Well, if I remember correctly, many criticisms of Objectivism center around Rand's solution to the complexities of (and contradictory desires introduced by) social interactions and personal interrelationships as (briefly summarized) "ignore them."*
At least in that sense, DFW is entirely in opposition to Objectivism's inherent self-involvement.
But, in my humble opinion, this is a lot like saying, "DFW's contention that 'the integral of f(x) is the limit as n approaches infinity of the summation of blah blah blah' is in opposition to Rand's contention that 'one plus one equals eleventy four.'"**
Of course, I hate Ayn Rand. So there's that.
*Note that my clear bias against and dismissive treatment of Objectivism is intentional.
**I'm not attempting a specific or academically sound argument here, but rather making the larger the point that I don't think IJ addresses Objectivism directly, but rather that IJ inherently treats Objectivism as unsound by addressing the subtler, higher-level subtleties of a philosophy that already establishes a clear opposition to Objectivism.
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