The Fault of the mind

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The Fault of the Mind

Esteemed psychologist Sigmund Freud’s discoveries are still relied upon on studied today. It was the largest known jump in the knowledge of the human brain. Many of Freud’s theories applied to fictional character help us better understand the sate of mind of the characters' and the author. The brain and one’s emotions can have a lasting effect on life, death, success, or even failure. Ultimately Victor Frankenstein’s down fall can be traced to Freudian psychological phenomena, specifically a refusal to live in the ego, and a less than ideal childhood.

It has been shown that the way one is raised as a child can have a large effect on them as an adult; this is supported by Frankenstein and his upbringing. When telling his tale Victor explains that, “no human being could have passed a happier childhood than myself” (Shelley 45). Victor’s childhood did not prepare him in any way for the world outside of the bubble in which he was raised. He lived with no conflict and led a spoiled, with no conflict, want, or need for anything. He had no troubles and no worries his parents cared for him, and he was waited on hand and foot by others, making him expect that the real world would be just as easy, and an illusion that was cruelly halted when he left the nest. Later victor narrates that within his childhood he was told by his father, “my dear Victor do not waste your time upon this” (Shelley 46). Victor’s parents claimed that they knew best for him and planned his life out for him, essentially from birth, making key basic decisions that lead to an extreme lack of decisiveness in his adulthood. Later Victor ‘miraculously’ changes his mind and begins focusing on his future and his studies he says “when I look back ...

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... and leave my adversary in being” (Shelley 172). This is without a doubt a step towards insanity. The only reason Victor has not allowed himself to die is that if he dies before the monster there would be no stopping it. An extreme example of life within the super ego, the only thing Victor lives for is the lives of others. Victor’s time in the super ego is a large reason for his demise, his care only for others, not for himself harms him more than nearly anything else he experiences.

Frankenstein’s downfall can easily be traced to psychological issues beginning all the way back within his childhood. His focus on spending the majority of his life within the ego and the super ego shows that he doesn’t understand how a well-balanced life can be beneficial to him and others which ultimately leads to his downfall. It was not the monster’s fault but purely his own.

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