A man named Charlie Gordon performed surgery aimed at improving intelligence in "Argongon's Flower" written by Daniel Keys. He was originally mentally disabled and slowly became a genius. He seems to absorb information like a sponge, he can find the most complex scientific formula. The only problem with surgery is that it does not last forever, and for the remainder of the time, he tries to find out why it is not permanent. He will eventually lose everything he has learned and will be worse than he started, so Charlie will get better before he begins surgery.
If there is no surgery, charliee would be better. Through the flowers for Algernon, Daniel Keyes sent society an important message that humans should not tamper with human wisdom. After Charlie's action, he felt isolated loneliness, and his character changed him to avant-garde around him (lack of social skills), and suffered trauma from past memories. This ... first of all, Charlie understands that his colleague is not his real friend after all.
Flower-like students of the fictional Charlie story of Arge Jenon do not know how to do it. In the science fiction of Daniel Keys, Charlie is a trailer who experienced experimental manipulation to raise intelligence to genius level, and his mentor, Miss Kinnian, tells the wrong idea that he teaches him about punctuation. As the excerpt below shows, he is completely incompetent: Today, I said, the comma, this is a complete stop, tail, Miss Kinnian. She may lose a lot of money if it is a comma, no, in the right place, I do not have money, I can not see, a comma, you cease to lose it Let me do it. Mr. Kinnian was also a punctuation for a while and said that there are many other markers to learn. She said, do you need to mix the markers? How are you? Please awaken them (get up ... now, I can! Can you mix different functions?) (Punctuation, very fun!)