[OK my shrew friends, this article is a bit off the beaten path here on Shrew Views—it is very long. So get a cup of coffee and settle in for a lengthy read (about 20 minutes). But it is worth it. The Lewis quotes I use in this article are from the full Space Trilogy text which you can find here. Enjoy! I hope you end up reading the books! Wonderful reading!] Many of us know C.S. Lewis from his popular children’s series The Chronicles of Narnia. But Lewis’ contribution to the world goes far beyond that. Amongst others he wrote The Screwtape Letters, The Abolition of Man, A Grief Observed, The Problem of Pain, Mere Christianity, and the book I will primarily be discussing here, That Hideous Strength which was the third instalment in his Space Trilogy. Shrew Views is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber. Just to whet your appetite and satisfy the possible question you are asking, “what does this article have to do with Shrew Views?” let me immediately offer a quote from The Abolition of Man:
Now is the correlation to our current situation clear? I have been familiar with Lewis most of my life. I was about 7 when I found, on my mother’s rather eclectic bookshelf, a very early edition of That Hideous Strength. To this day I have no idea why this particular book fascinated me so. The old grey cloth covered volume just had a mysterious quality to it. I was about 25 when I finally read it, and since then have probably re-read the trilogy three more times, the last time just recently. I was astounded by the ability of Lewis to whack the nail on the head so efficiently with his insights on man’s (evil man) proclivity and passion in his effort to destroy nature and thus ascend to godhood. “Control” is a more appropriate word than “destroy”—but through control destruction is guaranteed. I found the above quote as I read through The Abolition of Man after reading That Hideous Strength and saw how correlated the world view in the trilogy was with Lewis’ own world view. It is uncanny how “with it” he was, and much like Orwell, he seemed to have a sixth sense for predicting the future. Lewis concerns himself in That Hideous Strength with the evils of technology and the attempts at transhumanism at a time (1945) when the working transistor had not even been invented (1947). Technology’s advance on society was just beginning after the jump in the evolution of “all things technical” most wars provide—money is always available when its need is in efficiently killing people in wars. Lewis was obsessed with “God’s way” which largely meant “Natures way.” In many of his books, evil, or Satan, was personified as men trying to achieve power through his mastery over nature—from a simple mastery of death and destruction to creatures large and small, to an effort to wipe out nature entirely, along with its ugly inconveniences (including what has later been labeled “useless eaters”). Here is the next quote I will offer (there will be many) from That Hideous Strength itself. This is a conversation between one of the protagonist’s staff and the Director (the Director is the “Christ figure” character that leads the “war” against evil).
Chilling, eh? Isn’t this exactly what we are dealing with now with the WEF’s desire to rule the world, to chattel all humans who are not part of the elite, and eventually become “trans” human themselves, and live forever? Yes, a stretch to many, but I think to most of you reading this it is a true reality, or at least a distinct possibility. Lewis’ primitive version of transhumanism, by preserving a severed head as the supreme being, is only the obvious precursor to brain inserted microchips and nano-bots coursing through the body, replacing any God given flesh and blood with man-made technology resulting in a man-made god at best. An eerie premonition indeed. Maybe before continuing I should let you in on a brief synopsis of this story. It is ultimately a good vs. evil “fairytale for grown-ups” as Lewis himself described it. The primary characters are NICE, a “sort of” corporation which houses the various men, and women behind the cause for evil. (The women include “The Fairy” (Ms Hardcastle) and her personal minions. Hardcastle is the head of the brutal private police force.) Other central characters include Dr. Ransom’s (The Director) group that lives in a large mansion a bit of a distance from NICE called St. Anne’s. House guests include a handful of human “Freedom Fighters,” a partially trained bear, a few mice, and other assorted animals. A battle of sorts ensues between these two groups which includes the resurrection of Merlin of King Arthur’s time, the aforementioned tame bear, an assortment of wild animals, and of course, magic. Obviously there is more to it than this. The trilogy is comprised of three books, Out of the Silent Planet, Perelandra, and That Hideous Strength. The full story includes space travel to Mars and Venus and the revelation of a spiritual ecosystem that involves all of the planets in the solar system, angels, gods, and strange “aliens” Ransom encounters in his spectacular travels. It is all quite intriguing, and I encourage all of you to read it. A quote that falls on page 337 of the text (the one I used for this included all three books with pages numbered consecutively) sets up the whole thing. This is a NICE character speaking, a man called Feverstone, so it is coming from the evil side:
This is a plea from the dark side to allow Science to recondition humans to transcend their limitations imposed on them by God’s Nature. Possibly when Lewis refers to Science (capitalized no less) he is referring to the recent advances in his time (the 1940’s) in nuclear fusion which resulted in the atomic bomb—something no human being had seen the likes of since the beginning of time (according to conventional history). Ironically, Lewis never mentions nuclear fusion in his book. Considering the publication of That Hideous Strength was in 1945, it is possible Lewis had not even been aware of the bomb since it was not released on Hiroshima until August 6, 1945. In an essay Lewis wrote in 1948 (On Living in an Atomic Age) he actually downplays the then current fear of atomic weapons, which seems odd if he was concerned at all about science wiping out humanity—at least not seemingly concerned about nuclear science. Whatever the reason, Lewis clearly implies that Science and the unconscious, and the irresponsible advances of Science, presented a problem to humanity in That Hideous Strength. Here is another gem from his The Abolition of Man, and sheds light on the above statement:
And:
Whew! It really wasn’t science in general that was an issue for Lewis, but more the “power over nature,” technology, nuclear science, “machines” etc that he had his beef with. In the following quote he focuses on the destruction of nature, thus elevating humans to a level of isolated and independent perfection, Godhood. This is spoken by one of the members of NICE—a scientist:
This idea is expanded further with the following excerpt. Genocide is obviously inferred. A theme very present in today’s world:
Here we move into the human side of things. Clearly it is the intention of the malevolent faction to reduce human kind to controlled slaves, or to exterminate them entirely. Where have we heard this before? Did C. S. Lewis have a time machine? And how do they describe the “elite”—those who are the ones implementing this New World Order?
