him.
Marsha:I wanted to bring this up because I could tell
Marsha:every time I saw her with him, she was very protective of him because of his condition.
Blair:Okay.
Marsha:I assumed it was because of his condition.
Marsha:So I was talking to him, and I was making conversation about asking him about his
Marsha:painting and that kind of thing.
Marsha:And she kept looking over at me and getting
Marsha:madder and madder.
Marsha:And then all of a sudden she says to me, don't
Marsha:bother him.
Marsha:He's not an objectivist.
Marsha:He's my husband.
Marsha:And I thought, oh, well, she didn't know what
Marsha:we were talking about.
Marsha:And she knew that I was somebody to always be
Marsha:asking her questions about philosophy.
Marsha:So she thought.
Marsha:Probably thought I was pestering him about that, you know?
Marsha:So I walked away.
Marsha:And during the next break in the lecture, she
Marsha:came over and found me.
Marsha:And she said, please, darling, forgive me.
Marsha:I didn't know what you were talking about.
Blair:Okay. That's nice to know.
Marsha:She wasn't acting like I'm the great person that, you know, she wanted to make sure
Marsha:that she did the right thing.
Blair:Well, I never.
Blair:I've never considered her a, you know, an
Blair:ogre, if you will, or a, you know, like, I wish.
Blair:She struts around thinking how superior she is to everyone.
Blair:I've never.
Blair:I've never thought of that.
Blair:Of her.
Marsha:She doesn't come across like that in any of the interviews.
Marsha:I don't?
Blair:No, of course not.
Marsha:No, I just wanted to confirm my experience with her.
Blair:Well, I appreciate that very much.
Martin:So, yes, thanks for sharing.
Martin:It's.
Martin:It's adding value, and it's like taking stories from a facets of rand.
Martin:So.
Marsha:Yeah. Oh, and, you know.
Marsha:Oh, that reminds me of something.
Marsha:So I have three other stories, if you don't mind, please?
Martin:Yeah, please.
Marsha:One is that she had some plastic jewelry on and I was admiring it.
Marsha:We talked about jewelry, and she said, oh, that was, that was designed by Joan
Marsha:Blumenthal.
Marsha:And another time I brought a copy of the
Marsha:fountainhead to have her autograph it.
Marsha:And she said, to whom should I autograph it?
Marsha:And I said, John Enright.
Marsha:And she says, that's a nice name.
Marsha:And I thought that was funny because of Roger Enright.
Marsha:Of course, you know that she liked that name.
Marsha:Gosh, what was the last one?
Marsha:Oh, oh, yes.
Marsha:So she and I had had these various
Marsha:conversations about cats, and I brought her these pictures of my cats and things like
Marsha:that.
Marsha:And it was funny because at one point I teased
Marsha:her and I said, oh, I'm going to bring my cats to the next lecture.
Marsha:She says, oh, no, darling, you can't do that.
Marsha:And one day this was in between periods.
Marsha:The lectures were in the fall and maybe this was in the winter when no lectures were going
Marsha:on.
Marsha:So I saw this pin of a cat that was arching
Marsha:his back, hissing and kind of, and it was all jeweled and everything.
Marsha:So I bought it.
Marsha:It was $3, and I wrapped it up.
Marsha:And for her birthday, which is in February, went to her office and I went to drop it off.
Marsha:And her secretary, I think it was Elaine Kalberman, said, oh, no, she doesn't accept
Marsha:any gifts.
Marsha:And I said, it only costs dollar three.
Marsha:So the secretary took it.
Marsha:Well, the next fall, when there were some more
Marsha:lectures, I saw she was wearing the pin.
Marsha:So I said, oh, I gave that to you.
Marsha:And she says, oh, it is the essence of cat.
Martin:Thanks for sharing that, Marsha.
Martin:We have here a support, how you could support
Martin:our show.
Martin:And in a way I created, you could call it like
Martin:boostogram, like a number.
Martin:And that's 221905.
Martin:So that rand's birthday in status.
Martin:So then, now we could make a clip of this and
Martin:share it and see if listeners value that and they want to donate and support.
Martin:And then we could make a split of that.
Martin:So that's great with sharing with sunlight
Martin:universe.
Martin:So could you go back a little bit with your
Martin:bio and your, you have done lots of writing and papers and so on.
Martin:Could you tell us a bit more? You talked about one about, you said about
Martin:animals, higher animals, and you have done a recent study there in a paper.
Martin:Could you tell a little bit about that?
Marsha:Yes. Well, after many years of reading and thinking about it, I wrote a paper, a
Marsha:philosophy of biology paper.
Marsha:Recently it was published in the Journal of
Marsha:Ayn Rand Studies.
Marsha:And it's called life is not a machine or a
Marsha:ghost.
Marsha:And it's about the naturalistic basis of
Marsha:life's ability to pursue goals, to have consciousness, to have free will, and to have
Marsha:meaning.
Marsha:And what I do is talk about the fact that the
Marsha:way that biologists and philosophy of biology people have approached life has been through
Marsha:the lens of mechanoreductionism, which is the idea that we can reduce everything to physics
Marsha:and chemistry.
Marsha:And consequently, they've had a hard time
Marsha:explaining many of the unique characteristics about living things.
Marsha:So what's happened is then you get, if you can't explain it that way, people just kind of
Marsha:throw up their hands scientifically, then you have other people saying, well, it must be
Marsha:that there's a life force or there's a mystical force that's enabling life to follow
Marsha:goal, to have goals and to have consciousness.
Marsha:So what I do in the paper is discuss these
Marsha:issues and then show a way to understand how life can have in itself the ability to pursue
Marsha:goals and how consciousness is related to that ability, how it arose, what it is in the body,
Marsha:and how free will arises out of the same ability.
Marsha:So that's, that's what I'm trying to answer in this paper.
Blair:I see.
Blair:Well, that's something, though, obviously,
Blair:we'll link to, and I'll have to read myself.
Marsha:Okay. Well, it's, you know, it's basically what I'm trying to do is give a
Marsha:naturalistic account for where these powers of human life, of not human life, of life itself
Marsha:come from.
Blair:Okay, great.
Blair:All right.
Blair:Well, Marcia, we've enjoyed having you on the show, and we wish you well with your endeavor
Blair:with, as program director and president of Reliance College.
Blair:And ladies and gentlemen, Marcia enright.
Marsha:Thank you so much for having me.
Marsha:I really appreciate it.
Martin:Yeah. And Blair, I want to add a little bit at Andy here.
Martin:You had in the show notes about your future plans and also where the listeners could find
Martin:your writings and also things about college.
Martin:And, yeah, if you want to apply for something,
Martin:for example, the dinner, the details there and so on, you can.
Marsha:Find information about the college at Reliance, reliancecollege.org, comma reliance,
Marsha:like self reliance.
Blair:Okay.
Marsha:And also there is where you can find out about the Jefferson dinner, which is going
Marsha:to be in New York.
Marsha:We're also going to hold one in California in
Marsha:September.
Marsha:And the summer seminar.
Marsha:If anybody is a young person who'd be interested in coming, please look up our
Marsha:summer seminar on the same website.
Marsha:It's under participate now.
Marsha:And all the links to all these things are there.
Marsha:And my writing website is Marsha, M A r S H A.
Marsha:Famolaro, f a M I l a r o dash enright.
Marsha:Enright.com.
Blair:All right.
Blair:I think very good.
Blair:Very good.
Blair:Well, Marcia, thanks for manning the foxhole
Blair:with us.
Marsha:Thanks for having, thank you very much.