John Locke

  • Who are they?

John locke was one of the most famous philosophers and political theorists in the 17th and 18th centuries. He lived from 1632 to 1704, an English philosopher and physician. He is know as one of the most influential thinkers in the enlightenment and commonly know as the ‘Father of liberalism’.

  • What were their major contributions to the 18th centre philosophy

John Lockes major contribution was foundering the modern philosophical empiricism finding out that the mind is born at a blank slate and that knowledge is based on experience. He is also considered the ‘father of liberalism’ which is based on the princible of liberty and equality, he helped founder of the U.S. Declaration of Independence and Constitution, human rights.

  • Explain their most successful and well recognised theory.

His most important work was the essay concerning human understanding. This was a book published in December 1989 based on the the knowledge and understanding of the human mind.

  • How was there theory related to Frankenstein?

John locke theory about human understanding relates to Frankenstein as Locke states that the mind is a blank slate, this relates to the creation that Frankenstein creates as he was born not knowing any of his body features capability’s or surroundings. The creature acted like a new born baby, having to learn everything over again from how to speak to how to survive. A quote for out of Frankenstein said by the creature “A strange multiplicity of sensations seized me, and I saw, felt, heard, and smelt at the same time; and it was, indeed, a long time before I learned to distinguish between the operations of my various senses”

Setting

What is happening in the text around this setting?

Word choices and/or language devices that shelly uses in this setting.

How does the setting develop, what tone.

 

Geneva- Home

“The majestic and wondrous scenes which surrounded our Swiss home—the sublime shapes of the mountains, the changes of the sea- sons, tempest and calm, the silence of winter, and the life and turbulence of our Alpine summers—she found ample scope for admiration and delight.”

When Frankenstein explains about his home he is talking about Elizabeth, he says that in-between all of whats happing she makes him feel calm and happy. As he talks about his surroundings he is using the tone used in gothic fiction, he says that it can be violent and calm, using two different descriptives for one thing. He says there is coldness and darkness out in the mountains which makes the reader quite unsettled, makes us feel cold and maybe scared, keeping us intrigued and wondering what is out there.

 

Inglostlad- University

“At length the high white steeple of the town met my eyes. I alighted and was conducted to my solitary apart- ment to spend the evening as I pleased.”

Shelly talks about a high white steeple which indicates that there is a church in the town, it make make the reader feel small compared to there surroundings. But in this Frankenstein says that he can spend his evening how he pleased which suggests that he feels calmed down by the church, but this makes the reader wonder what part the church may play in the text to come. This point makes the tone in the text very calm and makes us think about what will happen next because everything has come to an end and we no that in gothic fiction something bad may happen.

 

The Big Five

Conflicts in literature can be broken into five major categories.

Man vs Society

Man vs Technology 

Man vs Self
“Life, although it may only be an accumulation of anguish, is dear to me, and I will defend it.”
“Often did my human nature turn with loathing from my occupation whilst still urged on by an eagerness which particular increased, I brought my work near to a conclusion.”
“How can I describe my emotions at this catastrophe or how delineate the wretch whom with such infinite pain and care I had endeavoured to form.”

Man vs Man
“Cursed, cursed creator! Why did I live? Why, in that instant, did I not extinguish the spark of existence which you had so wantonly bestowed? I know not; despair had not yet taken possession of me; my feelings were those of rage and revenge. I could with pleasure have destroyed the cottage and its inhabitants and have glutted myself with their shrieks and misery.” The monster is saying how he wishes he isn’t alive and that he hates Frankenstein for creating him, he wonders why life is so miserable for him and why Frankenstein and other humans enjoy life and not him. He’s blaming Frankenstein and the cottagers for his miserable life.

“Beware; for I am fearless, and therefore powerful.”

“Accursed creator! Why did you form a monster so hideous that even YOU turned from me in disgust? God, in pity, made man beautiful and alluring, after his own im- age; but my form is a filthy type of yours, more horrid even from the very resemblance. Satan had his companions, fellow devils, to admire and encourage him, but I am solitary and abhorred.’”

Victor loves the monster at the beginning but he just hates the look of him and feels threatened by him he’s confused and he dosing want to like the monster because he may seem week towards his family of something.

Man vs Nature
“[Scientists] penetrate into the recesses of nature and show how she works in her hiding-places. They ascend into the heavens; they have discovered how the blood circulates, and the nature of the air we breathe. They have acquired new and almost unlimited powers; they can command the thunders of heaven, mimic the earthquake, and even mock the invisible world with its own shadows”

 

 

 

Wide Reading – The tell tale heart

“I have lost control of my mind, why do you say that I am mad? Can you not see that I have full control of my mind? Is it not clear that I am not mad?”

