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Rand doesn't explicitly refer to Kant in her ouevre, however in her first essay in her book Objectivist Ethics, Rand writes:

The basic social principle of the Objectivist ethics is that just as life is an end in itself, so every living human being is and end in himself not the means to ends or the welfare of others – and that therefore, that man must live for his own sake, neither sacrificing himself to others nor sacrificing others to himself. To live for his own sake means that the achievement of his own happiness is man’s highest moral purpose.

Her premise is:

so every living human being is and end in himself not the means to ends or the welfare of others

This is looks very similar to one formulation of Kants Categorical Imperative - a philosopher whom she claims to look away from. She then jumps from this premise to what seems the logical and rational and her final conclusion:

and therefore, man must live for his own sake, neither sacrificing himself to others nor sacrificing others to himself.

This appears at first simply a restatement of the premise in ordinary language. Consider a 'human being as an end in himself'. Not only he must consider himself an end but also others must do so. Hence 'live for his own sake, neither sacrificing himself to others nor others to himself'. The second statement seems simply expository. However there is a crucial change of language tempo and emphasis.

Traditionally sacrifice is the offering of food, objects or the lives of animals to a higher purpose, in particular divine beings, as an act of propitiation or worship, and often implies ritual killing. Hence to 'sacrifice himself to others' symbolically implies setting others as higher ends to which one sacrifices himself, a killing of himself, that is negating himself entirely as an end. This is a dramatic heightening of the language of the premise: I can after all treat you as an end without negating myself as an end, or I can treat you as an end without treating your end higher than mine by that mere act.

Hence one cannot take her premise as an axiom as the second statement wasn't rationally uncovered, but rhetorically so; thus it is her second statement that is axiomatic in her system of ethics - her premise is spurious.

Kant starts from his categorical principle:

“act as if the maxim of your action were to become by your will a universal law of nature.”

This simply means, act if and only if, the maxim of your action, the law that it follows could in fact be a law binding on everyone on the Community without negating itself. For example, we do not steal, because if everyone was allowed to steal, it negates the idea of property.

From this Kant derives:

“you use humanity, whether in your own person or in the person of any other, always at the same time as an end, never merely as a means.”

This merely is the crucial difference between Rand's System & Kant's, because it allows Kant to say that one can treat an other sometimes as a means - that is have someone working for you in a factory, and thus for the time he is working being a means to my end; but not wholly as a means - that is excluding slavery. (Really one should differentiate between benevolent & tyranical work or slavery here).

Now Kant is rather famously known for giving a rationalist basis to ethics. Rand famously says that, her ethics is rationally grounded. This, on the evidence above seems like a simple polemical and ungrounded claim.

If her ethics is not rationally based, how should one understand it? Where does it fit into a typology of ethics? Has she appropriated Kants dictum without Kants rationalism? Should I understand her as being a promulgator of not rationalist ethics but virtue ethics?

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I think you may be misunderstanding the value of the merely in Kant's formula of humanity formulation. It is not that it becomes okay to sometimes treat people as means; it is that it becomes okay to treat people as means so long as you recognize them properly as ends. Sticking with your factory analogy, you cannot on Kant's view treat your employees like machines [mere means] but you can recognize that there is a transactional nature to the relationship, i.e. you are buying their time. Maybe this works out to the same thing as what you wrote -- but as worded, it sounds like you are saying Kant would be fine with periodically [i.e. sometimes] reducing people to mere means in our relating to them.

If Rand is taking something from the formula of universalization, she is not properly understanding the requirements of the formula of humanity or ends. In both cases, the requirement is such that I respect all rationality whether in myself or others. In other words, it is not man living for his own sake. It is every rational being living for reason on Kant's picture. This gives us imperfect duties to ourselves and others (to cultivate one's talents and to provide aid). These duties arise in part, because the only way to universalize what we demand of others is to be a supply to others.

The Kingdom of Ends formulation makes this quite clear. You can find an interesting version of what it might mean in Christine Korsgaard's Creating the Kingdom of Ends.

Rand is not generally considered a philosopher in professional circles, but I would categorize her view as a form of egotism or social darwinism. Her views don't allow for the possibility of cooperative community which is a key feature in most views. There are also some elements of existentialism in her view insofar as meaning is found through independence, but there are some pretty clear elements where she thinks there is an idea of rationality that predates this.

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  • Perhaps as you say I have been unclear, I agree with your first paragraph. I understand Rand is not a philosopher, but she is seen as one in something less than professional circles. Commented Feb 13, 2014 at 16:25
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    "Her views don't allow for the possibility of cooperative community which is a key feature in most views": You are wrong there. Ref. aynrandlexicon.com/lexicon/cooperation.html
    – prash
    Commented Feb 13, 2014 at 23:07
  • @prash If I am understanding that passage correctly, one's goal is never the other's benefit per se. That's not really a cooperative community. That's a temporary alliance for selfish reasons. If we compare that with Kant, Kant sees the purpose of community and its basis as the mutuality of reason.
    – virmaior
    Commented Feb 13, 2014 at 23:26
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    @virmaior: I agree with your 1st sentence, and disagree with your 2nd. If Microsoft employs John, it is a cooperative community, even though there is never any guarantee of a permanent alliance.
    – prash
    Commented Feb 14, 2014 at 0:15
  • @@virmaior. '...you cannot on Kant's view treat your employees like machines [mere means] but you can recognize that there is a transactional nature to the relationship'. I think that explaining the treatment of people as means, in the sense Kant allows, in terms of a transactional relationship (as when I use a shop asssistant as a means when one makes a purchase) is a brilliant formula. Up to your usual best !
    – Geoffrey Thomas
    Commented Feb 15, 2018 at 15:04

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