Book Review: “The Philosophy of Tolkien” by Peter Kreeft
Recently I finished reading a
nonfiction book called “The Philosophy of Tolkien” by Dr. Peter
Kreeft. I highly recommend reading this book for anyone who is
interested in Tolkien's Lord of the Rings and other Middle-Earth
novels and stories. Kreeft digs through the writings and letters of
J.R.R. Tolkien and correspondence between him and his good friend
C.S. Lewis of “Chronicles of Narnia” fame to demonstrate the very
rich worldview and philosophy that fueled the creation of
Middle-Earth and his fantasy stories. Kreeft discusses such
questions as to God's existence, the existence and nature of angels,
what is beauty, the meaning of death, romance and love, knowledge,
history, language, politics, ethics. I started reading this book
over a year ago and got bored for some reason. I picked it back up a
couple of weeks ago and couldn't put it down. Perhaps this is
because I left off on the parts where Kreeft discussed two of my
favorite idea: Predestination and Providence. I recommend especially
the chapter in which Kreeft discusses Tolkien's take on ethics,
especially the battle between good and evil which Tolkien dramatized
in his novels. I want to highly recommend this book, though I feel
inadequate to the task of doing the book justice in this review, but
I want to insert here a quote about the battle between good and evil
which I thought highly uplifting and inspiring:
“Good and evil are not equally
powerful, because they are not equally real—even though evil
appears not only equal to
good but even stronger than
good (“I am Gandalf, Gandalf the White, but Black is mightier
still”). But appearance and reality do not coincide here, and in
the end evil will always reveal its inevitable self-destruction
(although often after a terrible price is paid: e.g. Napoleon,
Hitler, Stalin). The self-destruction of evil is not just
something to believe in and hope for, but to be certain of. It is
metaphysically necessary, necessary because the very kind of being
evil has by its unchangeable essence. For evil can only be a
parasite on good. It depends on a good host for it to pervert.
“Nothing is evil in the beginning” or by nature. Morgoth was one
of the Ainur, Sauron was a Maia, Saruman was the head of Gandalf's
order of Wizards, the Orcs were Elves, the Ringwraiths were great
Men, and Gollum was a Hobbit. And whenever a parasite succeeds in
killing its host, it also kills itself. So if evil succeeds, it
fails; it commits suicide.”
I
recommend this book highly. There are so many gems in the form of
quotes from Tolkien's letters and correspondence with others such as
C.S. Lewis, and I hope you will find more enjoyment in Tolkien's epic
saga the Lord of the Rings after reading this book.
"The Philosophy of Tolkien" can be purchased on Amazon here: http://www.amazon.com/Philosophy-Tolkien-Worldview-Behind-Rings/dp/1586170252/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1422577071&sr=8-1&keywords=philosophy+of+tolkien&pebp=1422577077500&peasin=1586170252
0 Comments:
Post a Comment
Subscribe to Post Comments [Atom]
<< Home