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.…
Charlie Kelmeckis, is an introverted and intellectually gifted teenager who is just starting his freshman year of highschool all alone. Then two seniors, Sam and Patrick, help him learn how to participate in life instead of watching others live it for him. He quickly is given the gift of true friendship, love, music and so much more, while a young english teacher and aspiring playwright helps him develop his skills as a writer. Though as all things that come up must go down, as his new friends start preparing for college, the problems he had buried all along threaten to shatter his newfound love for life.…
Daniel Keyes’ story, “Flowers for Algernon,” is the progress reports of 37 year old, Charlie Gordon, who gets a surgery to gain intelligence. Throughout the reports, you can see where Charlie intellectually starts and his progress from there. Then, unfortunately, Charlie’s intelligence descends and he’s back where he started. The story teaches you that too much of anything is unhealthy.…
37 years old with an IQ of 68, that was Charlie Gordon’s life until March 10th. Charlie gordon received an operation to increase his smartness. Living in the dark all his life he finally realizes what the world really is when he receives the surgery. He’s taught how to write correctly. Just a day before the surgery Charlie knew barely anything, but now he’s incredibly smart. This surgery is going to change Charlie’s life, for the better. With the strive Charlie had the operation will become a good thing for him.…
One day during lunch, Patrick is beaten up by a group of football players because he was talking to one of the players (his boyfriend). Charlie saves him from the beating and is let back into the group. The school year is ending which causes Charlie anxiety. He helps Sam to pack and they discuss his feelings for her. She becomes angry that he never said anything. They kiss, and as she touches his inner thigh, he becomes scared and tells her he is not ready.…
Charlie’s limited intelligence has made him a trusting, ingenuous and friendly man, as he assumes that all the people in his humdrum existence — mostly his co-workers at Donner’s Bakery are as well-intentioned as he used to be. However, as the neurosurgery stimulates his brain centers and rapidly increases his ability to learn, thereby elevating his mentality, Charlie gains perspective on his past and present. He founds himself becoming aware of a hard-hitting fact that his associates have constantly taken advantage of him and have treated him roughly just for sport, knowing that he would never understand. What is worse, he recovers that even if some people have shown a kindness to him, it usually came out of compassion or condescension and out of attitude to him as an inferior.…
Obviously, the surgery was a failure! Since Algernon died, Charlie realistically could expect his own demise. Although, Charlie’s intellect soared beyond specified predictions, the failure of the surgery- quite shocking to Charlie- was an uncontrollable variable! The doctors, opportunists, could not rectify, remedy this traumatic outcome. Only Charlie, the genius, could analyze the surgery’s inherent problematic components. At this point, Charlie did not regret the surgery; nevertheless, he should not have been the experimental…
Once they get permission required to do it, they operated on him and it because a success for a short period of time. He starts to learn, remember, and do things he was not able to do before. Later, Charlie starts to realize some things and begins to questions some of the people he is around all day long. Near the end of the book, he starts to forget things like he was before the operation… All of Charlie’s life has been a small world.…
The surgical operation was shown to be successful for a length of time but after so long things changed for the worst. Charlie knew this was going to happen after seeing the same thing happen to Algernon, the rat, who has had the same surgery done on him. Charlie started to regress back into his first state of mind. His intelligence starts to decline, his writing goes back to how it was, and his thinking process was back to how it was. Even with him noticing he was regressing he was grateful for the things he got a chance to understand and still was determined to work harder. “Im glad I got a second chanse in life like you said to be smart because I lerned a lot of things that I never even new were in this werld and im grateful I saw it all even for a littel bit”…
“Nature is like art; there are always those elements you want to change.” In the science fiction story, Flowers for Algernon by Daniel Keyes, Charlie had always wanted to be intelligent, and he did with a special operation. People today are trying to figure out how this story could become a reality. Genetic engineering is the modification of characteristics of a plant by changing its genes. Humans may give people confidence, cure them from diseases, and help people live longer.…
