John Locke's Philosophy in 'Frankenstein': A Study

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John Locke is a philosopher who discovered many theories. His philosophy states, “humans begin as blank and gradually acquire knowledge through experience” (Locke). This means that it is the experiences that determine who you are. They can determine if someone is a good person or a bad person. Positive experiences can make someone a good person; bad experiences determine if someone is a bad person, and the same can be said for the monster in Mary Shelley’s novel, Frankenstein.
Positive experiences can make someone a better person because people can learn from those positive experiences and use it to help someone else become a better person. One example is “One positive by-product of the Diamondbacks injury list has been the experience gain …show more content…

Shelley writes, “A considerable period elapsed before I discovered one of the causes of the uneasiness if this amiable family: it was poverty, and they suffered that evil in a very distressing degree (Shelly 77). The monster was stealing their food which he realized that was wrong because the family he was watching was low on food. Also it shows that this experience the monster went through showed that he was trying to become a good person. Another example is that in the book the monster kills Elizabeth to punish Frankenstein for not creating a female monster. This is a bad experience because the monster knows it is wrong to this and he did it anyway which makes him a bad person. All of these experiences lead the monster to have the negativity he experienced.
In conclusion, John Locke’s philosophy states that the experiences that people go through can determine who they are. People go through good and bad experiences that can change who they are. In the book Frankenstein, the monster went through experiences that made him a good person; ultimately, the negative experiences outweigh the good, causing he to become a bad person. In the end, it is the experiences that count that stand out the most in a person’s life making them who they are - proving Locke’s philosophy to be

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