Tuesday, September 3, 2019
The Tree of Knowledge in Frankenstein by Mary Shelley Essays -- Franke
The Tree of Knowledge in Frankenstein by Mary Shelley    In Frankenstein, Mary Shelley warns that with the advent of science,  natural philosophical questioning is not only futile, but dangerous.  In attempting to discover the mysteries of life, Frankenstein assumes  that he can act as God. He disrupts the natural order, and chaos  ensues.    Mary Shelley goes to great lengths to emphasize the beauty and order  of life when man engages in à ¬naturalà ® pursuits. She idealizes  Frankenstein's home life: à ¬I feel exquisite pleasure in dwelling on  the recollections of childhood, before misfortune had tainted my mindà ®  (38). His family is orderly and wonderful. Clerval's à ¬presence brought  back to my thoughts my father, Elizabeth, and all those scenes of home  so dear to my recollectionÃâ"I felt suddenly, and for the first time  during many months, calm and serene joyà ® (58). Shelley also stresses  that man should feel at one with nature, not at odds with it: à ¬When  happy, inanimate nature had the power of bestowing on me the most  delightful sensationsà ® (68).    Certain occupations allow man to be at one with nature and his fellow  creatures. Shelley feels that science should be useful and beneficial  to mankind. Clerval, a clearly pure and benevolent character, studies  languages. He loves poetry. These disciplines allow man to help others  and glorify nature without questioning it. In childhood,  Frankenstein's studies contained à ¬bright visions of usefulnessà ® (38):  à ¬I betook myself to the mathematics, and the branches of study  appertaining to that science, as being built upon secure foundations,  and so worthy of considerationà ® (41).    But Frankenstein's interests soon turned away from mathematics; he  speaks of his change of mind as i...              ...gnorant art thou in thy pride of wisdom!  Cease; you know not what it is you sayà ® (194)!    Frankenstein has finally learned his lesson. Or has he? After his  excruciating pains and hardship, Frankenstein's dying words are: à ¬I  have myself been blasted in these hopes, yet another may succeedà ®  (210). Unless Frankenstein is referring to beneficial, pragmatic  scientific knowledge, then he has not yet acknowledged that man cannot  know the secrets of nature. Shelley means his final words to be a  warning to the reader. Man's growing ambition and intellect will  render him desperate to discover the deepest mysteries of lifeà ³it is a  difficult task to halt this ambition. But this ambition is greater  than man's intellect. He can never know all, though he aspires to  heaven. Until he realizes his limitations, the spread of science can  only lead to chaos and destruction.                        
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