Has there ever been something that others can do or they are good at and you wish you could be as good? Well if so that's just like Charlie Gordon. In the science fiction story “Flowers for Algernon” by Daniel Keyes is about a mentally challenged 37 year old named Charlie Gordon. Charlie gets the opportunity of a lifetime when he is offered to get a surgery that may triple his I.Q. All Charlie has ever wanted was to be accepted by society. He felt that he wasn’t accepted because he wasn’t intelligent enough.This surgery may allow him to be accepted.Charlie should have got the artificial intelligence surgery (A.I) because he realized his “friends” were bullies, he was able to experience emotions, he got to know what it felt like to have his…
Charlie's operation benefitted him in many ways. For instance, Charlie, already knowing history, geography, and arithmetic, found it to be only natural that he “should start to learn a few foreign languages”. This shows that Charlie is progressing at a rapid rate; he already knows his core subjects, and foreign languages would just add on to his abundant library of diverse information in his expanding mind. This also shows that the operation is benefitting him greatly mentally; he is able to take in a massive amount of knowledge in. All this knowledge he is taking in drastically changes his view of the world. He realizes a heap of things he had no clue about the month before. For example, Charlie , realizing things he hadn't noticed before, “think[s] it's a good thing about finding out how everybody laughs at [him]”. This demonstrates that Charlie is in his beginning stages of gaining knowledge; he is realizing the pros an cons of life and analyzing whether the procedure was positive or negative. This also demonstrates that Charlie is a little hurt emotionally, but he comprehends why they would laugh at him; he will make sure it won't happen again. In conclusion, Charlie advancing mentally very quickly helped him figure out things he hadn't known or realized before. This just caused him to lose his loved ones. This just goes to show that being at a mental disadvantage isn't always a disadvantage, but a door stopper for negative potential.…
In Daniel Keyes “Flowers for Algernon” motivation is one of the most significant and constant themes throughout the story as it proves to be the key to reaching your goals. Through the character or Charlie Gordon, Keyes demonstrates the importance of motivation and how it allowed his character to push himself to reach the average intelligence of a human. Charlie wanted to be able to perceive the world around him like the average human being, he wanted to know how to read, write, think and learn which is why he worked so hard to reach a place where he felt proud. Motivation played an important piece inside his mind, as it kept him steady through the rough paths. For example when Charlie first learnt that the people that he thought were his…
As the book begins, a major conflict of man vs. society appears. Basically its between Charlie, representing the mentally retarded vs. society. Charlie does not realize this when his intelligence is limited but as he grows brighter he notices the people he used to call friends, namely his co-workers in the bakery, were outwardly mean to him. Frank Reilly, Joe Carp, and Gimpy play cruel tricks on him that Charlie does not understand. Once they took Charlie to a bar, got him drunk, and laughed at him while Charlie. Charlie never understood this at the time and he tools the laughter as a sign of friendship. His other co-worker, Fanny Birden, is the only one nice to him but it is only out of pity because of his disability. Once Charlie realizes the mistreatment of mentally retarded people, he cannot help but feel resentment to those who used to look down on him. At one point in the novel, Charlie is at a restaurant and there is a mentally retarded kitchen helper. When he sees that they are laughing at him he proceeds to yell at them telling them that the kitchen helper is human too. Charlie feels a connection with him. However when Charlie visits the Warren Home, he looks at the boys with the same perception people used to look at him with. For example, when the deaf mute boy in the shop class shows Charlie a mediocre lamp he made, Charlie said it was a nice job to humor the boy. Charlie resents the boys in the Warren Home because he knows that soon he will become just like one of them soon, and he does not want to go back to being dumb. Another conflict in "Flowers for Algernon" is man vs. man, namely Charlie vs. himself. When he grows smarter, he starts to talk about how Charlie is always looking at him. This Charlie is the dumber version of him and…
The movie “Charly” and the short story “Flowers of Algernon” both have some similarities and differences. For example, in both the movie and short story, they show that Charlie got the operation, and became intelligent at one point, but he lost his intelligence later. They both also show that he did some research about the operation before he lost his intelligence. The movie version did show that he had a romantic relationship with Miss Kinnian, but in the short story he didn’t really have a romantic relationship. Speaking of relationships, in the movie, it didn’t show how much Charlie cared for Algernon as he did in the story.…