Podcasts about The Space Trilogy

Series of three science fiction novels by C. S. Lewis, written from 1938-1945

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The Space Trilogy

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Best podcasts about The Space Trilogy

Latest podcast episodes about The Space Trilogy

The Lost Sci-Fi Podcast - Vintage Sci-Fi Short Stories

When a skeptical professor steps into the mind of a former student's fiancée, he discovers a surreal landscape shaped by vanity, obsession, and alarming emptiness. A sharp and unsettling exploration of how our inner worlds reveal far more than we intend. The Shoddy Lands by C. S. Lewis. That's next on The Lost Sci-Fi Podcast.Clive Staples Lewis, one of the most influential writers of the 20th century, was born in Belfast, Northern Ireland, in 1898. In 1917, during the height of World War I, he enlisted in the British Army and was wounded in combat less than a year later.Though best known for his beloved children's series, The Chronicles of Narnia—seven books published throughout the 1950s—Lewis also made a lasting mark with The Screwtape Letters in the 1940s, and his philosophical sci-fi epic, The Space Trilogy, written in the 1930s and '40s.While he authored more than 30 books in his lifetime, Lewis rarely ventured into short fiction. Today's featured tale marks a special occasion: his first story published in an American fantasy and science fiction magazine. From the February 1956 issue of Fantasy and Science Fiction, beginning on page 68, The Shoddy Lands by C. S. Lewis.…Next on The Lost Sci-Fi Podcast, A brief tale of the dismal success of a scientist's experiment. Anton's Last Dream by Edwin Baird.☕ Buy Me a Coffee https://www.buymeacoffee.com/scottsV===========================Facebook - https://www.facebook.com/TheLostSciFiPodcastTwitter - https://x.com/LostSciFiPodInstagram - https://www.instagram.com/lostscifiguyThreads - https://www.threads.net/@scottscifiguy=========================== ❤️ ❤️ Thanks to All Our Listeners Who Bought Us a Coffee$200 Someone$100 Tony from the Future$75 James Van Maanenberg$50 Anonymous Listener$25 Someone, Eaten by a Grue, Jeff Lussenden, Fred Sieber, Anne, Craig Hamilton, Dave Wiseman, Bromite Thrip, Marwin de Haan, Future Space Engineer, Fressie, Kevin Eckert, Stephen Kagan, James Van Maanenberg, Irma Stolfo, Josh Jennings, Leber8tr, Conrad Chaffee, Anonymous Listener$15 Every Month Someone$15 Someone, Carolyn Guthleben, Patrick McLendon, Curious Jon, Buz C., Fressie, Anonymous Listener$10 Anonymous Listener$5 Denis Kalinin, Timothy Buckley, Andre'a, Martin Brown, Ron McFarlan, Tif Love, Chrystene, Richard Hoffman, Anonymous Listener Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Communion & Shalom
#62 - Evangelicals' Gender Ideas Came from C.S. Lewis' Space Trilogy - with Robin Harris and Kathryn Wagner

Communion & Shalom

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 23, 2025 108:23


I mean, I don't know you. Maybe you didn't grow up in an evangelical Christian subculture. But if you did, there's a high likelihood that the ideas you absorbed about how men and women behave—and what it even means to be masculine or feminine—were influenced heavily by C.S Lewis' famous Space Trilogy: Out of the Silent Planet, Perelandra, and That Hideous Strength.On this fascinating episode, Kathryn Wagner (returning guest and medieval lit scholar) and Robin Harris (writer and incoming seminarian) stopped by to evaluate Lewis' takes on gender against both more modern feminist sensibilities and much older writers and theologians in the Christian tradition.You should absolutely join us.★ About Our Guests:Robin Harris is a North Carolina based freelance writer and editor who specializes in Bible curriculum. She is on the board of the Davenant Institute. Her writing has appeared in Mere Orthodoxy, Ad Fontes, and the Theopolis Institute. As of Fall 2025, she will be a student at Gordon Conwell Theological Seminary (MATS, 2027). She writes at robinjeanharris.substack.com/ and can be reached at robinjeanharris [at] gmail.com.Kathryn Wagner is the Director of Academic Programming at the Center for Christianity and Scholarship at Duke University. She studies the literature and religious culture of the late Middle Ages and teaches courses that aim to form students in virtue through the practices of the liberal arts. She can be reached at kathryn [at] mogkwagner.net.—★ Timestamps(00:00) #62 - Evangelicals' Gender Ideas Came from C.S. Lewis' Space Trilogy - with Robin Harris and Kathryn Wagner(04:20) Evangelicals who leaned on C.S. Lewis and the Space Trilogy(13:12) The Space Trilogy tackles gender(24:46) But can archetypes live in the real world?(38:44) God does not have a body: Metaphors in Christian scripture(53:28) Confusion and contraception are tied together(01:00:58) God as our mother?(01:06:39) Lewis's thinking evolution: widening the gender box(01:24:44) Replacing theoretical masculinity and femininity with real friendships(01:33:24) What would Lewis think of today's transgender conversation?(01:40:31) In the Christian tradition on gender, Lewis is the test run—★ Links and ReferencesThese well-read people dropped a lot of names and references. For your ease of Google searching, here are the ones we caught:John and Stasi Eldridge (books: Wild at Heart, Captivating), Jordan Peterson Jungian thinking, Council for Biblical Manhood and Womanhood, Elisabeth Elliot (book: Let Me Be a Woman), complementarianism and egalitarianism, Michael Ward (book: Planet Narnia), apophatic theology, platonic forms and Aristotle's hylomorphism, Thomistic/ Thomas=Thomas Aquinas, Pope John Paul II (book/writings: Theology of the Body), Anselm of Canterbury talked about God as our mother, Julian of Norwich said a similar thing; Joy Davidman, Dorothy Sayers, philosopher Elizabeth Anscombe, Sister Penelope Lawson, Ruth Pitter, C. S. Lewis (books: The Four Loves, A Grief Observed), Kevin Vanhoozer (theologian).—★ Send us feedback, questions, comments, and support!Email: communionandshalom@gmail.com | Instagram: @newkinship | Substack: @newkinship | Patreon: @newkinship —★ CreditsCreators and Hosts: David Frank, TJ Espinoza | Audio Engineer: Carl Swenson, carlswensonmusic.com | Podcast Manager: Elena F. | Graphic Designer: Gavin Popken, gavinpopkenart.com ★ This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit newkinship.substack.com

B. K. Neifert
Analysis of C. S. Lewis' Space Trilogy

B. K. Neifert

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 30, 2025 10:32


An Analysis of C. S. Lewis' Space Trilogy.

The Pastor Theologians Podcast
The Fantastical Fiction of C.S. Lewis | Ryhs Laverty

The Pastor Theologians Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 8, 2025 50:15


Today we are joined on the podcast by Ryhs Laverty as we discuss Life on the Silent Planet: Essays on Christian Living from C.S. Lewis's Ransom Trilogy  (Davenant Institute, 2024). This volume, edited by Laverty, is a collection of essays highlighting Lewis's insights on topics such as gender, contraception, bureaucracy, and transhumanism, as he wove them into the Ransom Trilogy. What questions does Lewis explore in his fiction that are pastorally relevant in our context today? How can the Ransom Trilogy continue to inform Christian living? This and more on today's podcasts!

Deep Talks: Exploring Theology and Meaning Making
Did C.S. Lewis' Space Trilogy predict Elon Musk, AI, & Aliens? | Annie Crawford

Deep Talks: Exploring Theology and Meaning Making

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 3, 2025 100:24


Is C.S. Lewis' "Space Trilogy" the most important Lewis book for our current cultural moment? Annie Crawford is the co-founder of Vine Classical Community & the Senior Fellow for The Society of Women of Letters. She writes for publications such as Salvo, The Symbolic World, and others on the works of C.S. Lewis. ____________   Deep Talks is a listener-supported podcast. Become a Patreon member today and receive bonus episodes, Q & A opportunities, and more! https://www.patreon.com/c/deeptalkstheologypodcast

The Novice Elitists Film Podcast
Flyin' Solo #5 (Books Caleb Read in 2024 - Part 1)

The Novice Elitists Film Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 24, 2025 53:24


Flyin' Solo roars back onto the TNE podcast feed as Caleb begins his three part series of discussing all the books he read/listened to in 2024. In this first episode he discusses the 21 books on his reading playlist, "To Your Scattered Bodies Go, The Stars!"   Some of the books included: Foundation, Jurassic Park, Horus Rising, Do Andriods Dream of Electric Sheep, Frank Herbert's Dune Saga (books 2-6), the Kim Stanley Robinson Mars trilogy, The Space Trilogy by C.S. Lewis, The Three Body Problem, and more.   This episode was recorded on 

Hugos There Podcast
The Space Trilogy, by CS Lewis (feat. Evan Bradtke)

Hugos There Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 1, 2025 86:01


Guest Evan Bradtke joins me for a fairly lengthy discussion of CS Lewis’s Space Trilogy (more aptly called the Cosmic Trilogy), all three volumes of which were nominated for the Retro Hugo. It’s a normal-ish episode, with the exception being that we discuss all three books in some detail. The books are, to me, less accessibly … Continue reading "The Space Trilogy, by CS Lewis (feat. Evan Bradtke)"

Jay's Analysis
Predicting the Coming Dystopia: C.S. Lewis' Space Trilogy (Half)

Jay's Analysis

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 20, 2024 107:54


Out of the Silent Planet, Perelandra and That Hideous Strength make up the lesser known C.S. Lewis space trilogy, covering the adventures of Ransom, the demoniac Weston and how the alien narrative might fit into the notion of the fall and there demonic. This analysis is public, while the full analysis will be available for subscribers to jaysanalysis.Send Superchats at any time here: https://streamlabs.com/jaydyer/tip Get started with Bitcoin here: https://www.swanbitcoin.com/jaydyer/ The New Philosophy Course is here: https://marketplace.autonomyagora.com/philosophy101 Set up recurring Choq subscription with the discount code JAY44LIFE for 44% off now https://choq.com Lore coffee is here: https://www.patristicfaith.com/coffee/ Orders for the Red Book are here: https://jaysanalysis.com/product/the-red-book-essays-on-theology-philosophy-new-jay-dyer-book/ Subscribe to my site here: https://jaysanalysis.com/membership-account/membership-levels/ Follow me on R0kfin here: https://rokfin.com/jaydyerBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/jay-sanalysis--1423846/support.

