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Michael D. Aeschliman

George Bernard Shaw
Photo: George Bernard Shaw in 1936, via Wikimedia Commons.

Shaw, Scientism, and Darwinism

George Bernard Shaw’s positive criterion by which to measure and ridicule folly and vice was fatally ambiguous, eclectic, and inconstant. Read More ›
G._K._Chesterton_at_work
Photo: G. K. Chesterton, via Wikimedia Commons.

Darwinism as the Root Problem of Modernity

Shaw and Chesterton believed that the acceptance of Darwinism made it impossible to resist social Darwinism, plutocracy, imperialism, racialism, and militarism. Read More ›
George_Bernard_Shaw_notebook
Photo: George Bernard Shaw in 1914, via Wikimedia Commons.

Shaw, Chesterton, and the Critique of Darwinism

Chesterton was a friend of Shaw but also an ideological opponent, who often debated with him on public stages. Read More ›
C. S. Lewis

That Hideous Strength — C. S. Lewis’s Fantasia of Consciousness at 75

The novel is a narrative, fictional version of a philosophical anatomy of the satanic dimension and implication of much modern history from 1914 onwards. Read More ›

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