Submitted by siuknowwhatImean t3_1157d2a in books
aeon_ducks t1_j918irv wrote
Reply to comment by PeterLemonjellow in Is Frankenstein responsible for the murders his creation committed? by siuknowwhatImean
Your argument is in bad faith because even if something/ someone is born fully sapient they are still ignorant. The "monster" was given no chance to adjust to his sudden existence. You people are putting all the blame on the monster despite him being the only innocent character in the story. Every living creature has a need to survive brain washed into the deepest part of our brains you can't expect him to just give up and die because everyone dislikes him, there is a reason a right to life is included in the constitution of nearly every free country on the planet.
PeterLemonjellow t1_j929a14 wrote
It's not a matter of a "right to life". It's a matter of who is making choices in that life. Even if the Monster is sapient but ignorant, that doesn't change the fact that the Monster is making decisions without the influence of Frankenstein (he's just making those decisions from a place of ignorance, which is further proof Frankenstein did NOT influence the Monster towards killing people). If the Monster were even truly physically and mentally identical to, say, an average 6 year old child, if that small child committed a murder you couldn't blame the father of that child; epecially if it was a father who abandoned them at 5 years old. Sure, what the father did in abandoning the child is despicable, but in the interim period the child showed personal autonomy and made its own decisions. It was acting outside the sphere of the father's influence or control. The father can be held culpable of abandonment, negligence of the child's own safety, etc., but he is not culpable for the actual acts of murder - those were completely the idea of the child (here "Monster").
The deny the Monster this autonomy, then you are denying the Monster's humanity entirely. So, is the Monster truly an inhuman monster incapable of the free will all humans share? Or is he a man, but a man that chose to kill?
(Just as an aside, I want to make it clear that this is just how I would argue this point to defend Frankenstein. I don't actually believe that Frankenstein is worth defending, but that's the assignment at hand.)
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