One's Morality can be determined the actions that they choose to do, this complication can happen. Victor, the creator is a smart man for knowing right and wrong because he's known what it means. In the creature's brain is just developing when victor was creating. The creature is known as Frankenstein as to learn from listening and observing one's surroundings. Frankenstein has to learn right from wrong because frankenstein is more a visionary character. As for where his creator does not accept him in his responsibility, and his maturity that is developing throughout the book. It one's responsibility to know what to choose from right and wrong and, benefiting from the crowded cannot always be the right choice for one's morals.
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Victor had disowned him because how he came out. But through the shadows of victor's life, the creature has been learning through his steps and his surroundings. This thought the creature responsibility on how to pursue his life. When the creature expand his learning process “i admire virtue and good feelings and loved gentle manners and amiable qualities of my cottagers, but I was shut out from intercourse with them except through mean which I obtained by stealth, when I was unseen and unknown, and which rather increased than satisfied the desire I had of becoming one among my fellows" (Shelley pg.). The creatures responsibility is for himself and for his creatures satisfaction it so the creature thinks, in the creature's mind things that if he is not seen by the cottagers that he will be rewarded with acceptance through victor. In the creature's eyes thinks that what he is doing is good and responsible and well caring. This responsibility turns the creature into a mature so called human. In the letter that Walton writes to his sister explains to his sister the event that was happening during the short amount of time while he was the victor. He explained what had happened to victor when he died he came across the creature, “he paused looking at me with wonder, and again turning towards the lifeless form of his creator, he seemed to forget my presence, and ever” (letter pg. 228). This showed Walton form the short amount of time that he encountered the creature showed his respect towards his creator and that shows the sign of maturity. This respectable action that the creature did was very kind and showed how much he cared for the man who created him with respect. The action that was contrasted in the book showed that the creature did not have the cold heart even if it did not belong to him just the thought to show his respect
The topic of Dr Frankenstein playing God can be related to the current day issue of abortion laws. Creating life should just be the act of God and taking it away is in the same context. Twenty years before Shelly published "Frankenstein" Luigi Galvani discovered that electricity could make a dead person's muscles twitch and simulate some type of life. This portrays the belief that reanimation is possible. The common belief of Dr Frankenstein playing God in this novel can also be portrayed as an issue between all religions.
The creature explains why his actions towards his creator, “I have devoted my creator, the select specimen of all that is worthy of love and admiration among men, to misery; I have pursued him even to that irremediable ruin. There he lies, white and cold in death. You hate me; but your abhorrence cannot equal that with which I regard myself”(Shelley, 263). However, the creature is sad about the event contrary to what someone would expect. He demonstrates once again that deep inside he didn’t wanted anything of this to happen because he was just looking for his own happiness.
In the novel, Frankenstein, by Mary Shelley, the two main characters, Victor Frankenstein and his creature, both display a sense of moral ambiguity. Each character has committed both good and evil alike, and neither knew the consequences of what they had done. However, Victor Frankenstein is generally the morally ambiguous character by his treatment of his creation and his own imperious personality. He wanted to be able to help science by recreating life or bringing it back, but at the same time, he did not want to consider the consequences of doing so. Victor tries to prove himself as a good moral character in the relationship between his creation and himself.
The creature's views were warped by all of this. Even when he learned to read, write, and speak, he learned to love others, but after all of this, he could not. If society learned to stop judging only appearance, the creature himself would have lived a better life. Not a life consumed by
(Shelly 69) What Victor endured in the past still fuelled his hate and anger towards the creature. This hate consumed his whole being leading him to parade such savagery to the creature. Through the cruelty he shows buth his own body and the creature we can see Victor's selfishness.
Children have never been very good at listening, but are very good at intimidating. In Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein, Victor, after obtaining an abundance of knowledge unknowingly created a creature that would soon seek revenge due to his feeling of rejection. Victor had been loved unconditionally by his parents. However he was not given the direction and reinforcement he desired while he was growing up. Victor was allowed to quarantine himself by his parents, rather than being educated to a better life.
