`A Parliament of Souls is a rich and important book. It is important because it tackles, with considerable force, basic anthropological and cosmological assumptions that tacitly inform moral views which are widely held in Western culture, are subversive of genuinely liberal values, and must be countered if Christian ethics is going to fall on anything but deaf ears. It is a rich book, partly because of the range of material from which
Professor Clark characteristically draws.'
Studies in Christian Ethics
Individuals and persons; Introspection and experiment; Destiny and the will; Beasts and angels; Cognition, revelation, and inspiration; Death and the making of the individual; Two natures, one identity; The controlling Daimon