Narnia and Morality

Morality is a concept that appears as a flagship driver behind almost all of C.S. Lewis' works. The innate quality that all of mankind shares equips each book in the series "Chronicles of Narnia" with an extra dose of motive. Morality supercharges the story of Aslan and Jadis, the white witch, adding the essential ingredients that serves as the catalyst for the battles in The Lion, The Witch, And The Wardrobe. The reader understands that Jadis is bad because she is injust, and that Aslan is good because he is the contrary. Imagine, however, that the morality in this story is tweaked. What would become of the stories of Narnia if lying was "good" or if turning creatures to stone was "just". Could Jadis be the hero and Aslan the villain? I don't think we could learn the same lessons that we normally do, but it might reveal deeper truths about the morality we already have.

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