Monday, January 20, 2020
Science in Shelleys Frankenstein :: Frankenstein Essays
      Science in Shelley's Frankenstein     Ã       In Shelley's Frankenstein, it's interesting to use the  text to ask the question, whose interest's lie at the heart of science?Ã    Why is Victor Frankenstein motivated to plunge the questions that bringing life  to inanimate matter can bring?Ã   Victor Frankenstein's life was destroyed  because of an obsession with the power to create life where none had been  before.Ã   The monster he created could be seen as a representation of all  those who are wronged in the selfish name of science.Ã   We can use Shelley's  book to draw parallels in our modern society, and show that there is a danger in  the impersonal relationship that science creates between the scientist and his  work.Ã   It seems to me that Shelley was saying that when science is done  merely on the basis of discovery without thought to the affect that the  experimentation can have, we risk endangering everything we hold dear.     Ã       Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã   When describing the monster  he had created, Frankenstein says:     No mortal could support the horror of that  countenance.Ã   A mummy again endued with animation could not be so hideous  as that wretch.Ã   I had gazed on him while unfinished; he was ugly then; but  when those muscles and joints were rendered capable of motion, it became a thing  such as even Dante could not have conceived. (Shelley, 235)     Ã       This was Victor's response to the reaching out of the  monster towards Victor on the night of his creation.Ã   Victor, who for  months had worked on this creation, was suddenly confronted with the results of  his scientific pursuit.Ã   He had labored night and day in an effort to do  something that had never been done by man before.Ã   He had figured out the  scientific way to bring life to that which was dead, so he blindly went forth  and did it.Ã   He never really stopped to think what the consequences of his  action might be.Ã   He knows that the creature he is making is ugly, but he  never wonders what will happen to the creature after he is brought to life as a  result of that ugliness.Ã   The monster is made oversized so it's easier for  Victor to work on him, yet no thought is taken about how the creature might feel  about such a form.  					    
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