Table of Contents
- 1 What is the most important lesson the creature learns in Frankenstein?
- 2 What does the creature learn to do and how does he learn this what kind of knowledge does the monster gain from the Cottagers Why is he eager to have this knowledge?
- 3 What lesson does the creature learn in Chapter 15?
- 4 What similarities does the creature share with Adam?
- 5 How does her language problem help the creature?
- 6 How does the creature learn about reading in Frankenstein?
What is the most important lesson the creature learns in Frankenstein?
One moral lesson in Frankenstein is that people need to belong and feel connected to others to survive. Another moral lesson is that humans must carefully consider the costs of scientific progress.
What does the creature learn to do and how does he learn this what kind of knowledge does the monster gain from the Cottagers Why is he eager to have this knowledge?
what kind of knowledge does the monster gain from the cottagers? He learns to speak, and then to read, by observing and listening to the cottagers. He found a portmanteau that had several books in it, and he read them. He then read the letters that were in the pocket of the coat he had taken from Victor Frankenstein.
What lesson does the creature learn in Chapter 15?
Learning Despair, Virtue, and Spirituality This book teaches the monster about deep thoughts. He learns to question life, death, and suicide. The book also teaches him about sorrow and despair.
How does Frankenstein’s creature learn about his creator and his origins?
How does the creature find out about his origins? He rifles through the pockets of the clothes he stole from Victor’s apartment and finds Victor’s journal. Victor and his father have travelled to Paris so Victor can regain his strengths before returning home to Geneva after the death of Henry Clerval.
What happens when the creature tries to express himself?
When the creature introduces himself to the cottagers Agatha faints, Safie runs away from the scene, and Felix beats the creature with a stick.
The monster, based on what he had read, believed that just as God created Adam, so had Frankenstein created him; in that sense he was similar to Adam. In addition, the monster had no companion and was lonely—just like Adam was before the creation of Eve.
How does her language problem help the creature?
How does her language problem help the creature? Which of them learns faster? Safie is from Turkey. Her father was wrongly accused and thrown into prison. Felix falls in love with her and teaches her French. The monster observes the reading lessons and learns faster than Safie.
How does the creature learn about reading in Frankenstein?
Felix falls in love with her and teaches her French. The monster observes the reading lessons and learns faster than Safie. 67. How does the creature learn about reading? What book does Felix use to teach Safie? Felix teaches Safie how to read with Volney’s Ruins of Empires.
How does the creature learn about the human race?
In addition, he learned of cruelty and judgment first-hand when the villagers chased him with sticks and threw rocks at him as well as when Felix attacked him for being too near his elderly and blind father. For these reasons, the creature decides upon revenge for Victor as he is the reason the creature’s life is so miserable and outcast.
How are the creator and creation alike in Frankenstein?
With the creature decrial of his own knowledge, he and Frankenstein become more closely aligned in the reader’s mind; indeed, they are nearly indistinguishable. Both creator and creation are made outcasts by what they know; both long for nothing so passionately as they do their former innocence.