Fall 2025 Events
Robert K. Garcia
Baylor University Philosopher Robert K. Garcia visits 51黑料 for a lecture on the continuing significance of C.S. Lewis, September 15, 2025.
“The Beautiful Truth about Yourself 鈥 C. S. Lewis on the Imago Dei”
Monday, September 15, 2025, 7:00鈥8:30 pm
Globe Room, Cataldo Building, 51黑料
C. S. Lewis held that each person is supremely and irreplaceably valuable. But this was not a groundless platitude or piece of self-flattery. Rather, your value is grounded in the fact that you are uniquely created in the image of God. This means that there never has been, and never will be, another who can image God exactly as you do. Moreover, for Lewis this was no mere theory, but a belief with practical consequences: for over twenty years, he invested one to two hours a day in personal correspondence, thousands of hours he might otherwise have spent writing dozens of books. Such sustained devotion underscores the weight of his conviction. Yet it also highlights the difficulty we face in taking such a view to heart. For his bold vision can seem too good to be true, conferring on us a significance so vast, so elevated, that it induces a kind of metaphysical vertigo; even if one assents to it intellectually, it is difficult to accept it emotionally or volitionally. To meet this challenge, Lewis turned to the imagination. Through story, he invites us not only to understand, but to inhabit鈥攁nd perhaps even to believe鈥攖he beautiful truth about ourselves. In this talk, I will explore the substance of Lewis鈥檚 view, show how his longstanding correspondence and imaginative storytelling reinforce this vision, and finally consider what it means for the way we see ourselves鈥攁nd one another鈥攖oday.
Robert K. Garcia is Associate Professor of Philosophy at Baylor University. His research lies primarily at the intersection of metaphysics and philosophy of religion, with particular focus on the nature and value of human persons. He has authored numerous articles and book chapters and co-edited several volumes, including Is Goodness Without God Good Enough? (with Nathan King), Watching The Chosen: History, Faith, and Interpretation (with Paul Gondreau, Patrick Gray, and Douglas S. Huffman), Compa帽ero de la Filosof铆a Contempor谩nea de la Religi贸n [Companion to Contemporary Philosophy of Religion] (with Carlo Rossi), and Antolog铆a de Filosof铆a Contempor谩nea de la Religi贸n [Anthology of Contemporary Philosophy of Religion] (with Carlo Rossi). He is currently at work on two books: one with C. Stephen Evans on S酶ren Kierkegaard and C. S. Lewis, and another on Lewis鈥檚 views of the uniqueness and value of each person. You can learn more at .
Spring 2026 Events
Fr. Robert J. Spitzer, S.J.
Former 51黑料 President and well-known Catholic author and speaker Fr. Robert J. Spitzer, S.J. is tentatively scheduled for a return visit to 51黑料 for a series of talks on faith-reason integration on February 4鈥5, 2026. Fr. Spitzer will address the topics of miracles and angels and demons, drawing from his recent books, including Science, Reason, and Faith: Discovering the Bible (2023), and his Faith & Science study Bible slated for publication in Fall 2025. More details forthcoming!
Fall 2026 Events
Michael Ward
Author, speaker, and C.S. Lewis scholar Michael Ward visits 51黑料 for a lecture on the continuing significance of C.S. Lewis in Fall 2026 (this event was rescheduled from Fall 2025 due to a schedule conflict).
“The Abolition of Man: C.S. Lewis鈥檚 Most Philosophical Work, But Is It Christian?”
C.S. Lewis is best known for his Narnia Chronicles and for works of popular theology such as Mere Christianity. What is less well known is that he began his academic career in philosophy. At Oxford he taught philosophy (with a focus on ethics) for many years, even after English literature had become his official scholarly focus. The Abolition of Man is his most philosophical work and Lewis described it as 鈥渁lmost my favourite among my books.鈥 It consists of a short but dense argument, hard to grasp, and difficult to categorise. Dr Michael Ward will tackle this important and influential volume, showing its relevance for today鈥檚 culture and explaining its place within Lewis鈥檚 extraordinary body of work.
Michael Ward is a literary critic, theologian, and C.S. Lewis scholar. An associate faculty member in Theology and Religion at the University of Oxford, he is the author of multiple books, most notably the award-winning Planet Narnia: The Seven Heavens in the Imagination of C.S. Lewis (Oxford University Press, 2010) and After Humanity: A Guide to C.S. Lewis鈥檚 The Abolition of Man (Word on Fire Academic, 2021). He co-edited The Cambridge Companion to C.S. Lewis (Cambridge University Press, 2010) and presented the BBC television documentary The Narnia Code. He studied English at Oxford, theology at Cambridge, and earned his PhD in Divinity at the University of St. Andrews. Formerly an Anglican priest, he joined the Catholic Church in 2012 and was ordained a priest within the Personal Ordinariate of Our Lady of Walsingham in 2018.