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Rhetoric Written: Orthodoxy
Reading Questions for "Orthodoxy"
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Undergraduate 1
12/13/2011

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Term
According to the preface, what is the “purpose of the writer”? (p. 9) This a positive (and legitimate) use of which informal “fallacy”?
Definition
To offer an explanation of how he came to his personal beliefs. Ipse dixit and Bulverism.
Term
How does Chesterton attempt to state the philosophy in which he believes? (p. 13)
Definition
That it is not his philosophy but that God and humanity made it and it made him.
Term
What is the “main problem” of this book? What answers this double spiritual need? (p. 14)
Definition
That people simultaneously need a mixture of the familiar and the unfamiliar. Chesterton believes that his faith fulfills both these needs.
Term
What does Chesterton mean when he uses the word “orthodoxy”? (p. 17)
Definition
The apostles creed.
Term
How does he contrast the poet and the logician? (p. 22)
Definition
The poet tries to get his head into the heavens, while the logician tries to get the heavens into his head. The logician loses.
Term
Explain the madman. What is the nearest we can get to expressing his error? (p. 24)
Definition
That madman is the one who has lost everything but his reason
Term
What is the chief mark of insanity? What keeps men sane? (p. 32)
Definition
Reason in a void. Mysticism.
Term
Explain the dislocation of humility. What is this new modesty? (pp. 36-37)
Definition
It has moved from ambition to conviction. Because of this, rather than working harder, a man stops working altogether.
Term
How is reason related to faith? (p. 38)
Definition
Because it is an act of faith to assert that our thoughts have any relation to reality at all.
Term
How can Chesterton say that democracy and tradition are the same idea? (pp. 52-53)
Definition
Because Chesterton considers tradition to simply be democracy extended through time.
Term
Chesterton says he learned “the whole spirit of [elfland’s] law”, “a certain way of looking at life” (55). What is this way of looking of looking at life? In other words, how do we answer when someone asks us why eggs turn to birds or why fruits fall in autumn? (p. 57) Why does water run downhill? (p. 58)
Definition
Because it is magic. Because it is bewitched.
Term
Fairytales gave Chesterton what “first two feelings”? (pp. 59-60)
Definition
Wonder/admiration and gratitude.
Term
What is the second principle of the fairy philosophy? (pp. 60-61)
Definition
The doctrine of conditional joy.
Term
What is the fairytale philosopher’s reaction to the view of scientific fatalism? (pp. 64-66) This leads to what “first conviction” on Chesterton’s part? (p. 67)
Definition
He finds it cold, dead, and intentionally un-wonderful. Fact are miracles because because they are willful.
Term
What are Chesterton’s five ultimate attitudes towards life? (p. 70)
Definition
1. The world does not explain itself.
2. Magic must have meaning and meaning must have had someone to mean it, and that is personal.
3. That purpose is beautiful in spite of defects
4. The proper form of thanks is in humility and restraint.
5. All god is remnant, meant to be stored and held sacred out of some primordial ruin.
Term
Chesterton’s acceptance of the world is like what? (p. 72) What is the “only right optimism”? (p. 73)
Definition
Patriotism, Universal Patriotism.
Term
What is the evil of the pessimist? (pp. 74-75)
Definition
They are cosmic anti-patriots. They do not love what they chastise and therefore there is no loyalty in their criticism.
Term
“We want a fiercer delight and a fiercer discontent” (77). Explain.
Definition
It is a desire to be a simultaneously a opportunist and pessimist without a neutralization of either.
Term
How is a suicide the opposite of a martyr? (pp. 78-79)
Definition
A martyr is one who cares so much for what is outside him that he forgets his personal life. A suicide is one who cares so little for anything outside himself that he wants to see the last of everything.
Term
Christianity destroyed which doctrine? What did it leave in its place? (p. 81)
Definition
Inner light, pantheism.
Term
What is the “hole” in the world? What is the “projecting feature” of Christianity that fit this hole and made everything come together? (p. 84)
Definition
That we must somehow love the world without trusting it. The insistence that God is personal and had made a world separate from himself.
