Rem and all on this thread,
May I please respond to some of the things you say about this book? I am very poor at debate and I am not looking for a debate, honestly! I just really am interested in these books and the author and his logic, etc. I found them more logical than some of you, and that worries me a bit. Perhaps I am being too easily persuaded.
I suppose I am arguing with you about some of your points, but only in the most friendly and open-minded way?My goal is to test my thinking?. Be easy with me if you respond because I am a sensitive soul, but I am trying to toughen up a bit.
Frankly I don't even know where to start... I guess at the beginning. The whole book - the whole entire argument - is based on the foundation that there is such a thing as a Universal Moral Law.
Yes..I agree?
It seems to me that Lewis just assumes this is true and does little to actually try and prove it.
Lewis spends no less than two chapters supporting his argument for this universal moral law. That is, two chapters supporting the idea with some logic (imo), not proof. I don't know how he could 'prove' there is a universal moral law any more than he could 'prove' there is a God, or you could 'prove' there is not a god.
At best he shot down some weak strawmen against his position.
Can you give me some examples here, so I can judge if I agree with you or not?
At worst he totally contradicted himself by claiming that some people don't know this Universal Moral Law and have to learn it.
I don't think so. Lewis does suggest that just because a law must be taught, does not mean that the law could not be a ?universal?, (not of human invention), law. In support of this idea, he used an analogy of the multiplication table. We learn the multiplication tables. If we do not learn the multiplication tables, that does not mean the universal multiplication laws do not exist. Whether someone taught you it or not, there is a universal law of multiplication.
*This analogy does not prove that there is a Universal Moral Law, but it does show that just because something is learned, doesn?t mean it can?t be a universal law. And that is all Lewis was trying to show.*
Other things he says are silly to me. He dismisses atheism because it's "too simple". He likens it to fish who don't know they are wet - atheism can't be true because if life really had no meaning then we wouldn't know it.
He did not say that atheism can?t be true because if life really had no meaning then we wouldn?t know it. Lewis said that his old argument for atheism did not explain why we have the Universal Moral Law, and so atheism didn?t answer his questions about the universe: it was ?too simple?. (and he had already explained why he believed there is a universal moral law)
Take it or leave it if you like, but he is laying out a line of reasoning that is possible. Not proven, Possible.
That is bizarre thinking to me... a non equeter if I've ever heard one. Then - no more discussion about atheism. That was the nail in the coffin for it.
This book was not intended to prove Christianity, or disprove atheism, imo. It is intended to ?explain and defend the belief that have been common to nearly all Christians at all times.? It is a good book to see what Christians as a whole believe, and how their beliefs are logically possible. If you are looking for proof of if there is a God or not, you are not going to find it here. Or, in my opinion, anywhere.
Then he goes on to talk about good and evil (dualism). He claims that nobody can do bad for the sake of doing bad - they have to be doing bad things to pursue what is actaully good (power, sexual pleasure, etc.). He never explains why power and sexual pleasure are "good" and not neutral.
?I am thinking I don?t understand this dualism thing?going back to read this part of the book?.brb?.
...Ok I am back, and I am still not sure what I think about this problem (?) of him not calling these things ?neutral? instead of ?good.? It seems to me that he is talking about dualism, and by definition there is no 'neutral' in dualism so why bring it up in a discussion about dualism?
He just assumes it's true. He also starts talking about a higher standard that would be beyond both the all good god and the all bad god. Well, doesn't that mean that the Christian god would also be held to a higher standard and doesn't actually "decide" what is good and bad? Then isn't god subbordinate to a higher law?
Ok I am gonna try to explain it anyway:
If one god is good, and one god is bad, who says which is which? Don?t we need some outside rule to judge, to define good and bad? Otherwise, everything bad is good to the ?bad god?? and if that is so, then there is no real ?good? or ?bad? at all and the whole thing falls in on itself. (There is really much more to this, but I can?t express it here without simply typing out several paragraphs in chapter 2.) In contrast, the Christian idea is that of one God who is Good, period. All else in the universe is judged next to this measure. It is a totally different idea. That is all Lewis is saying at this point.
Thanks for talking about this subject and thanks for reading my long post,
-LisaBObeesa