Chapter 1, Chapter 2 and Chapter 3: These chapters focus on the background stories of Victor Frankenstein's growth. He later caught his cousin Elizabeth who married him and how they found her. Later we will introduce the victor's best friend Henry Clervard. I also learned that Frankenstein was fascinated by the science of the 16th century author Cornelius Agrippa. It stimulated many other philosophers at that time and urged him to become a scientist.
Compare Mary Sherry 's Frankenstein and Kenneth Brana' s Frankenstein with most Americans who think about Frankenstein because of Frankenstein 's many movies. Contrary to common beliefs, Mary Sherry's Frankenstein is a scientist, not a monster. This "monster" is not like an implicit, angry criminal as described in the 1994 movie novel. Sherry's original Frankenstein was distorted by this Kenneth Blanca movie. Frankenstein's human morality is a product of evolution by genetic mutation and natural selection. It is entirely part of nature, but it is not - it is the opposite. In the last sentence of "Origin of Species", Darwin said, "This view of life has greatness ... In this form the most beautiful and most wonderful infinite form already exists and evolves. "A beautiful and wonderful form includes agents that react truly ethically to real moral facts and shape natural things."
Mary Sherry's life is full of ups and downs. Sherry wrote the novel Frankenstein at that time. Frankenstein is a novel, but it is similar to the real life of Mary Sherry. Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley was born on August 30, 1797 as parents of Mary Wollstonecraft and William Godwin in London, England. After Mary was born, her mother died ten days later ("Mary" 2). Four years later, William Gold got married again. - Mary Shelley was buried at Mary Wollstonecraft Godwin in London, England on August 30, 1797. She is a daughter of political theorist, novelist, and publisher William Godwin, and is the daughter of a writer and early feminist thinker Mary Worthcraft who died in childbirth 10 days after her daughter was born. When she was a child, Mary did not receive formal education but received advice from his father, but at the time Mary Godwin received an unusual higher education for girls.