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C. S. Lewis for the Third Millennium: Six Essays on The Abolition of Man is unavailable, but you can change that!

Kreeft, one of the foremost students of Lewis’ thought, distills Lewis’ reflections on the collapse of western civilization and the way to renew it. Few writers have more lucidly grasped the meaning of modern times than Lewis. Kreeft’s reflections on Lewis’ thought provide explorations into the questions of our times, providing light and hope in an age of darkness.

concrete entities in the universe: birds and bees and flowers and trees. It is not a power, or source of activity, but only the finished products. Thus “natural law” seems almost oxymoronic, since no law is ever observed as one of those concrete entities or finished products. The term “objective values” sounds equally oxymoronic to modern man, since he means by “values” something in our feelings and by “objective” something outside, like a rock. 3, By “natural law” is meant two things: first, that
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