Postmodern Realities Podcast - Christian Research Journal
Postmodern Realities Episode Science, Spirituality, and C. S. Lewis – An Analysis of the Space Trilogy

Postmodern Realities Podcast - Christian Research Journal

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 6, 2024 65:27


This Postmodern Realities episode is a conversation with JOURNAL author Cole Burgett  about his online article entitled, “Science, Spirituality, and C. S. Lewis – An Analysis of the Space Trilogy“ https://www.equip.org/articles/science-spirituality-and-c-s-lewis-an-analysis-of-the-space-trilogy/.Other podcasts and articles of interest by this author:Episode 415: The Subtle Art of Corruption in the Sophomore Season of ‘The Rings of Power'The Subtle Art of Corruption in the Sophomore Season of ‘The Rings of Power'Episode 408 “Alien: Romulus”, Risk Aversion, and the Parable of the Big Bad Company“Alien: Romulus”, Risk Aversion, and the Parable of the Big Bad CompanyEpisode 406 Faith, Family, and Fear: The Films of M. Night ShyamalanFaith, Family, and Fear: The Films of M. Night ShyamalanAnd many, many other TV and Movie reviews Cole has written consistently for us since 2021. 

FLF, LLC
Life on the Silent Planet! [The Pugcast]

FLF, LLC

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 4, 2024 61:38


Today the Pugs welcome Rhys Laverty (all the way from the UK!) to discuss a new collection of essays on C. S. Lewis's Ransom Trilogy (sometimes misleadingly known as the Space Trilogy). The collection is being published under the title 'Life on the Silent Planet' by the Davenant Trust. Contributors include many friends of the Pugcast, including Michael Ward, of Planet Narnia fame. The Pugs enjoy a free-ranging discussion about everything from whether or not Lewis believed in intelligent life on other worlds to whether or not we're living in the world Lewis described in, That Hideous Strength. Join the fun! Order Life on the Silent Planet: https://davenantinstitute.org/life-on-the-silent-planet Connect with the Davenant Institute: https://davenantinstitute.org/ Catch our new documentary ‘A Pugcast Pilgrimage: Lewis, Oxford, and Our Postmodern Age’ on Canon+: https://canonplus.com/tabs/discover/videos/34865?fbclid=IwY2xjawF-J-9leHRuA2FlbQIxMQABHXqj6CIhUs6mTwkMc-AHhKiP1E4dPAtOm60rgu69RZ2LfhqYLJg2JHx4uQ_aem_LV-nOWc1vnhV6scW9cGZpA Support the Pugcast on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/thetheologypugcast?fbclid=IwAR17UHhfzjphO52C_kkZfursA_C784t0ldFix0wyB4fd-YOJpmOQ3dyqGf8 The Theology Pugcast is a ministry of Trinity Reformed Church in Huntsville Alabama. To view more media from TRC, visit their website: https://trinityreformedkirk.com/media-podcasts

The Theology Pugcast
Life on the Silent Planet!

The Theology Pugcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 4, 2024 61:37


Today the Pugs welcome Rhys Laverty (all the way from the UK!) to discuss a new collection of essays on C. S. Lewis's Ransom Trilogy (sometimes misleadingly known as the Space Trilogy). The collection is being published under the title 'Life on the Silent Planet' by the Davenant Trust. Contributors include many friends of the Pugcast, including Michael Ward, of Planet Narnia fame. The Pugs enjoy a free-ranging discussion about everything from whether or not Lewis believed in intelligent life on other worlds to whether or not we're living in the world Lewis described in, That Hideous Strength. Join the fun! Order Life on the Silent Planet: https://davenantinstitute.org/life-on-the-silent-planet Connect with the Davenant Institute: https://davenantinstitute.org/ Catch our new documentary ‘A Pugcast Pilgrimage: Lewis, Oxford, and Our Postmodern Age' on Canon+: https://canonplus.com/tabs/discover/videos/34865?fbclid=IwY2xjawF-J-9leHRuA2FlbQIxMQABHXqj6CIhUs6mTwkMc-AHhKiP1E4dPAtOm60rgu69RZ2LfhqYLJg2JHx4uQ_aem_LV-nOWc1vnhV6scW9cGZpA Support the Pugcast on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/thetheologypugcast?fbclid=IwAR17UHhfzjphO52C_kkZfursA_C784t0ldFix0wyB4fd-YOJpmOQ3dyqGf8 The Theology Pugcast is a ministry of Trinity Reformed Church in Huntsville Alabama. To view more media from TRC, visit their website: https://trinityreformedkirk.com/media-podcasts

The Theology Pugcast
Life on the Silent Planet!

The Theology Pugcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 4, 2024 61:38


Today the Pugs welcome Rhys Laverty (all the way from the UK!) to discuss a new collection of essays on C. S. Lewis's Ransom Trilogy (sometimes misleadingly known as the Space Trilogy). The collection is being published under the title 'Life on the Silent Planet' by the Davenant Trust. Contributors include many friends of the Pugcast, including Michael Ward, of Planet Narnia fame. The Pugs enjoy a free-ranging discussion about everything from whether or not Lewis believed in intelligent life on other worlds to whether or not we're living in the world Lewis described in, That Hideous Strength. Join the fun! Order Life on the Silent Planet: https://davenantinstitute.org/life-on-the-silent-planet Connect with the Davenant Institute: https://davenantinstitute.org/ Catch our new documentary ‘A Pugcast Pilgrimage: Lewis, Oxford, and Our Postmodern Age’ on Canon+: https://canonplus.com/tabs/discover/videos/34865?fbclid=IwY2xjawF-J-9leHRuA2FlbQIxMQABHXqj6CIhUs6mTwkMc-AHhKiP1E4dPAtOm60rgu69RZ2LfhqYLJg2JHx4uQ_aem_LV-nOWc1vnhV6scW9cGZpA Support the Pugcast on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/thetheologypugcast?fbclid=IwAR17UHhfzjphO52C_kkZfursA_C784t0ldFix0wyB4fd-YOJpmOQ3dyqGf8 The Theology Pugcast is a ministry of Trinity Reformed Church in Huntsville Alabama. To view more media from TRC, visit their website: https://trinityreformedkirk.com/media-podcasts

Fight Laugh Feast USA
Life on the Silent Planet! [The Pugcast]

Fight Laugh Feast USA

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 4, 2024 61:38


Today the Pugs welcome Rhys Laverty (all the way from the UK!) to discuss a new collection of essays on C. S. Lewis's Ransom Trilogy (sometimes misleadingly known as the Space Trilogy). The collection is being published under the title 'Life on the Silent Planet' by the Davenant Trust. Contributors include many friends of the Pugcast, including Michael Ward, of Planet Narnia fame. The Pugs enjoy a free-ranging discussion about everything from whether or not Lewis believed in intelligent life on other worlds to whether or not we're living in the world Lewis described in, That Hideous Strength. Join the fun! Order Life on the Silent Planet: https://davenantinstitute.org/life-on-the-silent-planet Connect with the Davenant Institute: https://davenantinstitute.org/ Catch our new documentary ‘A Pugcast Pilgrimage: Lewis, Oxford, and Our Postmodern Age’ on Canon+: https://canonplus.com/tabs/discover/videos/34865?fbclid=IwY2xjawF-J-9leHRuA2FlbQIxMQABHXqj6CIhUs6mTwkMc-AHhKiP1E4dPAtOm60rgu69RZ2LfhqYLJg2JHx4uQ_aem_LV-nOWc1vnhV6scW9cGZpA Support the Pugcast on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/thetheologypugcast?fbclid=IwAR17UHhfzjphO52C_kkZfursA_C784t0ldFix0wyB4fd-YOJpmOQ3dyqGf8 The Theology Pugcast is a ministry of Trinity Reformed Church in Huntsville Alabama. To view more media from TRC, visit their website: https://trinityreformedkirk.com/media-podcasts