The Tell Tale Heart is a gothic fiction short story written by Edgar Ellen-Poe, we are told the story about a man and his intense obsession with what he sees in another mans eye. During the story the man stalks the old man by watching him in his room as he’s obsess with the idea that the old mans eye is ‘evil’, he states that he had a eye of a vulture. The man is fixated with the idea that the old man is giving him an evil eye and that it is cursed, he says he loves the old man it was just his eye that he dreaded so very much. He ends up killing the old man just because of his eye, this tells me that the man is obviously insane and clearly over the top about his emotions. I believe that the main character in this story shows strong emotional responses and this is the element I will be discussing in this report. There are features that are used in common gothic fiction, and there are three that are used throughout this text. The story shows tension and foreshadowing, it also represents the characters contrasting actions/qualities, the man in this short story follows his emotions instead of what is right.

First of in this story we straight away notice how the man allows his emotions to exaggerate and take over. At the beginning of the story the man goes on about how he is not mad (as said in the quote above), he is trying to persuade everyone that he is not mad when he clearly is and he is making it worse. He’s states that “a madman does not plan” when he clearly is planning his actions through out the text, foreshadowing that he going to do something terrible. He is arguing with the unknown, trying to convince us the opposite to something that is very obvious, this makes him seem insane. He lets his emotions over ride what is right by going to the old mans house every night which is not normal. Once he kills the old man he then hides the dead body under the floor boards, he says that he cuts the body up into little pieces and places them carefully under the house. During this part he is saying that he is not mad because he hid him so carefully, not letting any blood drip so no-one could find it.

While I read this it makes me feel like the man is even more insane than at the beginning of the story, I feel that I or any other person with a healthy mindset, could not of think of these horrid thoughts and only someone who is so twisted could even think about doing this. When people do strange things like this in real life society looks down on the person, we lock them up and they are pretty much forgotten. We get a sick feeling about killers in real life and I get this feeling when reading this story. 

The atmosphere in this story is very tense, there are lots of short sentences and repetition to indicate to us that the man it not well and he is panicing about the eye. Using short sentences makes us think about the last sentence so the whole section is still fresh in our minds, our brains overthink what he has said adding even more tension and horror into the story. The author wants us to get an idea of this abnormal behaviour and make us uncomfortable. The crazy man has peswaded himself that the eye is evil but its all in his disturbed mind, it must relate to his sickness that he goes on about at the beginning of the story. At the beginning he tells us that he has been ill, very ill, but this has not caused him to go crazy it has only made his feelings and his senses stronger. This startles me as he says in the story that he has herd things in heaven and hell, however he does not fear those things, so the tension in the story increases making the reader on edge.

The beginning of the story plays a major part in how the man reacts, from the beginning I felt like something crazy was going to happen as the man describes his illness and his control of his mind. It puts me in an uncomfortable position as you have no idea what is going to happen in the story and just when you think you have an idea about what is happening another strange event happens. I think Edgar used foreshadowing in the beginning of the story to indicate the sense of sanity. The first paragraph told me that the man is unstable if not crazy. The man claims he is not mad yet he wants to kill the old man because his eye bothers him. This certainly foreshadows the narrator as unreliable, hence his eventual mental breakdown.

From the story I feel that I cannot relate to his thoughts and what he feels towards the old man as its very abnormal, at the beginning of the book he states that he loves the old man and he was very nice to him during the days coming up to his death. But then he had a very strange vibe coming from his eye, we as a reader think that the man is absolutely crazy as he is going on about how he hates the mans eye so much but he loves him at the same time. It would have been much easier for him to just avoid the old man or move past his obsession with the ‘evil eye’. His mind must be very disturbed and makes me think about what his past life was like, when I read this story I feel like he is falling deeper and deeper into insanity. His emotions are very extreme and I don’t think any normal person would go though something as intense as this.

Some times in real life we let our emotions dictate our lives and we don’t think about the consequences, Edgar Ellen-Poe defiantly shows us the results in a intense situation when you allow this to happen. He uses tension and foreshadowing to help express the discomfort felt in the story and allow the gothic elements to really shine though. Even though I could not relate to the extremes of this story I feel like everybody allows there emotions to override the correct thing to do in life situations. I believe that Poe wrote this story brilliantly and a lot of gothic elements shone though in this text.

“For it was not the old man I felt I had to kill; it was the eye, his Evil Eye.”

