| | Kevin,
I thought I made this clear. By intellectual standards, I hardly mean footnotes and quotations. Those are necessary when appropriate, in certain contexts, to back up your attributions. What I meant by intellectual standards was: healthy reasoning, persuasiveness, thoroughness, honesty, fairness. That means reading a book you wish to review and presenting its ideas fairly--not just predicting them based on what you perceive to be the premise. Rand's other works excelled by most intellectual standards because she dealt with ideas through and through -- in a clear and concise way, what's more.
You don't have to read Mein Kempf to see that its ideas are crap. But, if you wanted to understand why the content in that book was so persuasive to so many millions, and how Hitler reached his conclusions from his premises (a false premise can go a million different ways) in such a way that struck a sympathetic chord with people -- if you wanted to truly understand and analyze it, then yes, you would have to read it.
Fred,
You surely have one of the significantly revised editions. I've been told that the original edition was around 200 pages. But I could be wrong.
Alec
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