The Fountainhead

The Fountainhead

by

Ayn Rand

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The Fountainhead: Part 4: Chapter 18 Summary & Analysis

Summary
Analysis
At the crowded trial, Roark sits alone at the defense table, calmly listening as the prosecutor calls his motive “monstrous and inconceivable.” He says that Roark let “such a vague intangible, such an unessential as his artistic opinions” dictate this “crime against society.” The jury members listen, “attentive and emotionless.” Roark had picked all 12 of them, and the prosecutor had agreed since Roark had chosen the “hardest faces” rather than “the gentlest types.”
Roark is once again alone when he faces the crowd against him, which highlights his individuality. He seems to have done well by choosing a jury that aligns with his principles—they are rational individuals rather than those guided by emotions.
Themes
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Integrity vs. Conformity Theme Icon
Rationality vs. Emotion Theme Icon
The policeman who had found Roark, the night watchman, and the contractor’s superintendent who had noticed the missing dynamite are the witnesses on the first day. Peter Keating is the first witness on the second day. He says that Roark designed the homes at his request, since he was “not capable of doing it [himself].” When the prosecutor asks Keating why he objected to Prescott’s and Webb’s ideas, Keating says he was afraid of Roark.
Keating once again shows up to speak against Roark, though he doesn’t seem to mind stating in public that Roark is talented while he is not. Still, he seems to have been coerced into saying that he fears Roark.
Themes
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Integrity vs. Conformity Theme Icon
When Roark takes the oath, the audience can see that he is “a man totally innocent of fear.” He speaks of the man who discovered fire and the man who invented the wheel, how they must have been considered transgressors by their fellow men, and yet these men had left “a gift they had not conceived.” He says there have been men like them throughout the centuries, “armed with nothing but their own vision.” They are the “unsubmissive and the first,” and “stood alone against the men of their time.” They weren’t motivated by a desire to serve, since their fellow men rejected their inventions. Their only motivation was their own personal truth. The creators were never selfless—they “served nothing and no one.” They lived for themselves, which is the nature of achievement.
Roark’s sheer independence from the crowd holds him apart from and above them. He makes his speech confidently, and is unafraid of the consequences that will follow. His words mirror his attitude, as he praises individualistic creators.
Themes
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Integrity vs. Conformity Theme Icon
Rationality vs. Emotion Theme Icon
Quotes
Roark says that “Man cannot survive except through his mind,” and “the mind is an attribute of the individual.” There can be no “collective brain” or “collective thought.” While men can learn from one another, the ability to think and come up with new ideas cannot be given. Since man has to produce in order to survive, he can either choose to be independent or be a “parasite fed by the minds of others.” While “the creator’s concern is the conquest of nature,” the “parasite’s concern is the conquest of men” and he “lives second-hand” and “preaches altruism.” Men have been taught that dependence is a virtue.
Again, Roark highlights independence and individualism as necessary attributes of creation and excellence.
Themes
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Integrity vs. Conformity Theme Icon
Rationality vs. Emotion Theme Icon
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Roark continues that the man who tries to live for others “is a parasite in motive and makes parasites of those he serves,” resulting in a relationship of “mutual corruption” and “servility of the spirit.” He says that one cannot give without first creating, and that charity is not a higher act than achievement. He says that men have been taught it is a virtue “to relieve the suffering of others,” but suffering is not the most important part of life. The nature of altruism is that man wishes to see others suffer so he can be virtuous. 
Roark criticizes altruism as an urge born of dependence, and says that creation and selfishness are higher virtues.
Themes
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Integrity vs. Conformity Theme Icon
Rationality vs. Emotion Theme Icon
Religion and Morality Theme Icon
Roark says that while men have been taught “to agree with others,” the creator is the one who disagrees and goes against the current. He stands alone while men have been taught to stand together. The creator is “the egotist in the absolute sense” while the selfless man cannot “think, feel, judge, or act,” since these are “functions of the self.” He argues that the egotist does not sacrifice others—he does not use others and does not function through them.
Roark continues to argue the virtues of individualism, and also says nonconformism is often an attribute of the individualist.
Themes
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Integrity vs. Conformity Theme Icon
Rationality vs. Emotion Theme Icon
The only way to determine the worth of a man, Roark says, is his “independence, initiative, and personal love for his work.” In all “proper relationships there is no sacrifice of anyone to anyone.” For instance, architects do not need to subordinate their wishes to clients, just as clients must be free to pick the architects who suit them. No work can be “done collectively.”
Roark says that a person’s independence determines his or her worth, and that it is impossible to do original work collectively.
Themes
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Integrity vs. Conformity Theme Icon
Rationality vs. Emotion Theme Icon
The struggle between the creator and the second-hander “has another name: the individual against the collective.” By citing the “common good” of the collective, all sorts of tyrannies are imposed on the individual. However, Roark says that their country, “The noblest country in the history of men,” is not based on selflessness and service, but “on a man’s right to the pursuit of happiness.” The “rule of the second-hander” has “poisoned every mind” and “swallowed most of Europe” and is “engulfing our country.”
Roark insists that individual freedom and happiness are at the root of America’s philosophy as a nation, and that people must fight the power of the collectives that have taken hold of other countries in Europe, alluding to the socialism of Soviet Russia and the fascism of Nazi Germany.
Themes
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Integrity vs. Conformity Theme Icon
Rationality vs. Emotion Theme Icon
Religion and Morality Theme Icon
Quotes
Roark says he blasted Cortlandt because its “form was mutilated by two second-handers” who were permitted to do so “by the general implication that the altruistic purpose of the building superseded all rights.” He says that “the integrity of a man’s creative work is of greater importance than any charitable endeavor.” Roark claims that if his country no longer exists, he is willing to spend 10 years of his life in jail, in memory and gratitude for what the country used to be. He concludes by saying this his act is an act of loyalty to every creator. Before the spectators and Roark have even left the courtroom, the verdict is reached, and Roark is declared “Not guilty.”
Roark concludes his argument by saying that a creator’s idea is superior to charity and altruism. He says that if he is declared guilty, it will prove that America’s vision as a nation has already lost out to collectivism. Roark’s appeal to patriotism and individualism works, and he is set free.
Themes
Individualism Theme Icon
Integrity vs. Conformity Theme Icon
Rationality vs. Emotion Theme Icon
Religion and Morality Theme Icon