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Theism and Humanism : The Book That Influenced C. S. Lewis

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ISBN-10: 1587420058

ISBN-13: 9781587420054

Edition: 2nd 2000 (Revised)

Authors: Arthur James Balfour, Michael W. Perry, C. S. Lewis

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Description:

In 1962, Christian Century asked C. S. Lewis to name the books that had most influenced his thought. Among those Lewis listed was Theism and Humanism, the published version of Arthur J. Balfour's 1914 Gifford Lectures at the University of Glasgow. Long out of print, the book is now available in this newly typeset and greatly enhanced edition.
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Book details

Edition: 2nd
Copyright year: 2000
Publisher: Inkling Books
Binding: Paperback
Pages: 203
Size: 6.00" wide x 8.75" long x 0.50" tall
Weight: 0.748
Language: English

C. S. (Clive Staples) Lewis, "Jack" to his intimates, was born on November 29, 1898 in Belfast, Ireland. His mother died when he was 10 years old and his lawyer father allowed Lewis and his brother Warren extensive freedom. The pair were extremely close and they took full advantage of this freedom, learning on their own and frequently enjoying games of make-believe. These early activities led to Lewis's lifelong attraction to fantasy and mythology, often reflected in his writing. He enjoyed writing about, and reading, literature of the past, publishing such works as the award-winning The Allegory of Love (1936), about the period of history known as the Middle Ages. Although at one time…    

Second Edition Forewordp. 5
1915 Prefacep. 9
Introductoryp. 11
Metaphysics and the 'Plain Man'p. 13
Inevitable Beliefs and 'Common Sense'p. 18
The Character of the Theism To Be Establishedp. 19
What the Argument Is Notp. 22
An Argument to Designp. 25
Design and Selectionp. 27
Argument from Valuesp. 34
Aesthetic and Theismp. 39
Aesthetic Describedp. 41
Whence Comes It?p. 42
Values and the Higher Emotionsp. 44
Natural Beautyp. 51
Aesthetic of Historyp. 53
Ethics and Theismp. 59
Ethics Describedp. 62
Egoism, Altruism and Selectionp. 63
Selection and the Higher Moralityp. 67
Same Subject Matter Continuedp. 72
Theism and the Collision of Endsp. 74
Intellectual Valuesp. 79
Retrospectp. 81
Reason and Causationp. 81
Leslie Stephen and Locke's Aphorismp. 82
Reason and Empirical Agnosticismp. 87
Perception, Common Sense and Sciencep. 89
Common Sense and the External Worldp. 91
Science and the External Worldp. 93
Primary and Secondary Qualitiesp. 94
Perception as a Causal Seriesp. 96
Perception as a Cognitive Actp. 98
An Irresistible Assumptionp. 100
Probability, Calculable and Intuitivep. 103
Mathematicians and Probabilityp. 105
Calculable Probabilityp. 106
Intuitive Probabilityp. 111
Uniformity and Causationp. 113
Habit, Expectation, Inductionp. 115
Regularity, Causationp. 116
The Principle of Negligibilityp. 118
Causation and Foreknowledgep. 121
Tendencies of Scientific Beliefp. 127
Beliefs that We Are Inclined to Holdp. 129
Atomism. Beliefs of Conservationp. 130
Epiloguep. 138
Summary and Conclusionp. 141
Humanism and Theismp. 143
The Doctrine of Congruityp. 143
Is this Systematic Philosophy?p. 149
Conclusionp. 152
A Distinctively Christian Settingp. 155
An Epilogue on the Incarnationp. 155
Our Significance in the Cosmic Dramap. 156
Our Ethical Needsp. 159
Our Material Bodiesp. 160
Our Difficulties with Evilp. 161
A Catechism for Naturalismp. 163
The Evolution of Beliefp. 165
The Discrepancy Between Religion and Sciencep. 174
Changes from the 1915 Textp. 179
Letters from C. S. Lewis to Sheldon Vanaukenp. 181
December 14, 1950p. 182
December 23, 1950p. 183
April 17, 1951p. 185
Notesp. 187
Glossaryp. 193
Indexp. 199
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