A Meal of Thorns
A Meal of Thorns 04 – PERELANDRA with Taylor Driggers

A Meal of Thorns

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 12, 2024


Taylor Driggers joins us to talk about the second volume in C.S. Lewis's SPACE TRILOGY. A richly-described and philosophical science fiction story, PERELANDRA has a lot that's interesting and a lot that's pretty weird when you think about it. A Meal of Thorns is a podcast from the Ancillary Review of Books. Credits:Guest: Taylor Driggers Title: Perelandra by C.S. Lewis Music by Giselle Gabrielle Garcia Artwork by Rob Patterson Opening poem by Bhartṛhari, translated by John BroughReferences:Queering Faith in Fantasy Literature: Fantastic Incarnations and the Deconstruction of Theology by Taylor Driggers The Ursula Le Guin Archives Laurie Marks' Elemental Logic novel series Philophantast conference The Centre for Fantasy and the Fantastic at the University of Glasgow Dead Collections by Isaac Fellman (and our episode on it) The Two Doctors Górski by Isaac Fellman The other two novels in the Space Trilogy: Out of the Silent Planet and That Hideous Strength Lewis's The Chronicles of Narnia The Inklings (wiki link) Lewis's A Grief Observed Lewis's final novel Till We Have Faces Ursula Le Guin's review of Lewis's The Dark Tower Lewis's The Great Divorce, Pilgrim's Regress, and The Screwtape Letters Stephen Metcalf, “Language and Self-Consciousness: The Making and Breaking of C.S. Lewis' Personae” in Word and Story in C. S. Lewis: Language and Narrative in Theory and Practice ed. Peter J. Schakel & Charles A. Huttar Lewis's debate with Elizabeth Anscombe J.R.R. Tolkien's The Lord of the Rings Ridley Scott's Alien “Sehnsucht”, the concept of inconsolable longing The Transformers franchise Aamer Rahman on defeating Nazis Satan (Milton's version) Le Guin's The Left Hand of Darkness and specifically the religion/philosophy of the Handdara Sofia Samatar's The Practice, The Horizon, and the Chain Casella's essay on (not) defending science fiction against criticisms of complicity Taylor's seminar for his work with the Le Guin Fellowship on historicizing queerness in fantasy and “queer hiddenness in the archive”, available online this fall/winter. Greg Egan's “Oracle”, available on his site (and in the collections Oceanic and The Best of Greg Egan) ContactRSS feed | Spotify | Apple Podcasts | +lots of other platforms (let us know if it's not on your favorite)You can follow A Meal of Thorns on Twitter and Bluesky.Email us at mealofthorns@gmail.com.Support the Show!You can support the podcast (and the Ancillary Review of Books) by joining our Patreon. For $5 and up, you get access to ARB's exclusive monthly newsletter, our Discord community, and more to come.Interested in purchasing a book we mentioned on the show? Check the show notes for Bookshop links; we get a cut if you buy them through our Bookshop!It seems small, but it really does help: like and share our posts! Leave a comment or review wherever you find us. The internet's kind of broken, but that kind of thing really does help people hear about the work we're doing.

chycho
Ep.177: Reading Books, P7: Time & the Technosphere & Black Holes and Baby Universes [ASMR]

chycho

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 5, 2024 91:05


- Video on BitChute: https://www.bitchute.com/video/OLPpeFe0Me11/ - Video on Rumble: https://rumble.com/v4xm6in-reading-books-part-7-asmr-monday-may-27-1100-am-100-pm-pst.html - Video on Odysee: https://odysee.com/@chycho:6/reading-books,-part-7-monday,-may-27,-11:b - Video on CensorTube: https://youtube.com/live/kcPVP6bGnFU ▶️ Guilded Server: https://www.guilded.gg/chycho SoundCloud PLAYLISTS: - Books: https://soundcloud.com/chycho/sets/books - Podcasts: https://soundcloud.com/chycho/sets/chycho ***SUPPORT*** ▶️ Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/chycho ▶️ Substack: https://chycho.substack.com/ ▶️ Paypal: https://www.paypal.me/chycho ▶️ Buy Me a Coffee: https://www.buymeacoffee.com/chycho ▶️ SubscribeStar: https://www.subscribestar.com/chycho ▶️ ...and crypto, see below. APPROXIMATE TIMESTAMPS: - Salutations - Snack for Today: Mangoes, Blackberries and Dark Chocolate (5:23-6:49) - Introduction - Stephen King, a good story tell with TDs that drank the Russiagate Kool-Aid and is injected up the Ying-Yang (9:52-11:09) - Trump Derangement Syndrome is very much real: a story of one interaction with someone afflicted with TDS (11:25-14:55) - Japan, South Korea and China - Science Fiction Book Recommendations: Dune, The Andromeda Strain, Magician and The Space Trilogy (16:37-18:23) - 1st Reading, Book #18: "Time and the Technosphere: The Law of Time in Human Affairs" by José Argüelles (Introduction 18:38, Reading 34:29-49:31, Post Reading Discussion 49:31-53:02) --- Stay Away From Crazy: This Is Relationship Advice (21:00-22:28) --- Exercise Involving Clocks, Alter Your Perspective of Time: Remove All Clocks From Your Line of Site “Time and the Technosphere” (22:29-28:02) --- Reading Page 18 to 21 of "Time and the Technosphere: The Law of Time in Human Affairs" by José Argüelles (34:29-49:31) --- Post “Time and the Technosphere” Discussion, Jose Arguelles: Biosphere & Noosphere, Vladimir Vernadsky, Geophysics & Western Education (49:31-53:02) - 2nd Reading, Book #19: "Black Holes and Baby Universes and Other Essays" by Stephen Hawking (Introduction 54:30, Reading 59:55-1:13:44) --- Reading Page 85 to 90 of "Black Holes and Baby Universes and Other Essays" by Stephen Hawking (59:55-1:13:44) --- Post Discussion of Reading “The Origin of the Universe” by Stephen Hawking: Big Bang, Time and Conscience (1:13:44-1:18:06) - Short Salvia Divinorum Discussion: Extract, Leaf and Tea (1:23:49-1:26:06) - Closing ***WEBSITE*** ▶️ Website: http://www.chycho.com ***LIVE STREAMING*** ▶️ Twitch: https://www.twitch.tv/chycholive ***VIDEO PLATFORMS*** ▶️ YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@chycho ▶️ BitChute: https://www.bitchute.com/channel/chycho ▶️ Rumble: https://rumble.com/c/chycho ▶️ Odysee: https://odysee.com/$/invite/@chycho:6 ▶️ Kick: https://kick.com/chycholive ▶️ Twitch: https://www.twitch.tv/chycholive ***FORUM*** ▶️ Guilded Server: https://www.guilded.gg/chycho ***SOCIAL MEDIA*** ▶️ Twitter: https://twitter.com/chycho ▶️ Minds: https://www.minds.com/chycho ▶️ Gab: https://gab.ai/chycho ▶️ Vk: https://vk.com/id580910394 ▶️ Gettr: https://gettr.com/user/chycho ***AUDIO/PODCASTS*** ▶️ SoundCloud: https://soundcloud.com/chycho ***CRYPTO*** ▶️ As well as Cryptocurrencies: Bitcoin (BTC): 1Peam3sbV9EGAHr8mwUvrxrX8kToDz7eTE Bitcoin Cash (BCH): 18KjJ4frBPkXcUrL2Fuesd7CFdvCY4q9wi Ethereum (ETH): 0xCEC12Da3D582166afa8055137831404Ea7753FFd Ethereum Classic (ETC): 0x348E8b9C0e7d71c32fB2a70DcABCB890b979441c Litecoin (LTC): LLak2kfmtqoiQ5X4zhdFpwMvkDNPa4UhGA Dash (DSH): XmHxibwbUW9MRu2b1oHSrL951yoMU6XPEN ZCash (ZEC): t1S6G8gqmt6rWjh3XAyAkRLZSm9Fro93kAd Doge (DOGE): D83vU3XP1SLogT5eC7tNNNVzw4fiRMFhog Peace. chycho http://www.chycho.com

The Engineering Leadership Podcast
Building & leading a combined engineering & security org w/ Mike Hanley #175

The Engineering Leadership Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 16, 2024 45:44


