https://www.marketsandmorality.com/article/161266-scarcity-isolation-and-dependence-economic-insight-in-c-s-lewis-s-_the-great-divorce_ Introduction In C. S. Lewis’s The Great Divorce , hell is not a place of fire and deprivation but a gray, drizzling town of effortless material provision. Its residents can conjure whatever they desire simply by imagining it. Yet they are ghosts—translucent, insubstantial, drifting into ever-widening isolation. No one needs anyone for anything. The result is not prosperity but desolation: an endless, sprawling anti-community in which souls scatter across millions of miles of empty streets, retreating from one another whenever the slightest friction arises. Lewis depicts a world that has solved the economic problem of material scarcity and arrived not at flourishing but at what he elsewhere calls “sub-humanity”: creatures so diminished by the absence of desire for good things that they have nearly ceased to be fully human. [1] This depiction should...
AI Overview In C.S. Lewis's The Great Divorce, human autonomy—the desire to be one's own master and live entirely by one's own will—is the primary engine that drives souls into Hell. Lewis argues that Hell is simply the ultimate result of a soul demanding absolute independence from God.The relationship between the book's themes and autonomy can be broken down into a few core concepts:The Locked Doors of Hell: Lewis famously posits that "the gates of Hell are locked on the inside." The damned are not locked out of Heaven; they are so chained to their own self-will, pride, and resentment that they refuse to surrender their autonomy to enter.The "Thy Will Be Done": The book concludes with the idea that there are only two kinds of people in the end: those who say to God, "Thy will be done," and those to whom God ultimately says, "Thy will be done." Granting a soul complete and total autonomy to live without God is the very definition of Hell.Rejection of Joy: In the heavenly realms, the ghosts from Hell are offered infinite joy and reality, but they must give up their pet sins, grievances, and independence to accept it. Many souls choose to return to the gloomy, autonomous isolation of the "Gray Town" (Hell) simply because they refuse to submit their ego.Ultimately, for Lewis, true human autonomy is a tragic illusion. He suggests that genuine freedom and selfhood are only found when we surrender our will to God, as autonomy leads only to eternal loneliness and decay.
AI Overview In C.S. Lewis's The Great Divorce , human autonomy —the desire to be one's own master and live entirely by one's own will—is the primary engine that drives souls into Hell. Lewis argues that Hell is simply the ultimate result of a soul demanding absolute independence from God. [ 1 , 2 , 3 ] The relationship between the book's themes and autonomy can be broken down into a few core concepts: The Locked Doors of Hell: Lewis famously posits that "the gates of Hell are locked on the inside." The damned are not locked out of Heaven; they are so chained to their own self-will, pride, and resentment that they refuse to surrender their autonomy to enter. [ 1 , 2 , 3 , 4 , 5 ] The "Thy Will Be Done": The book concludes with the idea that there are only two kinds of people in the end: those who say to God, "Thy will be done," and those to whom God ultimately says, "Thy will be done." Granting a soul complete a...