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Examples
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As CS Lewis wrote in "Mere Christianity," when we speak of morals we usually mean something more than an opinion; we mean something that people ought to do whether they want to or not and whether they see the benefit of it or not.
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As he correctly points out, C.S. Lewis suggested this idea in Mere Christianity and The Problem of Pain.
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As he correctly points out, C.S. Lewis suggested this idea in Mere Christianity and The Problem of Pain.
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Pez, here is what Dembski wrote on the subject of interventions in Mere creation: science, faith & intelligent design, p. 301:
Blast From the Past 2010
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As he correctly points out, C.S. Lewis suggested this idea in Mere Christianity and The Problem of Pain.
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Olegt: Pez, here is what Dembski wrote on the subject of interventions in Mere creation: science, faith & intelligent design, p. 301:
Blast From the Past 2010
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D.G.D.: Regarding healthy romance, C.S. Lewis in Mere Christianity makes a helpful distinction between what he calls love and being in love: the former is an act, and the latter is mainly an emotional fixation or attachment.
Archive 2008-12-01 2008
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D.G.D.: Regarding healthy romance, C.S. Lewis in Mere Christianity makes a helpful distinction between what he calls love and being in love: the former is an act, and the latter is mainly an emotional fixation or attachment.
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Or, as C.S. Lewis put it in 'Mere Christianity': A cold, self-righteous prig who regularly attends church on Sunday may be further from heaven than a prostitute.
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This time, Dembski gives a source for his "quote" – Ratzch's original article in "Mere Creation".
The Memory Hole 2005
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