The Fountainhead

The Fountainhead

by

Ayn Rand

Teachers and parents! Our Teacher Edition on The Fountainhead makes teaching easy.

The Fountainhead: Part 4: Chapter 11 Summary & Analysis

Summary
Analysis
Roark and Wynand are on vacation aboard Wynand’s yacht in the South Pacific and have been away from New York for several months. Roark had finished all the sketches for Cortlandt before he left. Dominique seemed jealous when Wynand told her he would go away for months with Roark, and this pleased Wynand.
Dominique is jealous that Wynand gets to spend so much time with Roark, while Wynand misunderstands and assumes she wants to spend time with him.
Themes
Love and Selfishness Theme Icon
Wynand tells Roark he is “a miser about two things on earth: [Roark] and Dominique.” He says that until he met them, he had been living a completely selfless life, the kind that Toohey advocates. He didn’t care deeply about anything and his work gave “the greatest pleasure to the greatest number.” His papers represent everyone but himself—he has “erased [his] ego.” He “wanted power over a collective soul and [he] got it.” However, he says that Toohey would say he isn’t a true altruist because he must decide for the people rather than letting them decide what they want. A true altruist will decide what is best for people and “then ram it down their throats.”
Wynand is aware that he was a selfless person until Roark and Dominique showed him how to live with selfishness and integrity. However, he at least let people choose what they liked to read and made the Banner cater to their choices, so he isn’t a complete altruist, unlike Toohey who chooses for people since he claims to know what they need better than they know themselves.
Themes
Individualism Theme Icon
Integrity vs. Conformity Theme Icon
Religion and Morality Theme Icon
Roark says he has been thinking about actual selflessness, and that, although people say it doesn’t exist, it in fact does because some people “have no self.” Like Keating, they live “within others,” or “second-hand.” Keating’s aim was greatness in other people’s eyes—“fame, admiration, envy. […] He didn’t want to be great, but to be thought great. […] He borrowed from others in order to make an impression on others.” While this is true selflessness, Roark is amazed that the world calls people like Keating selfish.
To Roark, living for others and their approval makes one selfless—one’s self is eroded in the process.
Themes
Individualism Theme Icon
Integrity vs. Conformity Theme Icon
Religion and Morality Theme Icon
Quotes
Roark says that this kind of selflessness is at “the root of every despicable action.” “Second-handers” are hypocrites and cheats who “preserve a respectable front” and those who want money just for ostentation. They want to be liked and admired by others, and in the process, they sacrifice their self-respect. On the other hand, “A truly selfish man cannot be affected by the approval of others. He doesn’t need it.” 
Roark makes his case that selflessness causes people to behave in despicable ways while selfishness preserves one’s self-respect.
Themes
Individualism Theme Icon
Integrity vs. Conformity Theme Icon
Religion and Morality Theme Icon
Get the entire The Fountainhead LitChart as a printable PDF.
The Fountainhead PDF
Roark says second-handers “have no concern for facts, ideas, work. They’re concerned only with people.” The ones who actually work and create are the egotists because you can’t “think through another’s brain.” Second handers “have no sense of reality” because their reality is not within them but is “anchored to nothing.” This is why Roark cannot reason with a committee—they are “Men without an ego. Opinion without a rational process.”
Roark’s term for people who depend on other people for ideas or a sense of self is “second-handers.” He explains his disdain for collectives—according to him, people lose rationality and sense when they are in groups. 
Themes
Individualism Theme Icon
Integrity vs. Conformity Theme Icon
Rationality vs. Emotion Theme Icon
Religion and Morality Theme Icon
Wynand says that second-handers “accept anything except a man who stands alone” because “they don’t exist within him and that’s the only form of existence they know.” Roark says that second-handers also reproach the independent person because they are still human beings and retain “some sense of dignity.” No person can achieve absolute humility and survive. People seek happiness and never find it, not realizing that their desires are “motivated by other men” rather than being “truly personal.” Roark believes “the cardinal evil on earth is that of placing your prime concern within other men.”
Wynand joins Roark in his criticism of second-handers, but doesn’t seem to realize that some of the things that Roark is saying about second-handers apply to Wynand as well. Roark says that second-handers dislike independent people because they notice the independent person’s dignity and wish they had it—this sounds like Wynand when he enjoyed breaking people with integrity. Also, Wynand has just admitted that he was unhappy before he met Roark and Dominique, and Roark explains that second-handers do not see that they are in charge of their own happiness.
Themes
Individualism Theme Icon
Integrity vs. Conformity Theme Icon
Roark says that the only quality he seeks in his friends is a “self-sufficient ego.” He tells Wynand that Wynand wasn’t “born to be a second-hander,” which makes Wynand happy. Roark doesn’t tell him that “the worst second-hander of all” is “the man who goes after power.”
Roark tells Wynand he isn’t meant to be a second-hander but doesn’t tell him that he has turned into one by seeking power. Toohey, too, seeks power over people and is aware that this makes him a selfless person. Wynand lacks Toohey’s self-awareness.
Themes
Individualism Theme Icon
Integrity vs. Conformity Theme Icon
Religion and Morality Theme Icon