![]() ![]() He had close friendships with individuals, like George Bernard Shaw for example, whose ideas he attacked energetically in debate and in print. As a sidelight, this was true of Chesterton personally. Nevertheless, they represent two different philosophies, and those philosophies really are at war. This, Chesterton tells us, is what is really at issue when Gabriel Syme, the hero of the story, meets the anarchist Lucian Gregory in Saffron Park, a fantastical suburb of London, and they debate about law and anarchy. Instead, it’s the account of a desperate war with high stakes: the future of human society hangs in the balance. This book is not a dispassionate philosophical treatise. Chestertonįrom the Aplecture at Seattle Pacific University ![]() ![]() The Man Who Was Thursday: A Nightmare by G.K. The Man Who Was Thursday, the Nightmare of Modernity, and the Days of Creation Sonja E. Share Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Flipboard Print arroba Email ![]()
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