experimentation is ethical because it can make humans’ IQ increase a lot, it can help find cures for diseases, but animal experimentation can cause many animals to die and they are given diseases. It is ethical to use animals for medical test in “Flowers for Algernon” Algernon is used in an experiment that is supposed to make living organisms smarter. In the book charlie cannot spell the right way, “Mr. Strauss says I shud rite down what I think and evrey thing that st happins to me from now on.” this evidence…
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fully understand? Daniel Keyes explores this in his short story “Flowers For Algernon” by mapping the intellectual growth and decay of a mentally retarded man who experiences the theoretical effects, side-effects, and social repercussions of using surgery as a means to enhance intelligence. “Flowers For Algernon” demonstrates that any artificial enhancement to human intelligence results in an evolutionary disadvantage. “Flowers For Algernon”…
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Flowers for Algernon Charlie Gordon was a man with a disability which include that he wasn't smart as the other people. Also, he has this disability were he couldn't write the right way and he didn't have imagination, he just simply can't think about anything.Therefore people used to make fun of him because he was different and used to do silly stuffs. But he was just being himself and because of his problem he couldn't notice when people were laughing at him or with him for him was the same.Charlie…
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two texts, “Flowers for Algernon” by Daniel Keyes and the biblical story “The Garden of Eden,” there are two characters, Charlie and Adam, who reflect each other throughout each of their belonging stories. As both of their stories develop, there is a clear understanding that Charlie Gordan and Adam get tempted to do what their heart longs for the most, as well as seeing how they suffer the consequences of making a life changing action. The protagonists in both “Flowers for Algernon” and “The Garden…
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Payton Mitchell Hours:3,6 Trimble Argument Essay In “Flowers for Algernon” Charlie Gordon was a hardworking 37-year-old man who was not smart. His dream was that he wanted to be smart. His teacher miss Kinnian requested him to get a surgery to the doctors named Dr. Strauss and Dr. Nemur. Miss Kinnian wanted the doctors to be ethical. Ethical, or ethics can be defined as standards of good, bad, right, or wrong. Ethics are rights, religion, standards, and virtues, but they are not confined to…
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The Cost of Bad Decisions “The measure of intelligence is the ability to change,”- Albert Einstein. In Flowers for Algernon by Daniel Keyes, Dr. Strauss, Dr. Nemur, and Miss Kinnian were all trying to help Charlie Gordon (a mental 37-year-old) prepare for an operation. The purpose of this surgery was to help Charlie become smarter since he was a grown man with an IQ of 68. Charlie’s dream has always been to be able to read and write, but he never knew how much it would cost him (Charlie was never…
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Charlie Gordon underwent surgery throughout the entire story of Flowers for Algernon. Before the surgery, Charlie worked at Donnegans Plastic Box company with his friends, he went to a night school, and didn’t care what anybody said about him. After the surgery, he had no job, no friends, no school, and no money. He had nothing, the surgery nearly ruined his life in multiple ways. First off, Charlie had a job where he could get paid, hang out with his co-workers, and just have a fun time in general…
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intelligence God would have given him a super high intelligence. In the science fiction story “Flowers for Algernon” Charlie is a 37 year old man who has a very low intelligence. In the story Charlie Gordon has a surgery that could triple his I.Q. The surgery is a success for a short period of time. There’s also a white mouse named Algernon that had undergone the surgery as well. Charlie becomes friends with Algernon. Charlie should not have had the Artificial intelligence surgery. As a result, Charlie lost…
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In the story Flowers For Algernon, by Daniel Keyes, the author depicts how experimenting on people with the hope of “fixing” or “improving” them can cause more harm than good. Some people encourage the idea of experimenting, but is medically altering a human being’s brain and mind a good idea? This book shows how people view experimenting, and that maybe our medical procedures don’t always last forever. There are many books that show how human experimentation can negatively affect our society…
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In the short story “Flowers for Algernon”, by Daniel Keyes, the main character, Charlie Gordon, has a surgery to make himself smart, but, in the end [it doesn’t even matter], loses all of his knowledge, bringing him back to the way he was before, mentally handicapped. What happened to Charlie may, at first, seem like a tragedy, but, when you see his outlook on what happened, you start to realize that it isn’t so bad afterall. Charlie knows what role he plays in other people’s lives now, and has learned…
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