Mike Hanley, Chief Security Officer and SVP of Engineering @ GitHub, joins us to discuss how GitHub has successfully combined its engineering & security orgs and shares recommendations for how other orgs can pivot to this model. We cover why it's so important for eng orgs to collaborate with security early on in the product development cycle and tips for educating your engineers on security best practices. We also discuss how the rise of AI tools / usage is changing how companies need to think about & practice security, why AI is providing opportunities for increased safety & security within product development, and strategies for encouraging your org to adopt AI tooling within engineering, security, and beyond.ABOUT MIKE HANLEYMike Hanley is the Chief Security Officer and SVP of Engineering at GitHub. Prior to GitHub, Mike was the Vice President of Security at Duo Security, where he built and led the security research, development, and operations functions. After Duo's acquisition by Cisco for $2.35 billion in 2018, Mike led the transformation of Cisco's cloud security framework and later served as CISO for the company. Mike also spent several years at CERT/CC as a Senior Member of the Technical Staff and security researcher focused on applied R&D programs for the US Department of Defense and the Intelligence Community.When he's not talking about security at GitHub, Mike can be found enjoying Ann Arbor, MI with his wife and eight kids."The idea that the security team is walled off or separate or not really connected, not just to engineering but the entirety of the business, you really can't have that. If you think about the pace of modern development, things are moving so quickly. It's so driven by software. The idea that you're like, ‘Hey, I got to walk down the hall and check in with somebody from security who has no idea what's going on in my roadmap, who has no idea what my day to day experience is living in engineering...' That just doesn't work!”- Mike Hanley   We now have 10 local communities of engineering leaders hosting in-person meetups all over the world!Local communities are led by eng leaders just like you, who wanted to create a place to connect, share insights & tackle critical challenges in the job.New York City, Boston, Chicago, Seattle, Los Angeles, San Diego, San Francisco, London, Amsterdam, and Toronto in-person events are happening now!We're launching local events all the time - get involved at elc.community!SHOW NOTES:GitHub's convergence of the eng & security orgs (2:33)Benefits of combining engineering & security org mandates (4:46)How the security team is involved with the internal product dev lifecycle (8:05)The downsides of engaging your security team as an afterthought (10:46)What an early-stage yes/and product conversation looks like (12:48)Examples of educating your eng team on security best practices (17:17)Expanding two-factor authentication externally (19:29)Stewarding security as a responsibility & value (21:59)Security & safety implications for orgs using / building AI tools (23:44)Why the rise of AI is a great time for eng / security collaboration (27:09)How to leverage security best practices using AI tools (29:53)Mike's view that AI will create more opportunities & improve structural tech (32:14)Frameworks for getting to “yes” when it comes to adopting AI tooling (35:15)AI-powered tools GitHub is using to change workflows outside of eng & security (39:06)Considerations pivoting toward combining eng & security functions (40:35)Rapid fire questions (42:25)LINKS AND RESOURCESWhy Johnny Can't Encrypt - Alma Whitten And J. D. Tygar's argument that effective security requires a different usability standard that is not achievable through the user interface techniques commonly found in consumer software.The Space Trilogy - C.S. Lewis believed that popular science was the new mythology of his age, and in The Space Trilogy he ransacks the uncharted territory of space and makes that mythology the medium of his spiritual imagination.The Works of Peter DruckerThis episode wouldn't have been possible without the help of our incredible production team:Patrick Gallagher - Producer & Co-HostJerry Li - Co-HostNoah Olberding - Associate Producer, Audio & Video Editor https://www.linkedin.com/in/noah-olberding/Dan Overheim - Audio Engineer, Dan's also an avid 3D printer - https://www.bnd3d.com/Ellie Coggins Angus - Copywriter, Check out her other work at https://elliecoggins.com/about/

The C.S. Lewis podcast
#146 That Hideous Strength: How do we resist evil?

The C.S. Lewis podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 26, 2024 13:03


In this final episode on The Space Trilogy, Alister McGrath finishes his discussion on That Hideous Strength, looking particularly at how evil emerges and how we stop technology, such as AI and nuclear weapons, getting out of control. Alister also summarises some of his thoughts on the entire trilogy. What are the key takeaways? Does he have any tips for best engaging with these books? Which related Lewis works would Alister recommend? Plus, we hear some of your comments. + Subscribe to The CS Lewis podcast: https://pod.link/1560959545 + For more shows, free ebook and newsletter visit our new website + For online learning https://www.premierunbelievable.com/training + For our Premier Unbelievable? Live events + Support the podcast from the USA + Support the podcast from UK and rest of the world

Pints With Aquinas
Transhumanism and Emerging Technologies w/ Fr. Michael Baggot

Pints With Aquinas

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 7, 2024 166:34 Very Popular


Fr. Michael Baggot joins the show to talk about Transhumanism. Who are the leading thinkers in the movement? What philosophies underpin the movement? What is the goal of tranhumanism? How does Transhumanism relate to Transgenderism? Father addresses all these questions. Show Sponsors: Ascension: https://ascensionpress.com/fradd Strive21: https://strive21.com/matt Father's Book: https://www.routledge.com/Enhancement-Fit-for-Humanity-Perspectives-on-Emerging-Technologies/Baggot-Gomez-Carrara-Tham/p/book/9781032115856 Fr.'s Links: https://www.magisterium.com/ https://upra.org  https://catholic.tech https://catholicworldview.com  @ThoseTwoPriests  References: When Harry Became Sally by Ryan T Anderson: https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/when-harry-became-sally-ryan-anderson/1125792437 The Transhumanist FAQ by Nick Bostrom: https://nickbostrom.com/views/transhumanist.pdf Unfit for the Future by Julian Savulescu: https://www.amazon.com/Unfit-Future-Enhancement-Uehiro-Practical/dp/019965364X Better Than Well by Carl Elliot: https://www.amazon.com/Better-Than-Well-American-Medicine/dp/0393325652 A Free Man's Worship by Bertrand Russel: https://www3.nd.edu/~afreddos/courses/264/fmw.htm The Space Trilogy by CS Lewis: https://www.amazon.com/Space-Trilogy-C-S-Lewis/dp/068483118X The End of Sex by Hank Greely: https://www.amazon.com/End-Sex-Future-Human-Reproduction/dp/0674728963  

The BreakPoint Podcast
Would the Discovery of Alien Life Disprove Christianity?

The BreakPoint Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 18, 2024 6:15


To see this What Would You Say? video in its entirety and to share it with others, go to whatwouldyousay.org. Or, you can look up the What Would You Say? channel on YouTube. Be sure to subscribe to be notified each time a new video is released.   _________ Among the unexpected stories of 2023 was a renewed interest in all things extraterrestrial: from images of alien corpses; to retired high-ranking military officials claiming secret government programs launched to capture UFOs; to a strange encounter with Las Vegas police officers. The public interest in whether there's anything out there is as high as ever. But what would the existence of alien life mean for Christianity?   That's the question tackled in a brand new video, part of the What Would You Say? series, called “Would the Discovery of Alien Life Disprove Christianity?”   Many people assume that if any evidence were to be discovered for extraterrestrial life, it would be devastating to the Christian worldview. However, according to my colleague, Shane Morris, that's not necessarily the case. In fact, according to Shane, “There's nothing in the Christian view of the world that excludes the possibility that God created life on other planets.” In this video, Shane offers three things to keep in mind. First, that “despite the hype of science fiction and decades of searching, there is currently no evidence for life on other planets.”   [A]fter decades of looking and listening and exploring the heavens for that life, we've come up empty-handed. So much so, in fact, that physicists and astronomers have named the emptiness the Fermi Paradox, which refers to “the discrepancy between the lack of conclusive evidence of advanced extraterrestrial life and the apparently high likelihood of its existence.” In other words, if life happens easily, “Where is everybody?”    Ward and his co-author, Donald Brownlee, argue in Rare Earth that life doesn't happen that easily, and assuming that it does is the real mistake. At least a dozen special conditions found on our planet are probably necessary for the existence of intelligent life, including a precise orbital distance from our star, heavy elements, liquid water, a moon, a magnetic field, not too much gravity, a nearby gas giant, and having a star like our Sun, which, as it turns out, is anything but “ordinary.”    Shane's second point is that “even if intelligent life were found elsewhere in the universe, it wouldn't necessarily present a problem for Christianity.”  Before Star Trek or Star Wars existed, C.S. Lewis wrote his Space Trilogy. In it, he famously imagined alien races that never fell into sin. And in a few essays, Lewis wrestled with whether the existence of real-life extraterrestrials would threaten Christianity. According to Lewis, the Bible never says God created the vast cosmos only for humans…   For Lewis, intelligent aliens created and loved by God posed no problem, nor would they contradict the Bible. In the same essay, he cautioned that the Bible was not intended to satisfy our curiosity about such things but as an instruction manual for salvation. But he also warned that humans are in no position to tell God what He can and cannot do with His vast universe.     And finally, Shane states that “the Bible teaches that there are other beings in the universe, but they're not what materialists expect, and they do not always come in peace.”   Some biblical scholars, like the late Dr. Michael Heiser, have suggested that some alleged alien encounters may be the result of demonic activity and possession. After all, in 2 Corinthians 11:14 Paul warned that Satan disguises himself as an angel of light.    This means that Christians need not believe every story of alien abductions or close encounters, but we need not immediately dismiss them as jokes or conspiracy theories. Christianity teaches that we are not alone in the universe, that it is full of intelligent entities, both good and evil, and that all were created by and remain under the power of God.    The existence of extraterrestrial life is still speculation, but the Christian worldview has more room for mysteries than our secular, materialist age does. It offers a bigger, more thorough, and more satisfying explanation for the universe.    That was Shane Morris answering the question “What would the discovery of extraterrestrial life mean for Christianity?”  To see the whole video and to share it with others, go to whatwouldyousay.org. Or, you can look up the What Would You Say? channel on YouTube. Be sure to subscribe to be notified each time a new video is released.   This Breakpoint was co-authored by Shane Morris. For more resources to live like a Christian in this cultural moment, go to breakpoint.org.  ______ As a Breakpoint listener, you probably pick up on how the daily commentaries do the work of translation for you. We take a story or issue being discussed in our culture right now and model how to think through it from a Christian worldview. But, if you're interested in going deeper, in discovering how to develop the wisdom and skills needed to walk wisely in this cultural moment, then the Colson Fellows program might be for you. This ten-month program combines theological, spiritual, and worldview formation through a carefully curated combination of readings, daily devotions, live webinars, and monthly meetings with your peers. With both in-person and fully online offerings, you can choose the format that works best with your stage in life. Interested in learning more? You can explore the program and submit an application at colsonfellows.org.

