| | Rand believed in what the ancients called the unity of virtues: if you truly possess one of the virtues, you possess them all. So if you are genuinely and wholly productive, you must have complete integrity, complete independence, and so on. (Even Aristotle subscribed to this doctrine, but if you want to see it carried to its ultimate conclusion, check out the Stoics, for whom Virtue was one big thing, qualitatively different from any other value or any other excellence in life.)
So moral perfection, for Rand, is being completely rational, completely independent, completely honest, and so on down the line--at all times.
The ancients also had a notion of unified or global practical wisdom--assessing every situation and every social interaction correctly, so as to act virtuously in that context. Rand had no notion of practical wisdom, but insofar as she rolled it up into general-purpose rationaliy, the implication that Teresa drew about omniscience is, at the very least, a defensible interpreation of Rand. (The Stoics bit the bullet and acknowledged that exercising unified practical wisdom required omniscience regarding oneself and any situation that one encounters, which is why they said that the truly Virtuous human being is "as rare at the Ethiopian phoenix.")
The problem with the unity of the virtues is that you are unlikely to find a single psychologist who believes that unified virtue is humanly attainable. In fact, the notion of complete unity *within* each virtue--say, equally developed independence in every possible setting--is pretty daunting from a psychological standpoint.
What's more, Rand seems to have intended that moral perfection means possessing the kind of character that her fictional heroes possessed, notably their near-imperviousness to all of the negative emotions, with the possible exception of anger. Peikoff, in Objectivism: The Philosophy of Ayn Rand, does not hesitate to equate moral perfection with Roarkhood or Galthood.
Since Rand correctly rejected the idea of perfect knowledge, it is a shame she didn't go further and reject the idea of moral perfection.
Robert Campbell
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