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Playlist Frankenstein: Shmoopversations 14 videos
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Frankenstein: Nature vs. Nurture 24897 Views
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Description:
Was Frankenstein’s creature “born” a monster? Were his fun-filled murderous tendencies all inate? Or did he begin as a “blank slate,” but was never taught good manners by good ol’ Vic, like...y’know, not killing people. Shmoop it up and watch the video to learn more!
Transcript
- 00:01
We speak student!
- 00:09
Frankenstein a la Shmoop
- 00:10
Nature versus Nurture
- 00:13
What is the nature versus nurture debate?
- 00:17
So nature versus nature --
Full Transcript
- 00:18
You know, you've probably heard this being talked about
- 00:21
in contemporary society.
- 00:22
The question is - Are we born as a blank slate
- 00:25
and anything that we are as humans
- 00:28
comes from nurture, meaning comes from
- 00:31
the environment we're brought up in,
- 00:32
the way we're treated, et cetera?
- 00:34
Or are we born with certain innate qualities?
- 00:37
You know, I might be born as kind of a bubbly kid.
- 00:41
Or am I born blank slate
- 00:43
and because my mom is bubbly,
- 00:45
so am I? That's kind of the question.
- 00:47
Nature versus nurture is used a lot
- 00:49
in super controversial topics
- 00:50
like homosexuality, where there are people who argue
- 00:54
that people are not born as homosexuals,
- 00:58
- but instead it is, you know, nurture and it's learned. Exactly. - Learned.
- 01:02
So that's the nature versus nurture.
- 01:04
How is the nature versus nurture debate brought up in Frankenstein?
- 01:10
Is the monster innately bad...
- 01:13
or is he bad because his creator abandoned him?
- 01:17
Those are the two options.
- 01:18
Either he was just born a monster,
- 01:21
or created a monster,
- 01:23
or he was totally a blank slate,
- 01:25
could've turned out to be the sweet guy next door,
- 01:28
but then Victor abandoned him
- 01:30
and so he became evil and started killing everyone.
- 01:33
The Enlightenment is when this theory of the blank slate -
- 01:36
the fancy term for that is "tabula rasa" -
- 01:38
came about with John Locke.
- 01:40
And the idea would be that yes,
- 01:44
Frankenstein's monster could have turned into
- 01:48
a normal guy and could've led a totally fine life.
- 01:51
But he was abandoned by his creator
- 01:54
and so the nurture made him not be that way.
- 01:57
Today you look at a toddler, you look at a kid --
- 01:59
We now know that tabula rasa's not a thing.
- 02:03
It's definitely not -- No one's born a blank slate.
- 02:06
But we still don't know how much.
- 02:08
And the modern parlance is that there's a genetic predisposition
- 02:12
to doing something some way.
- 02:14
Exactly. You know, we know that nobody's born blank slate.
- 02:16
We also know that, you know,
- 02:19
nurture is an issue and nature --
- 02:21
But we still haven't figured out how much.
- 02:23
And this is something that Mary Shelley was thinking about
- 02:25
and John Locke in the Enlightenment was thinking about
- 02:28
like hundreds of years ago and we still haven't figured it out.
- 02:32
What is the nature versus nurture debate?
- 02:35
How is the nature versus nurture conflict
- 02:38
presented in Frankenstein?
- 02:43
[ baby laughs and cries ]
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