

#249
Mentioned in 98 episodes
The abolition of man
Book • 1943
In 'The Abolition of Man', C.S.
Lewis delivers a defense of objective value and natural law, originating from his Riddell Memorial Lectures at the University of Durham in 1943.
Lewis argues that education should be conducted within the context of moral law and objective values, which he terms the 'Tao'.
He criticizes modern attempts to debunk these values, warning that such actions could lead to a dehumanization of society, resulting in what he calls 'Men without Chests' – individuals whose emotions have not been trained to conform to reason.
The book emphasizes the universal nature of traditional moralities across different cultures and warns against the dangers of moral relativism and the reduction of human beings to mere objects of scientific analysis.
Lewis delivers a defense of objective value and natural law, originating from his Riddell Memorial Lectures at the University of Durham in 1943.
Lewis argues that education should be conducted within the context of moral law and objective values, which he terms the 'Tao'.
He criticizes modern attempts to debunk these values, warning that such actions could lead to a dehumanization of society, resulting in what he calls 'Men without Chests' – individuals whose emotions have not been trained to conform to reason.
The book emphasizes the universal nature of traditional moralities across different cultures and warns against the dangers of moral relativism and the reduction of human beings to mere objects of scientific analysis.
Mentioned by
Mentioned in 98 episodes
Recommended by 

as one of the two books that every believer ought to read.


John Lennox

560 snips
John Lennox: AI, God & Writing | How I Write
Mentioned by 

when discussing the dangers of transhumanism.


John Lennox

444 snips
394. A Conversation About God | Dr. John Lennox
Mentioned by 

to discuss insights on the frameworks discussed in the conversation.


Brett McKay

434 snips
From Public Citizens to Therapeutic Selves — The Hidden History of Modern Identity
Mentioned by 

when discussing C.S. Lewis's foresight regarding the singularity and our ability to shape the future.


Dwarkesh Patel

198 snips
Joe Carlsmith — Preventing an AI takeover
Mentioned by 

about people who tell kids there is no right or wrong, then get upset when they lie and cheat.


Timothy Keller

119 snips
Integrity
Mentioned by Michael Knowles in the context of transhumanism.

119 snips
"Lost Technology, Nephilim, & The Mainstream Lies" Michael & The Rogue Archaeologist | Tim Alberino
Recommended by 

, C.S. Lewis argues in it that if nothing is self-evident, nothing can be proved.


Jonah Goldberg

106 snips
In Defense of Dogma | Solo
Mentioned by Tim Keller when referring to an appendix in the back, in which C.S. Lewis shows that the Ten Commandments are essentially held by all the religions of the world.

83 snips
God’s Law
Mentioned by Mark Gafni when referencing Skinner’s reading of it and rejecting value.

72 snips
EP 314 Zak Stein and Marc Gafni on the Nature of Everything
Mentioned by 

when discussing the convergence of moral laws across different cultures.


Timothy Keller

71 snips
Splitness