The Two Tongues Podcast
S3E46 - C.S. Lewis in Space Part 2 - Perelandra

The Two Tongues Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 17, 2023 105:42


In this episode we tackle the second novel in C.S. Lewis' Space Trilogy. We explore Venus as a new and innocent paradise, meet the mirror or our primordial Mother--Eve--and get to watch as she's tempted by the Devil. But this time...this time, there's another presence in the garden, our hero--Elwin Ransom--and he's hungry for serpent! Lewis weaves theological concepts masterfully into the re-telling of the Eden myth. We explore the pros and cons of religious monism, the meaning of evil and contemplate if and how it can be conquered.  Enjoy ;)

Purposeful Lab
Is Extraterrestrial Life Compatible With Christianity? - with Matthew Tsakanikas

Purposeful Lab

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 26, 2023 64:01 Transcription Available


In light of the recent congressional hearings on UFOs, Dan and Catherine engage in a thought-provoking conversation with theologian, Dr. Matthew Tsakanikas on extraterrestrial life.They delve into the available data on UFOs and contemplate the implications that extraterrestrial life would have on Christianity. Drawing from the wisdom of C.S. Lewis and Thomas Aquinas, this episode provides timely insights you won't want to miss.Read Matthew Tsakanikas' article: Congressional Hearings on UFOs and the Foresight of C.S. LewisHave your call in questions be featured on the podcast: Leave a voicemail at 949-257-2436 Learn more and read articles: https://www.magiscenter.com/purposeful-lab

ONE&ALL Daily Podcast
Abundance of the Holy Spirit | Dru Rodriguez

ONE&ALL Daily Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 20, 2023 4:01


Listen today as we explore the abundance of the Holy Spirit, drawing examples and illustrations from C.S. Lewis' “Space Trilogy”. Don't miss this opportunity to gain a fresh perspective on the Holy Spirit's presence.

The BreakPoint Podcast
The Rise of AI Girlfriends

The BreakPoint Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 13, 2023 5:03


One of the most telling statistics from the General Social Survey, is that Americans are having less sex now than they did in 1980s and 1990s. Young men especially have become less sexually active. Since 2008, the share of men under 30 reporting no sex at all has nearly tripled. This stat is one of the clearest signs of what has turned into a counterintuitive but reliable pattern. The more “liberated” and “progressive” our culture becomes, the less interested in or capable of finding human partners we become. I say, “human partners,” because the decline of sex and the rise of high-tech sex alternatives have gone hand-in-hand. Online pornography use, for instance, has become ubiquitous. The Institute for Family Studies reported in 2022 that a majority of men ages 30-49 say they've watched pornography in the past month. And given the connection between porn and male sexual dysfunctions, this becomes a self-perpetuating cycle. Now, another emerging alternative to real women will likely draw even more men into unreality. British freelance writer Freya India recently highlighted the phenomenon of AI girlfriends, describing an array of new apps like Replika, Intimate, and Dream Girl Builder, which offer men the chance to craft “flawless” digital partners. These apps promise AI-airbrushed pornography. Users customize body type, face shape, and hair color to “create their dream companion,” that will “exceed [their] wildest desires,” and can join them on “hyper-realistic voice calls.” These apps offer not only simulated sex, but also the promise of companionship and emotional attention. As India writes: "Eva AI, for example, not only lets you choose the perfect face and body but customise the perfect personality, offering options like “hot, funny, bold”, “shy, modest, considerate” and “smart, strict, rational”. Create a girlfriend who is judgement-free! Who lets you hang out with your buddies without drama! Who laughs at all your jokes! “Control it all the way you want to,” promises Eva AI. Design a girl who is “always on your side”, says Replika." That last app has been downloaded more than 20 million times, and the industry seems poised to boom, with NBC reporting that “Ads for AI sex workers are flooding Instagram and TikTok.” This isn't an expansion of sexual and romantic freedom or a tool that empowers people to make human connections. Rather, it is a retreat from human connection, a turning away from the very thing for which we are biologically, socially, and emotionally wired. And yet this has always been the end of the road we started on long ago, when we mixed a commitment to hyper-individualism with technology. As Sherry Turkle observed over a decade ago in her book, Alone Together, the process started with living our lives on the internet. Soon we began exploring alternative identities through social media. We crafted these identities and connections to perfection, pruning our “friends lists” to include only those people who pleased us. Before long, we came to prefer these digital relationships on our terms to the messy and often frustrating demands of in-person relationships. Now we have reached the stage at which many would rather cut out humans altogether, opting instead for “drama-free” companions who never have bad days, never grow old, always laugh at our jokes, never ask anything of us, and can be simply “paused” if it suits us. And AI technology is here to fill that demand. What's next? C.S. Lewis was among many science-fiction authors to speculate. In That Hideous Strength, the last book of his Space Trilogy, he describes corrupted inhabitants of the Moon who do not sleep with each other when they marry, but “each lies with a cunningly fashioned image of the other, made to move and to be warm by devilish arts, for real flesh will not please them, they are so dainty … in their dreams of lust.” Perhaps AI girlfriends will eventually become robotic girlfriends, deceiving users into truly giving up on human relationships. But what insanity! We were never made for such nightmares. We were created with bodies for embodied relationships—among them the one-flesh union of marriage, through which God gives children. And at the heart of Christianity is the message that God values our embodied natures so highly that, in Christ, He assumed that nature in order to save us. Our human relationships don't need replacing. They need redemption. As our culture's retreat from humanity reaches new levels of strangeness, the task of the Church may increasingly be to call our neighbors back to being human. Few would have expected Christians to get a reputation for being the “pro-sex people,” but if falling in love with a computer is the alternative, we may be well on our way. This Breakpoint was co-authored by Shane Morris. For more resources to live like a Christian in this cultural moment, go to breakpoint.org. 

The C.S. Lewis podcast
#126 Perelandra: Free will, desire and the Fall

The C.S. Lewis podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 9, 2023 19:30


Alister McGrath unpacks some of the theology within the second book of the Space Trilogy. What was Lewis' understanding of the Fall? What if the Fall hadn't happened? How does he explore the concepts of free will, desire, good, love, truth and demon possession in Perelandra? + Subscribe to The CS Lewis podcast: https://pod.link/1560959545 + For more shows, free ebook and newsletter visit our new website + For online learning https://www.premierunbelievable.com/training + For our Premier Unbelievable? Live events + Support the podcast from the USA + Support the podcast from UK and rest of the world

By-The-Bywater: A Tolkien Podcast
55. There Was a Lot to Remember Here and I Don't Remember Most of It.

By-The-Bywater: A Tolkien Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 2, 2023 56:28


Jared, Oriana and Ned discuss Ned's choice of topic: The Notion Club Papers. Written in 1945 during a creative pause in completing the final third of The Lord of the Rings, The Notion Club Papers found Tolkien on familiar ground, creating a set of purported notes from regular club meetings among a group of Oxford professors much like himself and his fellow members of the famed Inklings. While not advancing beyond a couple of drafts and far from complete, the papers tell first of a professor who, due to a discussion on how spacecraft would work in science fiction, avers he has himself been able to travel in dreams through the reaches of space and meet other minds before returning to earth. One initially skeptical member over time then tells of his own unusual dream experiences, building up to a sudden moment during a massive storm where he invokes the language and imagery of the downfall of Númenor, in much the same fashion as The Lost Road did nearly a decade prior; related manuscripts found Tolkien revisiting the Númenorean story in particular, as well as speaking in detail about his invented language for the society. How does the novel's complicated structure work creatively, if at all, and is there something there that could have been developed further in later drafts? What does it mean that Tolkien seemed most at ease exploring the possible sources of his own creativity in such a second-hand fashion, even if the means by which he did so ended up being incredibly insular? What were the contemporary sources and inspirations for this effort among his fellow Inklings and beyond, and are there any parallels he acknowledges or, perhaps notably, ignores? And who wouldn't want to talk over the evident problems of medieval life while getting a haircut from Norman Keeps?Show Notes.Jared's doodle. This is why it's important to check the insulation on your windows.And indeed the WGA strike did end soon after we recorded our episode. SAG strike still ongoing for the moment!More from the Lord of the Rings musical revival, and who knows where it will go…Amazon's plans for ads for Prime Video, great. Lovely. Couldn't agree with that more. Yup.News about the Tales Of The Shire game and we are very curious indeed!Yeah that whole Warren Beatty Dick Tracy thing.There are indeed skeletons in Stardew Valley. (The upcoming game Ned mentioned is Wytchwood.)The Notion Club Papers! We recommend at least a little caffeine before reading.Knowing a little about the Inklings will not hurt at all when it comes to the Notion Club Papers.Socratic dialogue can indeed be rollicking.Our episode on “A Secret Vice.”Thomas Pynchon is out there and is happy not to be recognized.That Hideous Strength concludes the Space Trilogy by taking a Charles Williams direction (though as Jared notes, not very successfully).If you haven't seen Inspector Morse just ask a relative who still watches PBS a lot. (Because they've likely been watching Endeavour.)Interstellar is trippy, man. (In a formal Nolany way, but still.)The Great Storm of 1987 as reported on UK TV.“The Call of Cthulhu” is probably Lovecraft's most well known story. And boy does it have problems too!C. S. Lewis's “The Dark Tower” is a weirdly fascinating fragment, while An Experiment With Time by J. W. Dunne was a reference point for both Lewis and Tolkien in these works. Ringu aka The Ring, which of course has nothing to do with a certain other ring. We think.Monty Python's Constitutional Peasants, one of their most perfect moments.David Lindsay's A Voyage to Arcturus Tolkien definitely liked. The Worm Ouroboros by E. R. Eddison, rather more mixed. (And relatedly our episode on Sir Gawain and the Green Knight.)The Grink! (RIP Twitter, culturally at least, but Bluesky is starting to gel more.)Per Ned's closing comment, Roger Zelazny's A Night In The Lonesome October has become a seasonal classic of sorts. (And the Gahan Wilson illustrations inside are a delight.)Support By-The-Bywater through our network, Megaphonic, on Patreon and hang out with us in a friendly little Discord!

