C. S. Lewis comes across to many Christians and non-Christians readers as a writer whose purpose is to make others contemplate what is beyond nature. In this particular case of “On Living in an Atomic Age‚” Lewis writes to numerous audiences to proves that nature is not “the only thing in existence” (Lewis 75). He believes that there is ‘another world’ beyond nature. Before Lewis gets to this part of the essay he goes on to explain what nature is in its truest form. Lewis makes it clear that nature
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The Wicked Ways of the White Witch: How Evil is Evident in Jadis‚ the “Queen” of Narnia It was once said that “evil enters like a needle and spreads like an oak tree” (“Ethiopian”). In C. S. Lewis’ The Lion‚ the Witch‚ and the Wardrobe‚ evil enters the fictitious world of Narnia and quickly diffuses throughout the land. This evil permeates every aspect of its society and has its inhabitants living in fear of the source: Jadis‚ “Queen” of Narnia‚ better known as the White Witch. She is
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Mere Christianity C.S. Lewis’ argument for a Universal Law comes from ancient antiquity where it was referred to as the Law of Nature. This Law of Nature was something so inherent and so primal that it seemed all were bound to in some way. Now there is all sorts of law that we are bound to yet the only true law that we can break is the Natural Law. We can not as C. S. Lewis points out defy gravity or further defy Newtonian physics‚ but we can choose to not follow the standard. For example‚ if someone
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The Lion‚ The Witch and The Wardrobe – C.S. Lewis The Lion‚ The Witch and The Wardrobe. C.S. Lewis’s first book of the Chronicles of Narnia introduces the reader to the land of Narnia. Written in the 1950’s Lewis’s inspiration to write a children story stemmed from the arrival of three children evacuated to the Lewis country home during the bombing of London by the Nazi. Within unfolding story C.S. Lewis provides childlike insights into philosophies of faith‚ compassion‚ temptation‚ redemption and
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C.S. Lewis’ descriptions of heaven and hell in the book The Great Divorce are mainly metaphorical‚ as he wants to illustrate the fundamental differences between the two places that we have all grown up knowing about. To do this he uses the typical illustrations such as light and dark‚ sunrise and sunset‚ and mountains and valleys‚ or deep ravines. However‚ I think many things that are spoken about in the book are very similar to the actual places. Several differences are the people‚ the weather and
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theologists‚ but C.S. Lewis made his own claim as to what he believes love really is. Lewis believed that love was not as simple as many theologians have put it. He believed that love was split into four different types‚ and that to understand love is to know these four types. Storge‚ Phileo‚ Eros‚ and Agape are the four types of loves Lewis speaks about. To be able to break down the subtle love between characters in his fictional novels‚ we must first have a firm grasp as to what Lewis really means when
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The beginning of the book The Great Divorce by C.S. Lewis was difficult to understand and hard to figure out‚ but as you read on‚ you come to find out that this book is about heaven and hell and the people that go there. The narrator who is the main character in the book tells the story on what he sees from his eyes. The author describes hell as a dark cold town with alleys that people live in and no one to be seen on the streets‚ and heaven as this place that looks beautiful with green grass‚ mountains
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‘‘Religion and Rocketry’’ was more effective than Out of the Silent Planet for C.S. Lewis to express his thoughts about life on other planets and how they relate to us. There are many ways to express a thought or opinion. An author can choose to communicate his opinion through a non-fictional source‚ like C.S. Lewis did in ‘‘Religion and Rocketry’’‚ or through a fictional source. C.S. Lewis communicated the same idea he did in ‘‘Religion and Rocketry’’ through a completely fictional story called
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sorrow in order to go to confession. A priest who hears the confessions is like the father who ran to his son when he returned; they both forgive their children in a way from their faults after witnessing their struggle. In the Great Sin by C.S. Lewis‚ one of the most treacherous
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Christianity‚ Lewis’ purpose is to explicate that all human beings have a sense of right and wrong‚ indicated as the Law of Human Nature‚ use this Law to support the theory of a God‚ who gives humans this law and governs them by it‚ show the difficulty all humans face because they fail to obey this law perfectly‚ and that Christianity is the only logical answer for this theory to help the modern man into the Christ-life by using analogies‚ logical deductions‚ and the Christian dogma. I. Lewis analyses
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