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Few writers or thinkers in the twentieth century have more lucidly grasped the meaning of modern times--the failed promise of the enlightenment--than the great C.S. Lewis. Here Peter Kreeft, one of the foremost students of Lewis's thought, distills Lewis's reflections on the collapse of western civilization and the way to renew it. Kreeft shows that Lewis, and particularly Lewis's book The Abolition of Man, offers deeply prophetic words for our time. Using this major work as the focus of this book, Kreeft summarizes Lewis's philosophy of history and evaluates our era from that standpoint; gives a defense of the Natural Law (or objective values) as the absolute sine qua non for the survival of civilization; summarizes Lewis's refutation of twenty alternatives to it; then fleshes out Lewis's hopeful conclusion in The Abolition of Man, a conclusion that gives a new and humane world view of mankind.
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