The Two Tongues Podcast
S3E41 - Kyle's Back Baby

The Two Tongues Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 30, 2023 120:57


In this episode Kyle and Chris reunite after a long hiatus. Two Tongues once again! We talk C.S. Lewis' Space Trilogy, touch on Russell Brand and Danny Masterson, drink a few beers and be merry. Join us won't you?

The Two Tongues Podcast
S3E39 - C.S. Lewis in Space - Out of the Silent Planet

The Two Tongues Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 14, 2023 89:42


In this episode we discuss the first book in C.S. Lewis' little-known "Space Trilogy" titled--Out of the Silent Planet. We discuss Lewis' relationship with JRR Tolkien and their united effort to publish powerful myths for the modern age. I treat this book as a fairytale and analysis it Von Franz-style to uncloak the religious and mythological symbols Lewis hid, as he's known to do, in the story, plot and characters. Is this sci-fi story archetypal? Does it provide insights to Lewis' understanding of Christianity? You tell me. Enjoy ;)

By-The-Bywater: A Tolkien Podcast
54. The Pleasures of the Robot Dancehall.

By-The-Bywater: A Tolkien Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 4, 2023 55:48


Jared, Oriana and Ned discuss Jared's choice of topic: The Lost Road. In 1937, Tolkien agreed to C.S. Lewis's suggestion to try to write the kind of stories they enjoyed but didn't see good examples of to their liking. Lewis's efforts turned into what has been termed the Space Trilogy, starting with Out Of The Silent Planet. Tolkien's goal was a time travel story called The Lost Road, but outside of a few chapters and some potential outlines, it never got any further, with the success of The Hobbit and his resulting focus of attention being The Lord Of The Rings stopping any further development. It was eventually published in the Christopher Tolkien-edited series The History of Middle-earth, and was revealed to be a fascinating if very incomplete early conception of what Númenor was, including some of its key protagonists and antagonists at the time of its fall. How much does the story's self-evident autobiographical angle play into how we should regard the surviving chapters, and what do his choices about how to refocus or rewrite the story of his own life suggest in turn? What import do the specifically metaphysical elements of the story have for both Tolkien and his own conception of not only the legendarium but how he regarded language? Building off our previous discussion of the specifically Númenorean chapter in our episode on The Fall of Númenor, what is it about that sequence that is so unusual for Tolkien's general writing on Middle-earth, and how does it fit within the larger context of this story as it is told, or as much of it as we have? And finally, have you all pre-ordered Jared's book yet? Really, you should.Show Notes.Jared's doodle. I mean the whole skull thing is just plain rude.Jared's novel The West Passage is up for preorders! And you can see the cover art there as well, done by Kuri Huang – check out her work!Elliott Bay Book Company is indeed a great Seattle bookstore, check it out if you're ever there.Deadline's report about the rescheduled release of The War Of The Rohirrim, along with TheOneRing.net's further report also noting the potential production crunch that had been previously looming. (As a compare and contrast, here's Vulture's piece on the production nightmare of Spider-Man: Across The Spider-Verse and Screenrant's summary of a paywalled Insider article on the much more humane Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Mutant Mayhem production.)A summary of Embracer's money sillies. Well well well.The musical revival does seem to have landed rather well! Here's a fun little promo video, an engaging video review from an attendee, and TheOneRing.net's own report. (And of course, once more, here's our own episode on the original production.)The Lost Road! It's a curio, that's for sure, but an interesting one even in all its flaws and lacunae.C.S. Lewis's space trilogy. It's interesting…if a little uneven, let's say.As noted at various points, the Númenor chapter was already discussed on its own a bit in our episode on The Fall of Númenor. Want to know something about the Lombardic language? Well there's always Wikipedia…As for Middle-earth metaphysics, our episodes on The Nature of Middle-earth and the Valar are there for you!The Worm Ouroboros with the framing device with Lessingham. A common trope!Sycld Shefing! He got around.Corn? Maize? Here's a little more about it.So the actual Alboin was…not pleasant. And you better believe the skull thing was known by later artists.Kim Stanley Robinson's The Years of Rice and Salt, if you'd like to know more. (And then there's Harry Turtledove and then etc.)Our “A Secret Vice” episode, considering Tolkien's compulsion to create languages.Support By-The-Bywater and our network, Megaphonic. Thank you if you do.

The C.S. Lewis podcast
#119 Has The Space Trilogy stood the test of time?

The C.S. Lewis podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 21, 2023 15:16


Alister McGrath concludes his introduction to Lewis' Space Trilogy by exploring parallels with The Chronicles of Narnia. He offers tips for getting into these three books, speculates on why they haven't been turned into films and shares his favourite moment in the trilogy. + Subscribe to The CS Lewis podcast: https://pod.link/1560959545 + For more shows, free ebook and newsletter visit our new website + For online learning https://www.premierunbelievable.com/training + For our Premier Unbelievable? Live events + Support the podcast from the USA + Support the podcast from UK and rest of the world

Epiclesis
Oil and Water and Unity

Epiclesis

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 20, 2023 32:52


Oil and water don't mix. So how can they be symbols of unity? Join Pastor Chris for a look at Psalm 133 in a continuing series. And along the way we managed to talk about C.S. Lewis and the second book in his remarkable "Space Trilogy" titled Perelandra. One day there will be a new heavens and a new earth. Until then, we believers must be oil and water and engage in the only act truly capable of bringing about unity. If you'd like a written transcript of the sermon, please click here.

The BreakPoint Podcast
UFOs and the Power of Worldview

The BreakPoint Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 15, 2023 4:15


As if the last few years were not strange enough, the United States Congress recently held hearings on the subject of UFOs. As NBC News reported, numerous claims were made by those called before the subcommittee, including by former military or intelligence personnel.  Perhaps the most surprising aspect of this otherwise earth-shattering story was how it has largely been greeted, at least on social media, with a collective “meh.” If so much information was kept hush-hush for so many years, why the sudden transparency now? Isn't this just another chapter in red herrings tossed out to distract us from what's “really” going on?   As tempting as it is to think of these hearings as an unaired episode of The X-Files, the virtue of stories like this, and of the whole genre of sci-fi, is that they bring up questions about the deeper things of life. Who are we? Are we alone in the universe? What would it mean if we weren't? What makes us special as human beings?   Noted sci-fi writer Arthur C. Clarke famously said, “Two possibilities exist: either we are alone in the Universe or we are not. Both are equally terrifying.” Religious people are less likely than others to believe that aliens exist. Or, if they think something is “out there,” they are less likely to think of extra terrestrials as E.T. as they are to think of them as demons trying to deceive us for one reason or another. On the other hand, those with a materialist outlook tend to see the world as just a “pale blue dot” in the heavens and humanity as nothing more than the consequence of chance and chaos. In fact, it's become almost an article of materialist faith that if we are here, someone else must be too.  All of which suggests that there's more to how we view these matters than what we have seen or not seen. For instance, despite being supposedly a planet-wide concern, nearly all UFOs sighted tend to show up in the English-speaking world. Or, as someone on Reddit noted, “they sure love the US.”    A similar phenomenon can be seen in the variations of “bigfoot” stories, depending on from what region they are. The stories out of the Pacific Northwest tend to resemble a Harry and the Hendersons vibe. Sure, the creature might seem a bit scary but, in the end, they are one with nature, like a kind of extra furry Bill Walton. The stories out of Texas are all about these super aggressive creatures that are ready to fight and kill and steal your children. Tennessee bigfoots, on the other hand, are just downright neighborly, knocking on doors to ask for some garlic. These together suggest it's clear that, even when it comes to urban legends and outer space, the stories we tell ourselves make a big difference in what we see in the world.  Anyone who has read C.S. Lewis' Space Trilogy can tell you that the great apologist used his own imagination to tell wonderful stories where very plausible aliens lived and interacted with his human heroes. The inhabitants of Mars and Venus, or as Lewis named them, “Malacandra” and “Perelandra,” were fellow creatures born of the artistry and care of the same God we encounter in the Bible.  Yet, in one of his last books, he noted the subjective element in people's belief in the extraordinary. Right at the end of his study of the medieval worldview, he wrote:   "Fifty years ago, if you had asked an astronomer about “life on other worlds,” he was apt to be totally agnostic about it or even stress its improbability. We are now told that in so vast a universe stars that have planets and planets that have inhabitants must occur times without number. Yet no compulsive evidence is to hand. But is it irrelevant that in between the old opinion and the new we have had the vast proliferation of “science fiction” and the beginnings of space-travel in real life?"   What we believe about alien life and other mysteries says more about our beliefs, or what Charles Taylor called our “social imaginaries,” than it does about their existence. The culture around us affects our view of the world in profound ways. Our worldview is a pair of belief “glasses” that help us understand the nature of reality, but it can also be a kind of blinder, too.   This doesn't mean we are completely lost in the fog of our own precognitive assumptions, only that we should follow Francis Schaeffer's advice about checking our presuppositions “after a careful consideration of which worldview is true.”  This Breakpoint was co-authored by Dr. Timothy D. Padgett. For more resources to live like a Christian in this cultural moment, go to breakpoint.org.

