Author: John G. West
Darwin in the Dock: C.S. Lewis’s Doubts about the Creative Power of Natural Selection
Lewis first read French philosopher Henri Bergson during World War I while recovering from shrapnel wounds, and the experience was profound.
Darwin in the Dock: C.S. Lewis’s Limited Acceptance of Common Descent
It would be wrong to conclude that his acceptance of some kind of human evolution placed him in the camp of mainstream evolutionary biology, or even mainstream theistic evolution.
Darwin in the Dock: C.S. Lewis’s Critique of Evolution and Evolutionism
Evolution has so many different meanings that if one doesn’t pay close attention, a conversation on the topic will quickly devolve into people talking past one another.
From C.S. Lewis, Four Arguments Friendly to a Universe by Design
In Lewis’s view, the longings provoked by earthly beauty could not be accounted for by a blind and mechanistic material universe.
A Regenerate Science?
In The Abolition of Man, C.S. Lewis expressed his hope that a reformation of science could be brought about by scientists.