First Citation in my ‘Final Report’

As reported earlier, I am in the process of reading as many as 50 books (I keep adding to them) to aid me in imagining a ‘Final Report‘ in this weblog.

I have completed transcribing notes from several books, but the latest one has only a single passage that I have kept. It is from That Hideous Strength by C.S. Lewis. Here is the passage, uttered by one of the characters, Grace Ironwood:

The laws of the universe are never broken. Your mistake is to think that the little irregularities we have observed on one planet for a few hundred years are the real unbreakable laws; whereas they are only the remote results which the true laws bring about more often than not.

In order to more fully understand this assertion I went to two sources, ChatGPT (https://chat.openai.com/) and Wikipedia. Here are the results.

CHatGPT:

Grace Ironwood is a character in the story who is associated with the organization N.I.C.E. (the National Institute of Coordinated Experiments). The passage you mentioned reflects her perspective on the laws of the universe. In this scene, she is likely expressing a viewpoint that challenges the conventional understanding of laws and irregularities in the universe.

“That Hideous Strength” is the third novel in C.S. Lewis’s science fiction trilogy, commonly known as the Space Trilogy or Cosmic Trilogy. The trilogy includes “Out of the Silent Planet,” “Perelandra,” and “That Hideous Strength.” Each book explores philosophical and theological themes within the context of a science fiction narrative.


In “That Hideous Strength,” the gravamen revolves around various themes, including the struggle between good and evil, the misuse of science and technology, the dangers of totalitarianism, and the importance of maintaining a moral and spiritual foundation in the face of societal decay. The novel delves into questions about the nature of power, the manipulation of language, and the consequences of abandoning moral principles in the pursuit of progress.

Overall, the gravamen of “That Hideous Strength” encompasses Lewis’s reflections on the state of contemporary society and his warnings about the potential dangers of unchecked technological and ideological advancements.


The novel explores the idea that there are fundamental moral and spiritual laws that govern the universe, and the violation or neglect of these laws can have profound consequences.

The laws of the universe in the context of the novel are closely tied to the broader philosophical and theological themes that Lewis addresses. The story involves a struggle between the forces of good, represented by the organization St. Anne’s, and the forces of evil, represented by the National Institute of Coordinated Experiments (N.I.C.E.).

The N.I.C.E. seeks to achieve power through scientific and technological means, and in doing so, it violates the natural order and spiritual laws. The characters in the novel, particularly those associated with St. Anne’s, recognize the importance of adhering to these fundamental laws and resisting the temptations of unrestrained scientific progress and unchecked ambition.

The laws of the universe, as portrayed in “That Hideous Strength,” are not merely physical laws but extend to the moral and spiritual dimensions of existence. The novel suggests that a disregard for these laws can lead to a destructive and dehumanizing outcome. Lewis, who was deeply influenced by his Christian faith, uses the narrative to explore his concerns about the potential consequences of a materialistic and morally indifferent worldview.

In essence, the laws of the universe in “That Hideous Strength” represent a moral and spiritual framework that should guide human actions, and the violation of these laws becomes a central point of conflict in the novel.

END ChatGPT


Wikipedia

Somewhat like the early Gnostics, the main antagonists of That Hideous Strength despise the human body and all organic life as frail, corrupted, and unworthy of pure mind. Like modern transhumanists, they believe that humanity can be perfected by migrating out of flesh and blood.

Lewis portrays the consequences of these ideas as a dystopian nightmare: by rejecting God and His creation, the N.I.C.E inevitably falls under the dominion of demons (whom they imagine to have discovered under the guise of “macrobes”). Lewis had hinted at such themes before in The Screwtape Letters, in which the senior demon Screwtape tells his nephew that their goal is “to emotionalise and mythologise their science to such an extent that what is, in effect, a belief in [demons] (though not under that name) will creep in while the human mind remains closed to belief in [God]. […] If once we can produce our perfect work—the Materialist Magician, the man, not using, but veritably worshipping, what he vaguely calls ‘Forces’ while denying the existence of ‘spirits’—then the end of the war will be in sight.”

Lewis’s attack is not on science as such, or scientific planning, but rather the kind of totalitarian planned society idealised by Nazism and Bolshevism: “the disciplined cruelty of some ideological oligarchy”.

A significant element of the book (Lewis rated it as “second in importance”) is to illustrate the destructive folly of seeking power and prestige by belonging to a ruling clique or inner circle.

Ron:

That Hideous Strength was first published on 1945. A careful reading of these summaries will reveal some of the social pathologies we see today in full bloom.

How this particular book and message will fit into my Final Report remains to be seen.

 

 

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About Ron Pavellas

reader, writer, a sometimes poet
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