The short story‚ Flowers for Algernon by Daniel Keyes provides us with a clear and honest idea of what being mentally disabled would be like through the mind of a cognitively challenged man named Charlie who is subject to undergo multiple mental experiments. One of the biggest
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"Intelligence without ambition is a bird without wings‚" (Dali). All change needs a level of courage‚ and Charlie Gordon has that. In the short story‚ "Flowers for Algernon" by Daniel Keys‚ Charlie Gordon is a thirty seven year old mentally impaired man who has an IQ of sixty eight. He receives the opportunity to have an operation done on him that will triple his IQ‚ and make it two hundred and four. This will allow Charlie to see the world through the eyes of a genius. Overall‚ this experiment
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Although Daniel Keyes wrote “Flowers for Algernon” with hope for mentally impaired Charlie Gordon‚ the operation failed with grotesque consequences! After the surgery‚ Charlie was blown away by the concepts and uncertainties he now understood‚ negative and positive. He was a human experiment to fix mentally impaired people like himself. He understood the failure and cruelness of the surgery. Charlie suffered the consequence of losing his care-free‚ stress-free‚ worry-free nature. The societal conflicts
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I fale almost every test that I take. I am not smart at all. Do you say that sometimes? Charlie‚ a character in the story called “Flowers for Algernon” by Daniel Keyes thinks that he isn’t smart. He has a low IQ score. Charlie gets an operation done that makes him smarter. We are having an argument to see if he should or shouldn’t get the operation. We think he should get the operation. The first reason why we think Charlie should get the operation is because his friends will not make fun of him
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Everything comes at a price even intelligence. In the Science Fiction short story “Flowers for Algernon” by Daniel Keyes is a mentally disabled 32-year-old man named Charlie Gordon. Charlie was chosen to have a life-changing surgery to boost his intelligence three times. After having the surgery he realizes that the surgery is not permanent and begins to go into a state of panic. After losing his intelligence he is forced to move away from everyone he knows Charlie should not have had the surgery
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Charlie Gordon is the main character in Flowers for Algernon‚ a story in which he is operated on to become more intelligent and to help him function “normally” in society. However‚ intelligence does not make a person happier‚ kinder‚ or generally better. One example that supports this theory is that Charlie’s friends from the factory are of average intelligence‚ but aren’t nice. Miss Kinnian is of average intelligence and is extremely kind‚ so there’s no correlation between intelligence and behavior
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College for Retarded Adults‚ has recommended Charlie for the experiment because of his exceptional eagerness to learn. The directors of the experiment‚ Dr. Strauss and Professor Nemur‚ ask Charlie to keep a journal. The entire narrative of Flowers for Algernon is composed of the “progress reports” that Charlie writes. This story made me think greatly about how technology has become a huge part of society‚ the constant want that humans have to become more and more superior and the further growing
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Some are very lucky to have intelligence but some are not so lucky. Like the character Charlie Gordon from the story “Flowers for Algernon” by Daniel Keyes. Charlie Gordon has a chance to have a surgery to make him smarter. As you know enery thing comes with a risk. With surgery it might make him die. Their was only one animal that survived the the surgery and his name was Algernon. So I don’t think he should have had the operation. First than first he went on with surgery and ended up dieing. I don’t
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“To be‚ or not to be‚- that is the question:” (Shakespeare’s Hamlet). Whether someone will pay to be intelligent for a time‚ or stay within their inability to understand the world around them. “Flowers for Algernon” a science fiction story by Daniel Keyes‚ follows the events from the life of a man by the name of Charlie Gordon who had to answer this very question. He did not have the same mental capacity of the average person‚ so he had the opportunity to rapidly gain intelligence. Ultimately he
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In the book Flowers For Algernon a brain surgery was performed on a rat and then on a human named Charlie. The surgery was supposed to make you smarter and it did. However it was not permanent and it took a while to start working. In my opinion I don’t think that they should have done the test on Charlie or any human because something could have gone horribly wrong. It could have gone wrong on Algernon too. It could have been very dangerous. Charlie’s Decision Charlie wanted to be the
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