 

 

 

 

Gothic Protaganist? – Frankenstien

Discriptors  Traits Actions Comments
Has distinct contrasting qualities to their character.
-They have different qualities in there personality.
Diffrent personality traits. He cuts up body but then feels guilty about it. “so deeply I was engrossed in my occupation… My work drew near to a close and now everyday showed me more painly how well I had succeeded. But my enthusiasm was checked by my anxiety”
Usually of a high social rank or holds a position of power.
-‘Big dog’
The male has a higher social rank than the female. He travels around the world, owns a villa – rich.  “When my father returned from Milan, he found playing with me in the hall of our villa.”
Often surrounded by devices that foreshadow something negative.
-Text of doom.
His emotions are formed and spoken about like a lake, river, train. Saying that they are flowing from somewhere. Chooses to dismiss the warnings. “Fatal impulse that led to my ruin”
Driven by strong emotions rather than logic or reason.
-There is no real reason to why they do these things.
He has no idea why he’s doing these things but he is getting drawn to them.

He stops every thing to go and do chemistry at uni, but something draws him to leave and work in a funeral home, the devotes life to bring back the dead.

“No word, no expression could body forth the kind of relation in which she stood to me—my more than sister, since till death she was to be mine only.”
“Wealth was an inferior object, but what glory would attend the dis- covery if I could banish disease from the human frame and render man invulnerable to any but a violent death!” 
Generally secretive or surrounded by air of mysyery.
-Dodgy
Keeping secrets He doesn’t have many friends and he doesn’t tell anyone about his experiment.

My temper was sometimes violent, and my passions vehement; but by some law in my temperature they were turned not towards childish pursuits but to an eager desire to learn, and not to learn all things indiscriminately.

Has a need to know or curious nature.
-Nosey
Curious Fake towards others, Once he has his mind set, he goes for it.

Thee world was to me a secret which I desired to divine.

New language

Glossary:

Hastened: be quick to do something.

Benevolent: well meaning and kindly.

Vagrants: a person without a settled home or regular work who wanders from place to place and lives by begging.

Disconsolate: very unhappy and unable to be comforted.

Abode: a place of residence; a house or home.

Indiscriminately: in a random manner; unsystematically.

 

 

 

Foreshadowing in Frankenstein

Thus strangely are our souls constructed, and by such slight ligaments are we bound to prosperity or ruin. When I look back, it seems to me as if this almost miraculous change of inclination and will was the immediate suggestion of the guardian angel of my life—the last e ort made by the spirit of preservation to avert the storm that was even then hang- ing in the stars and ready to envelop me. Her victory was announced by an unusual tranquillity and gladness of soul which followed the relinquishing of my ancient and latterly tormenting studies. It was thus that I was to be taught to associate evil with their prosecution, happiness with their disregard.
It was a strong e ort of the spirit of good, but it was in- e ectual. Destiny was too potent, and her immutable laws had decreed my utter and terrible destruction.

Foreshowing is like a fortune telling device, possible things that will happen.
Hints that are in Frankenstein that are saying that something bad will happen.

  • He is saying that he and the girl are built to “prosperity or ruin”, not knowing if they will be drawn to wealth and susses or destroying things. Showing foreshadowing and mystery as he is saying that to things could happen.
  • This is telling me that his destiny was to strong to stop now and it had already made a huge influence on him, ordering him to his “utter and terrible destruction.” He is saying that her laws could not be changed now and that it his his destiny to do something bad in the future, this is a great example of foreshadowing.

Tone and mood – Tell tale heart

It is impossible to say how the idea first entered my head. There was no reason for what I did. I did not hate the old man; I even loved him. He had never hurt me. I did not want his money. I think it was his eye. His eye was like the eye of a vulture, the eye of one of those terrible birds that watch and wait while an animal dies, and then fall upon the dead body and pull it to pieces to eat it. When the old man looked at me with his vulture eye a cold feeling went up and down my back; even my blood became cold. And so, I finally decided I had to kill the old man and close that eye forever! So you think that I am mad? A madman cannot plan. But you should have seen me. During all of that week I was as friendly to the old man as I could be, and warm, and loving.

 

Tone: This part of the story say a lot that he hates something about the man but he still loves him, the character seems uncertain on what he is trying to say and what he feels. When he talks about the eye and how it is like a vulture he’s gets carried away and starts saying that he’s not mad but it makes the man seem even more mad and insane. The character has a weird obsession with the eye and he has no reason for it so it makes him sound crazy, scared even paranoid. He may have something going on in his mind that is unhealthy.

Mood: When reading this part of the story it develops a creepy mood and we feel a bit uneasy about the character. How the character says he was nice to the man all week makes us have a sick feeling because of what the man is going to do at the end of the week. The story puts us in a confused frame of mind and we feel weird out reading this.

The Gothic Protagonist – The tell tale heart

The student’s goal now is to pick three of these things and analyze how they apply to the narrator in further depth.