In Frankenstein, Victor Frankenstein is a scientist who brings a conglomeration of human and animal parts back from the dead. Despite his logical act of destroying the monster’s bride, Frankenstein still imprints hate, and hunts down his monster, making him the villain of his own story. The first clumsy act of villainy Frankenstein commits is when he first creates the monster. This horrid creature, made of human and animal parts, is born without intelligence, but more importantly is born with the ability to learn.
In reality, he is disgusted by the sight of his creation so he abandons it leaving it all alone in the world without any guidance and runs away to the next room. Victor himself suffered from being a social outcast and now he bestowed the same feeling onto the creature by abandoning him. By treating the creature as an outcast, “he will become wicked … divide him, a social being, from society, and you impose upon him the irresistible obligations—malevolence and selfishness” (Caldwell). Not only is Victor selfish for abandoning his creature but he is shallow as well. Instead of realizing that he achieved his goal of bringing life to an inanimate body he runs way because of how hideous it is.
If Victor personally knew the monster was dangerous, and that what he created would who cause so much destruction and hurt the ones he loves then, Victor would not of created the monster. In the beginning of the novel, Victor becomes widely obsessed with the thought of learning,logic and knowledge which takes over his life in which ends up involving those around him, including those he cares most about. Victor is desperate for knowledge and discovery, but not only just pertaining to Victor but along with other characters in the book as well, including, Walton, the sea captain and narrator of the novel and the creature, the monster in which Victor created. In the beginning of the book,
Guilt can either be an emotion that makes a person feel remorse for his or her’s actions toward another, or can be the conduct involving the executions of such crimes and wrongs. In the novel, “Frankenstein” by Mary Shelley, both definitions of guilt were the common theme. However, the main problem was whether the creature or the creator, Victor Frankenstein, were guiltier for their actions. The one presumed to be more guilty was Victor Frankenstein who created the monster in the first place causing his family pain and failed to take responsibility for the monster’s actions. Although he didn’t directly kill his family, the monster is guilty too.
He swears to take revenge on his creator, Victor, so he killed Victor’s friends and family one by one. In the end, the monster also killed Victor’s wife Elizabeth. It wanted Victor to know how it felt during its life, lonely and misunderstood. In the middle of the novel, Victor makes a statement to Walton about his destiny, trying to use his own experience to exhort, change, and prevent Walton’s desire and passion for adventure.
From the moment he is created, the creature knows he is not wanted by Victor. Shelly writes, “Unable to endure the aspect of the being
Being abandoned by his creator, the monster has no one to guide him, no one to teach him right from wrong and good from evil. When the creature is first abandoned by Victor, he’s confused and doesn’t understand that he has been abandoned. The creature explains how he felt when he woke up, “A strange multiplicity of sensations seized me, and I saw, felt, heard, and smelt at the same time; and it was indeed, a long time before I learned to distinguish between the operations of my various senses” (Shelley 99). The creature won’t fully realize the impact of being abandoned until later in the story. Victor also suffers from isolation from his
One of the overall motifs in the novel is loneliness. This idea is repeated many times but has a major effect on the creature as it is this loneliness that drives him to commit the crimes that he makes. This idea of loneliness being one of the worst things possible is also seen when the creature does everything possible to make sure that Victor ends up alone and miserable the way that he had for so many years. This idea conveys the impression that the creature is just a child because it shows its vulnerability and expresses the desire that creature has which is to not be alone anymore. When the creature goes and spends some time watching a family he feels less lonely and this makes him feel happy like he says, “Happy, happy earth!
Virginia Brackett asserts in her analysis of the novel that “Due to the monster's rejection by the cottagers and other humans, Victor serves not only as his creator but also as the only social construct on which he can build his reality” As the creator of the creature, Victor adopted the responsibility of his creation and the duties that accompany it, however, instead of answering the call of duty he fled and disregarded his obligation to the creature. The creature