For the New Intellectual: The Philosophy of Ayn Rand is a 1961 book by Ayn Rand. It was her first long non-fiction book. Much of the material consists of excerpts from Rand's novels, supplemented by a long title essay that focuses on the history of philosophy. Ayn Rand (IPA: , February 2 [O.S. January 20] 1905 â March 6, 1982), born Alisa Zinovyevna Rosenbaum (Russian: ), was a Russian-born American novelist and philosopher,[1] best known for developing Objectivism and for writing the novels We the Living, The Fountainhead, Atlas Shrugged and the novella Anthem. ...
While the division of revenues derived from new media content is apt to have a different cost basis from inventions, the existing rules for revenue sharing based on patent and licensing income is apt to be a good first approximation of distribution rules governing new media.
It is also apt to lead to new forms of collaboration among universities, which will marshal their collective intellectual capital to develop new courses as well as new forms of content-based educational materials.
If the intellectual property is in the general area of the faculty member's teaching or research at the university, the burden of proof should probably rest with the faculty member.
Intellectual talent and achievement are often treated as the status markers of an elite, and the formally meritocratic procedures of democratic education can be used to increase the stigma associated with modest educational success.
The very attempt to discuss intellectual life can be perceived as an attempt to lay a burden of judgement on people whose lives are too demanding to enable them to live up to it, and intellectual aspirations may be culturally marked as a betrayal of one's group, for example as "acting white".
Intellectual life tends to unfold as a set of independent strands, each of which is liable to be called to mind by a text, a thought, or a life-situation that it happens to speak to.