Complicated Moral Questions Questioned In Mary Shelley's Frankenstein

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A Close Analysis of Themes and the Complicated Moral Questions asked in
“Frankenstein” by Mary Wollstonecraft Shelly

The pursuit of knowledge, the weight of the moral implications of creating life, and weight of responsibility for said knowledge is heavily emphasized in “Frankenstein” by Mary Shelley. Inquiring knowledge and its benefits and what its boundaries are, are not so clearly defined as it might seem at first thought, one should consider asking themselves if some things are better left undiscovered or if there is no moral limit to scientific inquiry. The unorthodox start of “Frankenstein” sets the stage for the theme that is riddled throughout the novel, defined by Captain Walton in his first letter to his sister, “My life might have …show more content…

This emphasis on glory and discovery at a cost is the central theme that is accentuated throughout “Frankenstein” heavily contributed to the novel’s timelessness as a literary classic that has been consistently reproduced and retold in almost every decade since its initial publication in March 11th, 1818 (History.com Staff). The creation of the monster in the novel echoes Mary Shelley’s own personal struggles with her father and thus makes for that much more of a personalized and relatable novel, drawing influences from various classics such as “Paradise Lost” by John Milton, “Allegory of the Cave” by Plato, the Greek myth of Prometheus (as said directly in the original title), and even the “Book of Genesis”. Nonetheless, Victor Frankenstein’s inquiry of scientific discovery is the fundamental driving factor of the

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