Prospero's judgment against the Kaliban in Shakespeare's "storm" will never last its nature, he lost a devil, a natural devil, my pain, a humanitarian loss, a considerable thing. As his age goes up, his body gets uglier, so his heart becomes an ulcer. (IV.I.188-192) Prospero's Kariban ruled a considerable change in "Arashi". However, it is always said that Caliban is much lower than Prospero, for example "poisonous slave" or "dull." 188 - 192, Act 4, Act 1, Prospero's Carib Judgment
Introduction William Shakespeare's "Storm" is the story of Prospero who was on the island with her daughter Miranda. Living in the island is a soul called Ariel and an ugly monster called caliban. Miranda, Ariel and Calvin differ in character. However, Prospero had a tendency to raise all of these on the island. Through Caliban and Miranda in particular, Shakespeare shows that education and cultivation can influence people's true nature and self. NURTURE VS. NURTURE How is culture cultivated or promoted?
When Prospero expressed Cariban as "a devil whose nature does not exist", Shakespeare introduced the words "nature" and "raising" first in "Arashi." The natural concept of confrontation with breeding is the driving force that nurtures nature, which has been used more than a century ago by Darwin's cousin Francis Galton (1865). Galton believes that "no one can get rid of this conclusion, that nature has occupied a large position in cultivation" (1883, p. 241). By adding these two words, there will be a breakup that enters the longest discussion in the behavioral science. The original hyphen suggests an implicit conjunction "contrast". The proper combination of nature and cultivation is "and".