Selfishness In John Steinbeck's The Most Dangerous Game

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Selfishness is dangerous, it can kill and make others suffer even when they did no wrong. In The Most Dangerous Game, the General kills man after man without thinking about what it would mean for them. The men that he had killed and the men that he continues to kill have families, children, jobs, and goals. Yet he kills them all without showing any mercy and/or pity. This shows how he’s completely full of himself. It’s easy to see how selfishness can take over somebody and at most, kill people. Like how in The Bet, the lawyer had agreed to the bet he had made with the young banker. Afterwards, the banker was thinking to himself about the bet he had made and for what he had made it, that’s when he had realized something. The banker had realized that he made the bet with the lawyer for no reason, it was completely unnecessary and wouldn’t fall into the benefit of either one of the two men. …show more content…

Yet the banker decided to go on with the bet. Here, you can see that this was an act of pure selfishness as he held the lawyer as a prisoner for so long for no reason. Likewise, in What, of This Goldfish, Would You Wish the way selfishness had taken over Sergei was completely insane. When the young boy had shown up to his door he told him to leave, but the boy didn’t listen, instead he went straight to Sergei’s magical fish which he didn’t know was magical. However, Sergei thought the boy was trying to steal his goldfish and so without the slightest bit of hesitation, he picked the burner from off the stove and hit the young boy on the head. Sergei had taken the life of an innocent boy. Although it was in his power to take the boys life or let him live, his selfishness had taken over him. Which ended in Sergei ending the poor boy’s life. For reasons like so, it is very much prominent that selfishness is dangerous and can kill, even when it is not

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