And…
The transhuman elite is described throughout this text, devoid of humanism, devoid of any connection to nature at all, an organism that is not an organism but is ideally all metal, glass, chemicals, and other man-made materials. Lewis must have struggled with this concept as there was nothing that existed in his time that could even remotely fit what was in his imaginative mind. The closest he could get to describing what he envisioned was a severed head kept alive through tubes, cables, and contraptions that filled several laboratory rooms. This he could conceive of, but not the development of nano-particles and microelectronics—this was beyond him. As said before, the transistor had not yet been invented and what was required for his vision of walking, superior functioning humanoids had not even been a spark in any genius’ mind—but it was coming, sure enough it was coming, and now, in our day and age, Lewis’ vision is finally possible to manifest. Next Lewis speaks about politics and the media, which is also chillingly similar to what we currently are dealing with. So much so it made my jaw drop on my recent re-reading of the trilogy.
They’ll believe anything? Damn right they will, but only the wrong things, the right things they’ll ignore. Eventually God comes up in conversation, and Lewis finally reveals the true incentive behind the evil NICE’s quest. The head, as leader of their campaign, is revealed to be the God figure, at least intended as the initial experiment to that ultimate goal.
The correlation to present day is obvious. Although in true dictator fashion there is one figurehead, one human designated to be the ultimate leader on the throne of heaven. That, however, possibly awaits us in the future. They (the powers running our current agenda) have not yet created the transhuman being. Here Lewis is ahead of us and only time will tell if his uncanny accuracy continues into our future. And now, toward this end of Lewis’ story, we come to further explanation of the purpose of this holy war between evil as manifest in man and God as manifest in Nature:
It is clear from this final quote that Lewis sees evil as the destruction of nature and the worship of technology (or manmade technical advancement). I am curious to know what Lewis felt the solution to all this was. He only presents it as a battle between good and evil and ultimately good wins. He is sketchy on exactly how that happens. I am sure he addresses it more thoroughly throughout his other work. I have just not run across it clearly presented. I would venture to say it would be similar to what I have presented in my article A Meaningless Life—non-consumerism, less idealization of instant gratification, and more focus on the metaphysical (spirituality). I don’t think, however, that in his time Lewis was really experiencing the wanton commercialism and consumerism we see today. Nevertheless he certainly was beginning to experience a pull away from what really mattered in life and an embracing of technology, industrialism, and power through money and global manipulation. It is curious that he uses a “corporation” as the symbol of evil in this book. We must realize that he had just experienced a devastating war that was clearly seated in a strange unfamiliar evil (National Socialism) as well as experiencing the fall of Christianity in Soviet Russia. The atomic bomb, to Lewis, must have been a clear indication that man had gone mad with his zealous technological obsessions. This, however, contradicts his downplay of the bomb representing something for people to be so fearful of in his essay On Living in an Atomic Age. I will close this article with this final comment from Lewis. Try to see the correlation with our own time, which I believe is indeed the end of times. In Lewis’ tome good and God triumphed, which I also believe is the truth that can be applied to now. How long that triumph is in coming is up to us.
[1] “The evil ones” who have developed a technology to keep a human head alive. [2] Belbury is here the evil contingent resides. [3] The leader of the “evil contingent” is a head, being kept alive through technology (the precursor to Elon Musk’s brain chips). [4] Italian: scoundrel, swindler, cheat. Also, rascal. [5] Earth. Source: Shrew Views |
Wednesday, December 7, 2022
"The Eerie Premonitions of CS Lewis" by Todd Hayen
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