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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 4 page paper considers how the issue of rapid change is dealt with in three works, Frankenstein by Mary Shelly, Karl Marx’s The Communist Manifesto and John Stuart Mill’s On Liberty. The bibliography cites 2 sources.
Page Count:
4 pages (~225 words per page)
File: TS14_TEchgshl.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
In three works there are different types of change examined, and each indicates who change may be both painful and hard to accept. In Mary Shellys Frankenstein, Dr Frankenstein
says there is nothing so painful as sudden change. In Mary Shellys Frankenstein we see a monster created out of the body parts of the dead, being brought to life
by way of the thunderstorm and the electricity released by the lightening. There is a change here that needs to be accepted by society, an Individual is brought to life
in a way they do not understand, this create fear and panic. The use of technology often brings about the reaction of
fear to those who do not understand it, in this case the lessons may be brought into the current context. When modern science considers life; the creation or manipulation of
it, it is seen as a beautiful subject, one which should bring joy or relief. However, there is also a darker side, with the completion of the genome mapping project
the ethics and possibility of designer babies is brought to the fore. The same project has also raised fears about the way in which genetic information will be used by
insurance companies and employers in order to discriminate. It is discrimination that we see in Frankenstein, he is ugly and created, representing on the outside the worst that may be
seen from this manipulation of nature and life. Therefore rapid change is seen to impact on society by causing fear and resentment in those who do not understand its use.
The ability to control and manipulate science is shown in the book as a learning experience, whereby we learn what is and
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