The C.S. Lewis podcast
#118 Evil, evolution and theological reflection in The Space Trilogy

The C.S. Lewis podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 14, 2023 14:30


Alister McGrath explores some of the theological themes within Lewis' trilogy, such as incarnation, atonement and the problem of evil. How did Lewis view the relationship between science and religion? What did he think about evolution? How did he critique certain worldviews through his fiction? + Subscribe to The CS Lewis podcast: https://pod.link/1560959545 + For more shows, free ebook and newsletter visit our new website + For online learning https://www.premierunbelievable.com/training + For our Premier Unbelievable? Live events + Support the podcast from the USA + Support the podcast from UK and rest of the world

The C.S. Lewis podcast
#117 Vivisection, mental health, racism and sexism

The C.S. Lewis podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 7, 2023 12:57


We dive into some of the important issues explored in Lewis' Space Trilogy. Why was he so vehemently opposed to animal experimentation? What would Lewis say to those experiencing mental health struggles today? Plus, Alister McGrath responds to the accusation that CS Lewis was sexist and racist. + Subscribe to The CS Lewis podcast: https://pod.link/1560959545 + For more shows, free ebook and newsletter visit our new website + For online learning https://www.premierunbelievable.com/training + For our Premier Unbelievable? Live events + Support the podcast from the USA + Support the podcast from UK and rest of the world

The C.S. Lewis podcast
#116 Did CS Lewis believe in aliens?

The C.S. Lewis podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 31, 2023 14:57


Alister McGrath continues to explore questions raised by Lewis' Space Trilogy - were any characters inspired by his "strange" Oxford colleagues? Do we need to understand Medieval renaissance literature in order to read these books? Who is the narrator? What does Lewis think about extra-terrestrial life?,,+ Subscribe to The CS Lewis podcast: https://pod.link/1560959545,+ For more shows, free ebook and newsletter visit our new website,+ For online learning https://www.premierunbelievable.com/training,+ For our Premier Unbelievable? Live events,+ Support the podcast from the USA

Christian Nerds Unite
Is CS Lewis' Space Trilogy An Allegory?

Christian Nerds Unite

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 31, 2023 46:28


Hi Guys! Ricky Pope here and this week on the Christian Nerds Unite Podcast, we continue our conversation with Christiana Hale author of Deeper Heaven: A Reader's Guide to C. S. Lewis's Ransom Trilogy sometimes referred to as the Space Trilogy. We discuss lots of ideas that the book series deals with including medieval cosmoloty and faith. (Out of the Silent Planet, Perelandra, That Hideous Strength)Get Christiana's Book Deeper HeavenGet The Ransom TrilogyFollow Christiana on social MediaFacebookInstagramCheck out the Christian Nerd HQ Podcast Network! Episodes from member podcasts release Monday through Friday! Follow @ChristianNerdHQ on all the social networks!Monday: Christian Nerds Unite PodcastTuesday: Tatooine Sons: A Pop Culture PodcastWednesday: Fangirling Over JesusThursday: The Reverend and the ReprobateFriday: Speaking NerdyThis show is part of the Spreaker Prime Network, if you are interested in advertising on this podcast, contact us at https://www.spreaker.com/show/5841620/advertisement

The C.S. Lewis podcast
#115 Why did no one want to publish Lewis' Space Trilogy?

The C.S. Lewis podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 24, 2023 10:28


Professor Alister McGrath looks at the intended audience of CS Lewis' Space Trilogy and explores some of the influences behind the books, including JRR Tolkien and Charles Williams. + Subscribe to The CS Lewis podcast: https://pod.link/1560959545 + For more shows, free ebook and newsletter visit our new website + For online learning https://www.premierunbelievable.com/training + For our Premier Unbelievable? Live events + Support the podcast from the USA

Christian Nerds Unite
Why Should You Read CS Lewis' Space Trilogy?

Christian Nerds Unite

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 24, 2023 45:23


Hi Guys! Ricky Pope here and this week on the Christian Nerds Unite Podcast, I talk with Christiana Hale author of Deeper Heaven: A Reader's Guide to C. S. Lewis's Ransom Trilogy sometimes referred to as the Space Trilogy. We discuss lots of ideas that the book series deals with including medieval cosmoloty and faith. (Out of the Silent Planet, Perelandra, That Hideous Strength)Get Christiana's Book Deeper HeavenGet The Ransom TrilogyFollow Christiana on social MediaFacebookInstagramCheck out the Christian Nerd HQ Podcast Network! Episodes from member podcasts release Monday through Friday! Follow @ChristianNerdHQ on all the social networks!Monday: Christian Nerds Unite PodcastTuesday: Tatooine Sons: A Pop Culture PodcastWednesday: Fangirling Over JesusThursday: The Reverend and the ReprobateFriday: Speaking NerdyThis show is part of the Spreaker Prime Network, if you are interested in advertising on this podcast, contact us at https://www.spreaker.com/show/5841620/advertisement

The C.S. Lewis podcast
#114 An introduction to The Space Trilogy

The C.S. Lewis podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 17, 2023 16:04


​Many people don't even realise CS Lewis wrote science fiction, much less have perused these three colossal volumes. So, why read them? In the first episode of our brand new series on Lewis' Space Trilogy, Professor Alister McGrath looks at when and why Out of the Silent Planet, Perelandra and That Hideous Strength were created and how they can impact our lives today. + Subscribe to The CS Lewis podcast: https://pod.link/1560959545 + For more shows, free ebook and newsletter visit our new website + For online learning https://www.premierunbelievable.com/training + For our Premier Unbelievable? Live events + Support the podcast from the USA

MYSTICAL AMERICAN PATRIOTS SOCIETY
S3E013: The Eternal Conspiracy

MYSTICAL AMERICAN PATRIOTS SOCIETY

Play Episode Listen Later May 29, 2023 150:18


The Prime Directive and Yosemite (The Bison Thing), Indian white supremacists, the gang tries to buy some Nazi flags, the Eternal Conspiracy as demonstrated in That Hideous Strength and the rest of C.S. Lewis's Space Trilogy, J.R.R. Tolkien's take on conspiracy, dragons, the Technical Distraction, Sumo gives a physics lesson and Kavi visits a dinosaur museum.Shownotes:The Yellowstone Tweet (now with added context)Trinity Moravian Church in North Carolina purchased nearly $3.3 million of local residents' medical debt for just $15,048The Space Trilogy by C.S. LewisLinks:MAPSOC.ORGAlternate Current RadioSumo's SubstackThe Saint Nicholas ProjectDonate HERE!Follow us on Twitter: Sumo / Ghostack

Strangers and Aliens: Science Fiction & Fantasy from a Christian Perspective
THE DARK TOWER (C.S. Lewis’ Space Trilogy Part 4) – SA405

Strangers and Aliens: Science Fiction & Fantasy from a Christian Perspective

Play Episode Listen Later May 26, 2023 66:06


It's a mystery in the canon of C.S. Lewis' library. The unfinished manuscript that may or may not have been written by C.S. Lewis. It's created controversy. It's created confusion. And it's a possible glimpse into a path not taken. This would have been the sequel to OUT OF THE SILENT PLANET . . . […]

cs lewis dark tower space trilogy out of the silent planet
Jay's Analysis
The True History of England & The Archetypal Meaning of Robin Hood - Scott Mannion & Jay Dyer

Jay's Analysis

Play Episode Listen Later May 15, 2023 78:33


Scott Manion joins me to discuss his research into the real history of Albion, without any of the dross of w0ke nonsense. Since my background is Clan Maxwell and Clan Scott, I thought this would be a great topic to cover since we recently touched on this with CS Lewis' interest in true English history in the third of his Space Trilogy.

