Chesterton's Orthodoxy: Notes and Commentary
by Dr. Thursday
This may be useful to some of you who are trying to explore this book. At some future time (when I have a little more time to spare) I will revise this to show the CW pages, and perhaps paragraph numbers treated in each posting. Read more
One other item: if you do have questions on anything about this book (that is, in the chapters I have already examined) please do ask!
--Dr. Thursday.
Preface
chapter 0
Introduction
chapter 1 part 1
chapter 1 part 2
chapter 1 part 3
chapter 1 part 4
The Maniac
chapter 2 part 1
chapter 2 part 2
chapter 2 part 3
The Suicide of Thought
chapter 3 part 1
chapter 3 part 2
chapter 3 part 3
chapter 3 part 4
chapter 3 part 5
chapter 3 part 6
chapter 3 part 7
chapter 3 part 8
chapter 3 part 9
The Ethics of Elfland
chapter 4 part 1
chapter 4 part 2
chapter 4 part 3
chapter 4 part 4
chapter 4 part 5
chapter 4 part 6
chapter 4 part 7
chapter 4 part 8
chapter 4 part 9
chapter 4 part 10
chapter 4 part 11
chapter 4 part 12
The Flag of the World
chapter 5 part 1
chapter 5 part 2
chapter 5 part 3
chapter 5 part 4
chapter 5 part 5
The Paradoxes of Christianity
chapter 6 part 1
chapter 6 part 2
chapter 6 part 3
chapter 6 part 4
chapter 6 part 5
chapter 6 part 6
The Eternal Revolution
chapter 7 part 1
chapter 7 part 2
chapter 7 part 3
chapter 7 part 4
chapter 7 part 5
chapter 7 part 6
chapter 7 part 7
chapter 7 part 8
chapter 7 part 9
The Romance of Orthodoxy
chapter 8 part 1
chapter 8 part 2
chapter 8 part 3
chapter 8 part 4
chapter 8 part 5
chapter 8 part 6
Authority and the Adventurer
chapter 9 part 1
chapter 9 part 2
chapter 9 part 3
chapter 9 part 4
chapter 9 part 5
chapter 9 part 6
chapter 9 part 7
Thursday, April 09, 2009
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I hope I will be able to bring out the quote about Christianity and Buddhism: circle v. cross, etc in my college english honors class. We have dharma bums and siddhartha coming up this semester....
ReplyDeleteOh yes and about believing in oneself...what Chesterton classified as lunacy-to be found in Hanwell. Currently finishing up Into the Wild by Krakauer for class. About a young man who tried to "find himself" in Alaska and assumed room temperature up there. He tried to understand life, and what good it did him...
ReplyDeleteAh well, back to work
We have dharma bums...
ReplyDeleteMaybe they're just fans of LOST? LOL
...a young man who tried to "find himself" in Alaska and assumed room temperature up there.
He didn't just assume room temperature. He assumed Alaska-in-January-temperature. Krakauer cracked up. Before he froze.