Term
Christian optimism is based on what? (p. 85)
Definition
The fact that we do not fit in the world.
Term
What is the point of chapter six? (p. 88)
Definition
To show that whenever we feel there is something odd in Christian theology we will typically find that there is something odd about the truth.
Term
What illustration does Chesterton give of “this odd effect of the great agnostics”? (pp. 90-91)
Definition
How no sooner was Christianity convicted of being one extreme (e.g. too angular) it was then accused of also being the exact opposite extreme (too round).
Term
What did he (trying to be fair) conclude about Christianity? About Jesus? (p. 96
Definition
That Christianity was wrong and that Jesus must be the antichrist.
Term
What thunderbolt hit Chesterton? What key fit the lock? (pp. 96-97)
Definition
That the fact that Jesus was simultaneously “wrong” in every extreme actually indicated that he was right.
Term
How does he describe courage? This “duplex passion” is the key to what? (pp. 99-100)
Definition
“Courage is almost a contradiction in terms. It means a strong desire to live taking the form of a readiness to die.” The Christian key to ethics everywhere.
Term
What is the “new balance” discovered by Christian ethics? Be able to explain it in turns of red/white and lion/lamb. (pp. 103-105)
Definition
The balance of keeping two things side by side without overlapping each other. Red and white are side by side without ever turning pink. The lion lays down with the lamb without losing its royal ferocity.
Term
What is the thrilling romance of orthodoxy? (pp. 106-107)
Definition
Orthodoxy is not heavy, boring, or humdrum. It is perilous and exciting. It is a precise balance of truth for which the smallest deviation would turn everything wrong.
Term
What is the next question “so obviously in front of us”? (p. 109) And why can’t we get our ideal from nature? (pp. 109-10)
Definition
What do we mean by making things better? Because there is no principle in nature.
Term
What two things must we be fond of to change the world? (p. 112)
Definition
We must be fond of the world as well as fond of another world in order to have something to change it into.
Term
What is the “whole collapse and huge blunder of our age”? (p. 112)
Definition
We have mixed up two opposite things. Progress and vision.
Term
Progress is moving towards an ideal; what should our first requirement be of that ideal? (pp. 115-116)
Definition
It must be fixed.
Term
“If we suppose improvement to be natural, it must be fairly simple” (117). What should we conclude if the “end of the world is to be a piece of elaborate and artistic chiaroscuro”? (p. 118)
Definition
There must be design and there must be an artist.
Term
What is our second requirement for the ideal of progress? How does Christianity enter with the exact answer Chesterton was looking for? (p. 121)
Definition
It must be composite. By exactly fulfilling all of the requirements
Term
Chesterton concludes that “things naturally tend to grow worse” (122). How does orthodoxy come in (“like a battle-axe”) and say the same thing, but more? (p. 123)
Definition
Christianity shows the worsening to be true and shows its root cause to be “the fall.”
Term
What should we therefore be prepared for “in the best Utopia”? (p. 126)
Definition
For the moral fall of any man, in any position at any moment.
Term
What does Chesterton want to point out “as rapidly as possible”? (p. 132)
Definition
That every matter most strongly insisted upon by liberalizes would actually end up having an illiberal effect.
Term
What worldview is behind the denial of miracles—the worldview that “leaves nothing free in the universe” (134)?
Definition
Scientific materialism.
Term
If a man believes in miracles, how he is “the more liberal for doing so”? (p. 135)
Definition
Because he believes in the freedom of the soul and its control over the tyranny of circumstances.
Term
What opinion by Mrs. Besant does Chesterton disagree with? (p. 138)
Definition
Mrs. Besant believes everyone is one, and you should be kind to your neighbor because he is you. Chesterton wants to love his neighbor not because he is his neighbor but because he is not his neighbor.
Term
Describe the “intellectual abyss” between Buddhism and Christianity. (pp. 139-40)
Definition
Buddhism is one the side of modern pantheism and immanence. Christianity is on the side of humanity, liberty, and love.
