The Heavens Rediscovered - Jacob (Blog Post 13)
Lewis, in his Space Trilogy, paints a picture of outer space that is not filled with unspeakable horrors but instead, filled with glory. Ransom, when he first reluctantly embarks on his voyage, expects to find all sorts of nightmares. Instead, he finds a place of heavenly light. “Old thinkers had been wiser when they named it the heavens- the heavens which declared the glory” (Out of the Silent Planet.) Lewis, in his Space Trilogy, reintroduces the old picture of the heavens of the ancient and medieval mind. The planets are not separated from the heavens but dwell within it. The earth, Thulacandra the silent planet, is unique in its isolation from the heavens. Lewis draws on both the science of his time and the old medieval model to create a sense of wonderment at the Cosmos and paint a picture of it that is not a vacuous cold place of death, but a place of light and glory.
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