The Lutheran Ladies' Lounge from KFUO Radio
Next Book Club Pick: 'That Hideous Strength' by C. S. Lewis

The Lutheran Ladies' Lounge from KFUO Radio

Play Episode Listen Later May 9, 2023 8:49


In this excerpt from their May 5 book club recap episode, the Ladies (re)announce their next pick for the Lutheran Ladies' Book Club: C.S. Lewis's That Hideous Strength.    From the publisher's description:   The final book in C.S. Lewis's acclaimed science fiction Space Trilogy, which follows Out of the Silent Planet and Perelandra, concludes the adventures of the matchless Dr. Ransom.    Now, the dark forces that have been repulsed in Out of the Silent Planet and Perelandra are massed for an assault on planet Earth. Word is that the mighty wizard Merlin has come back to the land of the living after many centuries, holding the key to ultimate power for the force that can find him and bend him to its will. A sinister technocratic organization is gaining power throughout Europe, with a plan to “recondition” society, and it is up to Ransom and his friends to stop this threat by applying age-old wisdom to a new universe dominated by science. The two groups struggle to a climactic resolution that brings the Space Trilogy to a magnificent, crashing conclusion.    Written during the dark hours immediately before and during World War II, C.S. Lewis's Space Trilogy stands alongside such works as Albert Camus's The Plague and George Orwell's 1984 as a timeless classic, beloved by succeeding generations as much for the sheer wonder of its storytelling as for the significance of its moral concerns.  Click to learn more about C. S. Lewis's Space Trilogy, to see a list of previous Lutheran Ladies' Book Club picks and runners up, or to revisit past online book club events in the Lutheran Ladies' Lounge Facebook group.  Connect with the Lutheran Ladies on social media in The Lutheran Ladies' Lounge Facebook discussion group (facebook.com/groups/LutheranLadiesLounge) and on Instagram @lutheranladieslounge. Follow Sarah (@hymnnerd), Rachel (@rachbomberger), Erin (@erinaltered), and Bri (@grrrzevske) on Instagram! Sign up for the Lutheran Ladies' Lounge monthly e-newsletter here, and email the Ladies at lutheranladies@kfuo.org.

Wait it Gets Better
186-WIGB-Season-20-Sci-Fi Chakra Ep-5

Wait it Gets Better

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 27, 2023 40:53


Wait it Gets Better is an Improvisational Storytelling Podcast    Story Elements: Levi: Unique Artifact Reed:Unique Weapon Seth: Wild Card   Questions? Comments?  Waititgetsbettercast@gmail.com

The Lutheran Ladies' Lounge from KFUO Radio
Next Book Club Pick: George MacDonald's 'The Princess and the Goblin'

The Lutheran Ladies' Lounge from KFUO Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 15, 2023 14:29


In this excerpt from their February 10 book club recap episode, the Ladies announce their next pick for the Lutheran Ladies' Book Club: George MacDonald's The Princess and the Goblin.   From one of many publisher descriptions:  "When Princess Irene and her nursemaid stay out too late one night and are chased home by goblins, a young miner boy called Curdie comes to their rescue. So begins a fantastic adventure in which Irene and Curdie must try to stop a goblin invasion, helped by Irene's mysterious great-great-grandmother. This much-loved tale was a personal favourite of C.S. Lewis and J.R.R. Tolkien." Looking ahead, the Ladies also announce their upcoming summer book club read: book three of C. S. Lewis's renowned Space Trilogy, That Hideous Strength.   Click to learn more about George MacDonald's The Princess and the Goblin and C. S. Lewis's Space Trilogy, to see a list of previous Lutheran Ladies' Book Club picks and runners up, or to revisit past online book club events in the Lutheran Ladies' Lounge Facebook group.  Connect with the Lutheran Ladies on social media in The Lutheran Ladies' Lounge Facebook discussion group (facebook.com/groups/LutheranLadiesLounge) and on Instagram @lutheranladieslounge. Follow Sarah (@hymnnerd), Rachel (@rachbomberger), Erin (@erinaltered), and Bri (@grrrzevske) on Instagram! Sign up for the Lutheran Ladies' Lounge monthly e-newsletter here, and email the Ladies at lutheranladies@kfuo.org.

Fringe Radio Network
Stairs In The Woods - Unrefined Podcast

Fringe Radio Network

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 12, 2023 41:40


The two hosts of the Unrefined podcast discuss their vision for the podcast, which is to explore the world beyond the veil of the physical world. They hope to discuss various topics from a biblical worldview and to also include guests on the show. The conversation is about how the world is a strange place and how they are trying to find their place in it. They talk about how they want to explore the weird through a biblical worldview and how the further they have gone down this rabbit hole, the weirder it has gotten. They mention how they are both fans of Joe Rogan and Michael Heiser and how they are trying to make their place in the world. Lindsy has been listening to the Sisters of Mercy and Desmond Doom recently, and is reading Lewis's Space Trilogy. They are reading the trilogy mainly because they are interested in the last book's dystopian, trans-humanist future. They discuss the book First Enoch, which is a book about the pre-flood character Enoch. The book is unique and fresh, and the speaker is also reading a companion book to it. Enoch is an important book because it is quoted by Jude and referenced by Peter.Timestamps0:00:11The Unrefined Podcast: A Focus on the Seen and the Unseen0:03:35The Weird World We Live In:0:05:07Desmond Doom's Surf Goth Album and Lewis's Space Trilogy0:07:23The following is a conversation between the hosts discussing the book, First Enoch, 0:09:58What We've Been Reading and Listening to Lately0:14:11Predictive Programming in Movies and TV0:15:34The Stairs in the Woods: A Fascinating Phenomenon0:19:27The Stairs in the Woods: A Fascinating Phenomenon0:22:35Conversation between the hosts discussing a recent article about a search and rescue team finding a set of stairs in a remote location.0:24:22The Stairs in the Woods: A Supernatural Phenomenon0:29:16Skeptics and the Supernatural0:31:22The Supernatural Stairs: A Conversation0:36:31The thin space concept in relation to the stairs in the woods.0:38:35The Reenchantment of the World:

Unknown Friends
S3E24: That Hideous Strength (Space Trilogy, Bk. 3), by C. S. Lewis

Unknown Friends

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 1, 2023 29:01


That Hideous Strength, the last volume of Lewis's Space Trilogy, takes an unexpected turn after the first two books and explores a philosophical argument Lewis had previously expounded in The Abolition of Man. Nonetheless, the novel is primarily about human relationships, especially marriage. I'm Rachelle Ferguson of Kittywham Productions, and Unknown Friends is my book review podcast. Visit the Unknown Friends homepage at www.kittywhamproductions.com/podcast. To learn more about me and my work as a Christian playwright, explore my website at www.kittywhamproductions.com. You can get in touch with me by email at kittywham@gmail.com. Thank you for listening!

Book Fare
Ep 43 - Guest Christiana Hale talks CS Lewis, Out of the Silent Planet, and Imagination

Book Fare

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 29, 2022 53:00


This is a must listen for any CS Lewis, Narnia, or Space Trilogy fan, or for anyone just curious about classic literature and the history of thought. Christiana Hale is a CS Lewis scholar and author of Deeper Heaven: A Reader's Guide to CS Lewis's Ransom Trilogy. Christiana talks about some of the basics of Medieval thought that help us see what Lewis is trying to accomplish in these books, and in other works like The Chronicles of Narnia. She also talks about the role stories play in shaping our imaginations and how we can be an active part of making our minds what we want them to be.

The Brothers Zahl
Episode 9: Creativity

The Brothers Zahl

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 8, 2022 87:12


This one could also be called Freedom. Or possibly Fruit. Maybe even Living. Recommended and referenced resources include: Quotations: Bird by Bird (https://mbird.com/literature/anne-lamott-on-dropping-whiny-guilt-mongering-voices-into-mason-jars/) by Anne Lamott, Calvin and Hobbes (https://www.gocomics.com/calvinandhobbes/1992/05/21), "Ode to Failure" (https://mbird.com/poetry/ode-to-failure-excerpts-allen-ginsburg/) by Allen Ginsberg Books and Literature: Young Eliot (https://amzn.to/3PcuyeQ) by Robert Crawford, Show Your Work (https://amzn.to/3NOepuX) by Austin Kleon, Bird by Bird (https://amzn.to/3uyoYvD) by Anne Lamott, The Space Trilogy (https://amzn.to/3NRXtnk) by CS Lewis Movies and Podcasts: Get Back (2021) dir. Peter Jackson, The Well of Sound (https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-well-of-sound/id1435720647) Songs: “Problem Child” by The Beach Boys, “Walking on Thin Ice” by Yoko Ono, “Underwater” by Harry Thuman, “I'm so Afraid” by Fleetwood Mac, “Tri-Tra-Trallula” by Joachim Will, “A Ist Wieder Da” by Robert Gorl, “Learn How to Fail” by The Replacements, “The Fear in My Heart” by Luc Van Acker, “Can You Picture That?” By Electric Mayhem, “Xanadu” by Olivia Newton-John, “Seven Nation Army” by The White Stripes, “Jazzburger” by Loukas Thanos, “Reader Meet Author” by Morrissey, “Deadlines and Commitments” by The Killers, “Manhattan Jungle” by Per Tjernberg, “Perfumed Garden” by Rah Band Click here (https://open.spotify.com/playlist/2ZEDD3kbdFeuBjrMIhWi1V?si=058bfc64dedc426d) to listen to a playlist of the available tracks on Spotify.

The Great Books
Episode 223: 'Perelandra' by C. S. Lewis

The Great Books

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 12, 2022 28:34 Very Popular


John J. Miller is joined by Monika Hilder of Trinity Western University to discuss the second book in C. S. Lewis's Space Trilogy, 'Perelandra.'

The Great Books
Episode 222: 'Out of the Silent Planet' by C. S. Lewis

The Great Books

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 5, 2022 29:50 Very Popular


John J. Miller is joined by David Whalen of Hillsdale College to discuss the first book of C. S. Lewis's Space Trilogy, 'Out of the Silent Planet.'