That depends on how one defines wasting time. No, I wouldn't read his books hoping to find some great insight by which to live my life. But I would read his books (or try to. . .for some reason, I keep starting but never finishing any of them) in order to better understand (and hence counter) why so many Christian friends hold him in such esteem.Hillary wrote:The man is an obvious moron - I really wouldn't waste my time on his books.
With such friends, it doesn't work to simply dismiss the man. Instead, one needs to show why his arguments are fallacious. One of those, from Mere Christianity, is the 'Lord, Liar, or Lunatic' trilemma, which seems to be getting more widespread partly because the very popular (and equally moronic) Alpha Course uses it.
So kudos to Haruko for wading through that kind of sludge.
GK Chesterton was even worse! Fortunately, he's not quoted as often as Lewis.superman wrote:He was an incoherent pseudo-intellectual, and one of Christianity's foremost apologists. His books are fluffy evangelical tripe. At least writings by someone like Augustine went pretty deep into Christian theology and appeared to be well thought out (if still bogus). Lewis was more like the traveling evangelist; his writings were dumbed down so that even the average fundie could comprehend them.