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The Moral and Political Wisdom of C.S. Lewis, by Daniel J. Mahoney – Brown Pelican Society of Lousiana

The Moral and Political Wisdom of C.S. Lewis, by Daniel J. Mahoney

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C.S. Lewis photo on dust jacket. Created: 1957. Public Domain. Wikipedia

By Daniel J. Mahoney, The American Mind a publication of the Claremont Institute, May 14, 2026

Daniel J. Mahoney is a senior fellow at the Claremont Institute, a senior visiting fellow at Hillsdale College, and professor emeritus at Assumption University. He has written widely on French politics and political thought, Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, and the moral grounds of opposition to totalitarianism. His latest book, The Persistence of the Ideological Lie: The Totalitarian Impulse Then and Now, is available from Encounter Books.

 

From The Abolition of Man to “Screwtape Proposes a Toast.”

The great Christian apologist and literary critic C.S. Lewis provides a surprising amount of moral and political wisdom despite not being a political thinker in any formal sense of the term. For example, the three lectures that form The Abolition of Man remain a must-read for understanding the crisis of our time, as well as the path to recovering the wisdom that will allow us to overcome it.

Without relying on divine revelation or biblical faith per se, Lewis takes aim at what he elsewhere calls “the poison of subjectivism,” and also makes a compelling defense of the existence of a moral consensus among mankind that transcends cultures, polities, and historical epochs. In the book’s final section, he provides a searing analysis of the profound tendency of the modern project “to conquer nature for the relief of man’s estate,” which leads to the temptation to conquer human nature in the name of illusory “progress”—that is, to abolish human beings once and for all. …