TESTIMONIES: Harvard Student Was an Atheist. Then She Read C.S. Lewis on Subjectivism
It’s not a word often heard these days but “subjectivism” — AKA “moral relativism” — is among the essential ingredients in the political culture of the day. The dictionary defines subjectivism as “the doctrine that all knowledge is limited to experiences by the self, and that transcendent knowledge is impossible.”
Another way of putting it is to say “there is no such thing as absolute truth.” Put in the context of current popular culture, one would say “You do you and I’ll do me.”
You think abortion is fine, that’s merely your feeling or opinion. By the same token, if you think abortion is murder of an unborn human being, again, that’s nothing more than your opinion.
In the following 8:21 video from Aspiring Christian, “Jordan” is a former Harvard student who for much of her young teen and adult life considered herself to be an atheist. But it was in a Harvard class that she was assigned to “The Poison of Atheim” by C.S. Lewis and that began to change how Jordan saw herself and the world:
Thank you, good information