C.S. Lewis / by Stewart Goetz, Ursinus College, US.

By: Goetz, Stewart [author.]
Language: English Series: Blackwell great minds ; 16Publisher: Hoboken : Wiley, 2017Edition: First EditionDescription: 1 online resourceContent type: text Media type: computer Carrier type: online resourceISBN: 9781119190066 (paper); 9781119190271 (pdf)Subject(s): Lewis, C. S. (Clive Staples), 1898-1963Genre/Form: Electronic books.Additional physical formats: Print version:: C.S. LewisDDC classification: 230.092 LOC classification: BX4827.L44Online resources: Full text is available at Wiley Online Library Click here to view
Contents:
Intro; Title Page; Copyright Page; Contents; Acknowledgments; Introduction; Chapter 1 A philosophical mind; 1.1 A Brief Biography; 1.2 Lewis as a Philosopher; 1.3 Lewis and Common Sense; 1.4 Reading Lewis; 1.5 What Is to Come; Notes; Chapter 2 The thinking, reasoning, and sensing soul; 2.1 The Aboutness of Thought; 2.2 Reasoning and the Falsity of Naturalism; 2.3 A Possible Quibble; 2.4 Caveat: Bulverism; 2.5 First- and Third-Person Points of View; 2.6 The Soul; 2.7 Thought, Image, and the Immaterial; 2.8 Pleasurable Reason; Notes; Chapter 3 The meaning of life. 3.1 Setting the Stage3.2 The Purpose of Life; 3.3 What Makes Life Worth Living; 3.4 Pain, Pleasure, and Happiness; 3.5 An Alternative Rejected; 3.6 Space, Time, and Meaning; 3.7 Another Alternative Rejected; 3.8 Joy or Sehnsucht; 3.9 Things Making Sense; Notes; Chapter 4 Morality; 4.1 More than Morality; 4.2 Morality, Pleasure, and Happiness; 4.3 Pride; 4.4 Moral Value and Purpose for Acting; 4.5 Euthyphroâ#x80;#x99;s Dilemma; 4.6 Natural Law; 4.7 Heaven without Morality; 4.8 Naturalism and Morality; 4.9 Naturalism and Making Sense of Things; 4.10 Naturalism, Science, and Certitude; Notes. Chapter 5 Free choice and miracles5.1 Lewis the Supernaturalist; 5.2 Choice; 5.3 The Nature of Freedom; 5.4 The â#x80;#x9C;Iffynessâ#x80;#x9D; of Nature; 5.5 Arguments against Mental-to-Physical Causation; 5.6 The Relevance of the Subnatural; 5.7 Lewis as a Causal Interactionist; 5.8 â#x80;#x9C;Miraclesâ#x80;#x9D; and Miracles; Notes; Chapter 6 The grand miracle, death to self, and myth; 6.1 Incarnation; 6.2 The Seed Must Die; 6.3 The Paradox of Hedonism; 6.4 Pleasure and Passion; 6.5 Myth; Note; Chapter 7 Belief in god; 7.1 Reason and Religion; 7.2 Supernaturalism versus Theistic Supernaturalism. 7.3 From Self to God7.4 Further Considerations; 7.5 The Argument from Desire; Notes; Chapter 8 The problem of evil; 8.1 Statement of the Problem; 8.2 Human Beings and Evil; 8.3 The Irrelevance of Possible Worlds; 8.4 Lewisâ#x80;#x99;s View of the Fall; 8.5 Imaginative Metaphysics and Evolution; 8.6 Evil before the Existence of Human Beings; 8.7 Evil and Beasts; 8.8 Hell; note; Chapter 9 An enduring mind; Bibliography; Index; EULA
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230.092 G555 2017 (Browse shelf) Available CL-53109
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Includes bibliographical references and index.

Intro; Title Page; Copyright Page; Contents; Acknowledgments; Introduction; Chapter 1 A philosophical mind; 1.1 A Brief Biography; 1.2 Lewis as a Philosopher; 1.3 Lewis and Common Sense; 1.4 Reading Lewis; 1.5 What Is to Come; Notes; Chapter 2 The thinking, reasoning, and sensing soul; 2.1 The Aboutness of Thought; 2.2 Reasoning and the Falsity of Naturalism; 2.3 A Possible Quibble; 2.4 Caveat: Bulverism; 2.5 First- and Third-Person Points of View; 2.6 The Soul; 2.7 Thought, Image, and the Immaterial; 2.8 Pleasurable Reason; Notes; Chapter 3 The meaning of life. 3.1 Setting the Stage3.2 The Purpose of Life; 3.3 What Makes Life Worth Living; 3.4 Pain, Pleasure, and Happiness; 3.5 An Alternative Rejected; 3.6 Space, Time, and Meaning; 3.7 Another Alternative Rejected; 3.8 Joy or Sehnsucht; 3.9 Things Making Sense; Notes; Chapter 4 Morality; 4.1 More than Morality; 4.2 Morality, Pleasure, and Happiness; 4.3 Pride; 4.4 Moral Value and Purpose for Acting; 4.5 Euthyphroâ#x80;#x99;s Dilemma; 4.6 Natural Law; 4.7 Heaven without Morality; 4.8 Naturalism and Morality; 4.9 Naturalism and Making Sense of Things; 4.10 Naturalism, Science, and Certitude; Notes. Chapter 5 Free choice and miracles5.1 Lewis the Supernaturalist; 5.2 Choice; 5.3 The Nature of Freedom; 5.4 The â#x80;#x9C;Iffynessâ#x80;#x9D; of Nature; 5.5 Arguments against Mental-to-Physical Causation; 5.6 The Relevance of the Subnatural; 5.7 Lewis as a Causal Interactionist; 5.8 â#x80;#x9C;Miraclesâ#x80;#x9D; and Miracles; Notes; Chapter 6 The grand miracle, death to self, and myth; 6.1 Incarnation; 6.2 The Seed Must Die; 6.3 The Paradox of Hedonism; 6.4 Pleasure and Passion; 6.5 Myth; Note; Chapter 7 Belief in god; 7.1 Reason and Religion; 7.2 Supernaturalism versus Theistic Supernaturalism. 7.3 From Self to God7.4 Further Considerations; 7.5 The Argument from Desire; Notes; Chapter 8 The problem of evil; 8.1 Statement of the Problem; 8.2 Human Beings and Evil; 8.3 The Irrelevance of Possible Worlds; 8.4 Lewisâ#x80;#x99;s View of the Fall; 8.5 Imaginative Metaphysics and Evolution; 8.6 Evil before the Existence of Human Beings; 8.7 Evil and Beasts; 8.8 Hell; note; Chapter 9 An enduring mind; Bibliography; Index; EULA

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