Religion and Rocketry Name:Institutional affiliation Religion and Rocketry, by C.S. LewisC. S. Lewis (2010) argues from a Christian perspective that there is a creator, who is interested in living things, and refutes the school of ideas that life was a purely terrestrial abnormality. He is surprised at how individuals seek scientific advances with the aim of confirming the absence of God. According to Lewis, “Each new discovery, even every new theory, is held at first to have the most wide-reaching theological and philosophical consequences. It is seized by unbelievers as the basis for a new attack on Christianity; it is often, and more embarrassingly, seized by injudicious believers as the basis for a new defense” (Lewis, 2010). On whether there is life in the outer planets, the author claims that “We do not know whether we ever shall know” (Lewis, 2010). In this article, Lewis uses the word “life” to refer to animals as opposed to animals and vegetation. I agree with the evidence that Lewis presents to argue about the possible states of extraterrestrial life if it indeed existed.I strongly concur with Lewis that God cares for all creatures