Ethical Surgery In Daniel Keyes Flowers For Algernon

1377 Words3 Pages

“But I’ve learned that intelligence alone doesn’t mean a damned thing.” - Daniel Keyes (249) From the mouth of Charlie Gordon himself, the contradicting quote to the original thought of an ethical surgery is strongly challenged. The novel Flowers For Algernon, written by Daniel Keyes, is a remarkable book of the life of a mentally disabled person. After an experimental mouse, Algernon, is put into the hands of two doctors, he begins the journey of intelligence. Charlie is then found and is the first human to be experimented on for the intellectual surgery. Shown if the novel, experimentation and calculation was not being used correctly to begin with, so, therefore, they were not able to determine a future for either of the test subjects. …show more content…

A major scene in the novel, the convention, was where Charlie discovered the truth behind Nemur and Strauss’s scheme. When Nemur took the podium, he said, “It might be said that Charlie Gordon did not really exist before this experiment” (Keyes 161). Nemur truly believes that he invented Charlie, and that he saved him from a life of misery, or better yet, no life at all. This, of course, discouraged and angered Charlie, causing him to write, “I’m a human being, a person--with parents and memories and a history--and I was before you ever wheeled me into that operating room” (Keyes 161). The surgery did more than what had been established. On top of an advancement in his intelligence, Charlie realized that what he had gone through, and the work he had done, had gotten him nowhere. He was Charlie before the operation. The real Charlie. Charlie was able to form relationships before the operation, and functioned positively in society, but he would end up throwing this all away. He wanted to form stronger relationships, but his mental illness prevented anyone from doing so, due to the fact that they saw no point. After the surgery, Charlie is aware of his mental illness, and becomes angry about his process, which prevents him from forming the relationships he had wished for. Along with the convention, Charlie’s surgery shows much unethicality in the bakery, where he was fired from his job. Charlie’s boss/employer told Charlie on May 20, “But something happened to you, and I don’t understand what it means. Not only me. Everyone has been talking about it. I've had them in here a dozen times in the past few weeks. They’re all upset. Charlie, I got to let you go” (Keyes 104). Pre-surgery, Charlie was able to make a living, with a job and a roof over his head. Not until after his surgery, Charlie had lost his job, his

Open Document