The Pursuit of Happiness: C. S. Lewis’s Eudaimonistic.
Whilst CS Lewis may be best known for his childrens' fiction, such as the Chronicles of Narnia, some of his other works are well worth a read. This volume of essays is a good place to start. Each essay is short and to the point, resulting in 'bite-sized Lewis', as it were.
This is why CS Lewis calls this fantasy, literary fantasy. On the other hand, as a psychological term, it can have three meanings. Firstly, an imaginative building which may please patients and is mistaken for reality; for example, a woman in this condition will imagine a famous person is in love with her and a man might imagine that he is the long-lost son of nobles who is wealthy and.
This is an extensive collection of short essays and other pieces by C. S. Lewis that have been brought together in one volume for the first time. As well as his many books, letters, and poems, Lewis also wrote a great number of essays and shorter pieces on various subjects.
The book Mere Christianity by C.S. Lewis was a very interesting. As I first started reading the book from the preface I found out that before C.S. Lewis published the book he read them or gave them to someone to read aloud over the radio it was said to have been published into three separate parts the first one being named” Broadcast talks ” which was aired in the year 1942.
C.S. Lewis, the beloved writer of such Christian classics as Mere Christianity and The Screwtape Letters, has come to Logos! Analyzing such wide ranging subjects as the idea of love in medieval literature or the reign of relativism among the post-Christian West, Lewis’ works have touched audiences of all ages and backgrounds. Beginning life as a student with a knack for storytelling, he went.
In Mere Christianity, C.S. Lewis argues for the existence of God, and then proceeds to outline what he believes are the fundamental tenants of Christianity. In Book I, Lewis explores the notion of right and wrong, which he argues is, at its core, an inherently human characteristic that is not, as some would argue, merely a social construct.
Surprised by Joy is essentially an account of those factors that brought Lewis to a mature, adult Christian faith. The reader learns as much about what Lewis read as a child, an adolescent, and an.