Ah yes! Clive Staples Lewis: a donnish, deep-voiced professor of Medieval English; a writer of children's fairy tales with thinly-disguised religious messages; and a stalwart defender and apologist for the Christian faith.
Many that is until John Beversluis came along and wrote his excellent book-length takedown of Lewis's apologetics: C.S. Lewis and the Search for Rational Religion (Revised Edn, Prometheus Press, 2007).
This is a series about Beversluis's book. I begin with an unexciting index.
CHAPTER 1: C.S. LEWIS AS CHRISTIAN APOLOGIST
CHAPTER 2: THE ARGUMENT FROM DESIRE
CHAPTER 3: THE CASE FOR CHRISTIANITY
CHAPTER 4: MORALITY AND THE MORAL ARGUMENT
CHAPTER 5: JESUS: WHO WAS HE?
CHAPTER 6: THE ARGUMENT FROM REASON
CHAPTER 7: NONBELIEF
CHAPTER 8: THE PROBLEM OF CONTRARY EVIDENCE
CHAPTER 9: THE PROBLEM OF EVIL
CHAPTER 10: C.S. LEWIS'S CRISIS OF FAITH
CHAPTER 11: DID C.S. LEWIS LOSE HIS FAITH?
CHAPTER 12: SPECIMEN
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