Was it wise for Charlie Gordon from the book “Flowers for Algernon” by daniel keyes to get genetical intelligence surgically implanted in him? I believe that he should have got it regardless of the negative things that happened to him due to the surgery.…
Would you ever have a surgery that gives you artificial intelligence like in the book “Flowers for Algernon” by Daniel Keyes? In the Science Fiction book “Flowers for Algernon” by Daniel Keyes the main character Charlie had an I.Q of 68. Charlie got artificial intelligence and it made his I.Q increased to 204. It was an awful idea for Charlie to have the A.I surgery. The surgery made Charlie I.Q decrees to 68.…
Danny Saunders is a the brilliant child of the rabbi, Reb Saunders and is the protagonist of the novel “The Chosen” by Chaim Patok, and continues finding himself confused about his faith and who he is. As Danny continues to grow and mature he begins to comprehend his fathers silence. He also learns to peer into his own soul and find answers of his own. At the end of the novel, his father finally speaks to him bad decides to bless his career choice. He now understands and respects his fathers actions.…
How does Wyndham make Gordon an important and memorable character in the novel, the Chrysalids?…
Charlie Gordon was a determined man. He wanted to learn as much as he could but he was unable to because he was mentally retarded. Meanwhile, his doctors were testing an operation which they wanted to perform on Charlie to make him more intelligent however, he would eventually lose his intelligence and knowledge leading to his death. He would be unable to connect with other people because he would be too smart. Despite these affects, people still believe that the operation preformed on Charlie was ethical. Charlie Gordon's doctors didn't act ethically when they preformed the surgery on Charlie Gordon to make him smarter.…
“Laideezzz and gentulmennnnnn. Step right this way and see the side show! An act never before seen in the scientific world! A mouse and a moron turn into geniuses before your very eyes!” Greater intelligence does not equal greater happiness. In the science fiction novel, Flowers for Algernon, Daniel Keyes takes us on an adventure through a world where the statement “Ignorance is bliss,” could not be more true. Charlie Gordon was born mentally retarded, with an IQ of 68 at the age of 32. He undergoes a life-changing scientific procedure that skyrockets his IQ to 180. As his intelligence increases, he realizes that the friendships he had with people he cared about were false, and with intelligence, comes the heavy burden of societal norms. Although…
One reason for my thinking is that sometimes people want something so bad, they’re willing to do anything. The main character/narrator in this story, Charlie Gordon, wants something. He only wants to be smart and to be like other people… normal. “I want to be smart.” (pg. 190) He wants it so bad that he’s willing to take the risk of a surgical operation. This operation (on his brain, I might add) is supposed to get his logical thinking in better condition.…
Charlie Gordon found out that he would eventually decrease in Intelligence until he would slowly and painfully die. Charlie found out that he would die when he researched it himself and found that ,“Artificially increased intelligence deteriorates at a rate of time directly proportional to the quantity of the increase.” (Keyes 205) Yes, that confirms that he will die. Charlie also had to dissect his only friend to confirm his research,“Algernon died two days ago. Dissections show my predictions were right. His brain had decreased in weight and there was a general smoothing out of cerebral convolutions as well as deepening a broadening of brain fissures.” (Keyes 205) You could say he signed up for it and deserves to die. First of all you are a sickening human being and he wasn’t even told all of the drawbacks, once again going against the Ethics of…
“ ‘Knowledge of a boy’s IQ is of little help if you are faced with a forkful of clever boys’ ”-Hudson (Gladwell 84). An IQ threshold suggests that after a certain amount a higher IQ does not correlate to success. This introduces the aspect of individual merit into success in regards to hard work. Until reading this book I have believed my successes to be a culmination of my own efforts.…
The story “Flowers for Algernon” is about a mentally troubled man named Charlie Gordon, who gets a surgery to make him smarter. In my opinion, Charlie’s life is better off with him being smart. Even though there are some bad things about him being smart, there are also many good reasons that he is. He is smart enough to know what’s going on. Whether it be at work or at the lab, he knows how people are actually treating him. In my mind, Charlie is better off being smart, shown through how other people treat him, how he treats other people, and his potential contributions to the world.…
Everyone craves super human intelligence, to be able to recall things no one would ever know. What if you had that knowledge and after a few months you discover it's deteriorating at a rapid pace. Having your knowledge torn away, and to top it all off you’ll die. Just to have more intelligence. In the book this exact experiment tortured the main character charlie in the worst way possible, allowing him to experience incredible feelings such as love, pride, accomplishment, realizations, and have them ripped away by the hands of god and left to die.…
In the story “Flowers for Algernon” written by Daniel Keyes, the main character, Charlie Gordon, and he has a decision to make. Should Charlie make the decision by getting the operation to triple his IQ of 68? Charlie made the wrong decision by getting the operation because it brought pain; he was able to see the true side of his friends, and he was able to see the sad realities of life which he was oblivious to before the operation. He was happy and non-emotional. He thought his friends liked him. He went to adult night school so he can become smarter.…
As the nurse pushes Charlie in the squeaky bed into the operating room, unaware the horrible things will come of the surgery. In the story “Flowers for Algernon”, a science fiction story by Daniel Keyes, Charlie Gordon, a 37 year old man, with a mental disability, wanted to be smart all his life. Then one day Charlie was given the chance to have a surgery that would triple his I.Q, after the operation he undergoes many changes. Charlie’s character drastically changes after the operation. Charlie should’ve never had the surgery because he became negative as a person, he regressed and lost everything he learned, and he’s experience psychological and emotional changes.…
I don’t agree that a person’s IQ can’t be determined by testing. A person’s capacity for success is not a person’s IQ, and most people confuse the two. A person’s IQ is the relative maturity of that person intellectual…
IQ tests are not a good idea. Just because someone who took the test and did not do well on it does not mean that they are not as bright as the others. The score does not define how smart we are. “The scale, properly speaking, does not permit the measure of intelligence, because intellectual qualities are not superposable, and therefore cannot be measured as linear surfaces are measured.” (Alfred Binet [creator of the IQ tests], 1905) Many people are bright in all sorts of things; they cannot judge them by one test they did. They also have a lot of disadvantages. For example for someone who is applying for a job and in the resume it said that the person did not do well on the test, the manager would probably not hire. Scientist has scanned participants’ brains to test. The machine showed that there are different understanding abilities were related to different circuits in the brain, suggesting that different area of the brain controls certain abilities of the brain. "We have shown categorically that you cannot sum up the difference between people in terms of one number, and that is really what is important here," (Owen)…