Term
What must we adhere to if we want reform? Why? (pp. 141-42)
Definition
Orthodoxy. Because by insisting on the transcendence of God we get wonder, curiosity, and moral and political adventure, righteous indignation.
Term
If “to hope for all souls…is not specially favorable to activity or progress”, what should we insist on instead? (p. 143)
Definition
The danger that everybody is in.
Term
How is the divinity of Christ “terribly revolutionary”? (pp. 144-45)
Definition
Because it is the only religion in which God seemed for an instant to be an atheist
Term
What is the chief merit of essentials of old orthodoxy? What is its main advantage? (p. 145)
Definition
The natural foundation of revolution and reform. It is the most adventurous and manly of all reforms.
Term
What is Chesterton’s conclusion (“this last and most astounding fact”) about the enemies of the faith? (pp. 146-47) Orthodoxy is untouched, but what is destroyed instead? (p. 147)
Definition
That in their attempts to attack Christianity they end up fighting themselves. Political and common courage sense.
Term
What “crucial question” does the reasonable agnostic ask in this refutatio? (pp. 148-49
Definition
“Why can’t you take the truth without the doctrine.”
Term
Why does Chesterton believe in Christianity? (p. 150)
Definition
“For the same reason the intelligent agnostic disbelieves in Christianity.” Because he believes it quite rationally upon evidence.
Term
What three converging convictions have pressured many sensible modern men into abandoning Christianity? (p. 150) What explanation covers all three? (p. 152)
Definition
1. That men are like beasts
2. that religion arose from ignorance and fear
3. that priests have blighted societies with bitterness and gloom
The theory that the natural order was twice interrupted by some explosion or revelation.
Term
What three anti-Christian thoughts create the impression that Christianity is weak and
diseased? (p. 153) How does Chesterton respond to each of these misconceptions? (pp. 153-56)
Definition
That Jesus was a gentle creature, that Christianity arose from the dark ages of ignorance, that the church will drag us back to such ignorance, and that the strongly religious are weak, impractical, and behind in the times.That a careful look into the New Testament will show that Jesus was not a puppy. That Christianity was actually the one path through the dark ages which was not dark and overtaken by ignorance. That this is factually inaccurate/wrong.
Term
Why does Chesterton believe in miracles? Why do the disbelievers deny them? (p. 157)
Definition
Because there is evidence for them. Because have a doctrine against them.
Term
What fallacy do the anti-miracle debaters commit? (p. 158)
Definition
Petitio Principii
Term
What is the greatest disaster of the 19th century? (p. 160)
Definition
Men started using the word “spiritual” to mean good.
Term
What is the far more solid and central ground for Chesterton’s submission to the faith? (p. 161)
Definition
The Christian Church is a living teacher.
Term
How did Chesterton view the world after he accepted Christendom as a mother? (p. 163) Note how this ties in with the title chapter.
Definition
With old elvish ignorance and expectancy. A combination of childhood daring and curiosity missed with parental guidance.
Term
What (in conclusion) is Chesterton’s reason for accepting Christianity and not simply its truths? (pp. 163-64)
Definition
Because it has not merely told the truth about this or that, but because it has proven itself to be a truth telling thing.
Term
What is the despair of modern philosophy? Where does a man find adventure? (p. 164)
Definition
That is does not believe there is any meaning in the universe; and therefore there is no romance. In a land of authority.
Term
What is the primary paradox of Christianity? (p. 165)
Definition
That man in his ordinary condition is neither sane nor sensible.
Term
What is the fundamental difference between the joy of the pagan and the joy of the Christian? (p. 166-67) What does it mean to be “born upside down”? (p. 167)
Definition
That pagan is happy on earth and sad as he moves toward heaven. The Christian works in the opposite direction. To have your feet dancing toward heaven while your head is in the abyss.
Term
What is Chesterton’s concluding point about “the tremendous figure which fills the Gospels”? (pp. 167-68)
Definition
That there was one thing too great for God to show us when he walked upon earth, and perhaps it was His mirth.
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