4. Driven by strong emotions rather than logic or reason: this point was applied in the short story ‘The tell tale heart’ because the narrorator was obsessed with the other mans eye for no real reason, he hated the mans eye out of what he felt and the emotions he felt towards the man as he says “There was no reason for what I did.” at the beginning of the story. At the end of the story when the police were talking the the man his emotions got away on him and he told the police that he killed the man because he was scared of the loud heart beats. “Suddenly I could bear it no longer. I pointed at the boards and cried,Yes! Yes, I killed him!” if the man was thinking straight he wouldn’t have told the police that he killed the man but he had no idea what he was doing, he was just doing what his emotions were telling him.

 

Speech

1.6 Speeches

Why should we should stop factory farming?

 

Introduction:

Did you know over one hundred million animals are cruelly confined in factory farms every day in New Zealand. Imagine if you were stuck in a small cage, side by side to other helpless animals, rows upon rows of you. Never seeing the sun or never breathing in the fresh air. The animals are born there and killed there, all in one massive shed. How would you feel? It is believed that two out of every three farm animals worldwide are now being factory farmed, that’s the meat you eat, so I hope you take this into consideration next time you go to the store to buy your meat or eggs. Today in my speech I will talk about the conditions that the animals live in and how this affects us and the environment, then I will move on to what the animals go through and how it affects them physically, mentally and emotionally. Lastly I will speak about what we can do to help and set them free from the abuse.

 

The conditions:

When people come into New Zealand they think it’s clean and green, there are a few sheep, a few cows, but where are the pigs.   Where are the chickens. The majority of animals in New Zealand are factory farmed, locked away and out of site. In NZ we intensely factory farm around 800 thousand pigs for meat, 19 million chickens for meat and 3 million chickens in cages for eggs a year. I think to myself, but what about all the space we have, surely we have enough room in NZ to farm all of these animals in their natural conditions, allowing them to express their natural behaviours and run around, but apparently not. The factory farms put the animals in large windowless sheds and artificial environments with controlled lighting and temperatures. Confining so many animals in one place produces more waste than the surrounding land can handle. As a result, factory farms are associated with various environmental hazards, such as water, land and air pollution. Just one individual cow or pig produces 15 times more waste than a human, and the daily pile-up of xcre ment can lead to major environmental problems. Any kind of farming can cause environmental damage, but in overcrowded factory farms the problem is multiplied having a negative impact on the natural environment. The farms have to store the waste somewhere so they put it in huge, open-air lagoons, which are prone to leaks and spills. The waste seeps into underground water and the residue of pesticides causes health and environmental problems affecting our water. During digestion, ruminants (roomenent) like cattle, sheep, and goats emit methane, an infamous “greenhouse gas” and key contributor to global warming. If you want this to happen to your environment then do nothing but l want future generations to see what we see, don’t you?

 

 

The animals:

Most factory farmed animals experience boredom and stress so much in their lives when being factory farmed, that it leads to unnatural aggression, anxiety and illness. They have no sunlight due to being trapped in large windowless sheds, no room to move and no way to interact with others. The animals are kept in extremely small and soiled enclosures, with no bedding. They never breathe fresh air but instead inhale ammonia day after day.

Farmers get more money for chickens with big thighs and breasts. So they breed the chickens to be so heavy that their bones cannot support their weight. The chickens have difficulty standing, and their legs often break. Like other factory farmed animals, meat chickens are raised in overcrowded enclosures that they become aggressive. The beaks of chickens are often removed in factory farms to reduce excessive feather pecking and cannibalism among stressed, overcrowded chickens. Some cannot eat after being “debeaked” and starve.

Female pigs are put in sow stalls, only 2m long and 60cm wide just enough room to sit down. The mother pig is impregnated and then has her piglets on a hard concrete floor, she has no bedding or room to make a nest, the piglets aren’t able to be nurtured by the mother as if it was normal circumstances she just has to lie there while the piglets feed. Only at 4 weeks the piglets are removed from their mother and are raised in fattening pens for slaughter. The mother pig is then impregnated again and put back into the sow stall. The cycle of abuse is constant. If you think pigs are very intelligent animals, more intelligent than dogs, but if you were to put dogs in the same condition than the pigs you would be prosecuted for animal cruelty and go to jail. And yet they let this happen to pigs.

 

The animals are fed corn and wheat that are grown through intensive industrial farming that use large amounts of pesticides, which can remain in their bodies and are passed on to the people who eat them, creating serious health hazards in humans. Farmers also cut costs by feeding animals the remains of other dead animals. To combat unsanitary conditions, animals are fed large doses of antibiotics—but bacteria is constantly adapting and evolving. Overuse and dependence on antibiotics in our food system creates the potential for dangerous, drug-resistant strains of bacteria to develop and spread among people and animals. The animals are also injected with hormones to make them grow faster which leads to the chicken’s legs breaking and other symptoms I spoke about earlier.

An animal rights group investigated a Christchurch pig farm in early 2014. They saw severe overcrowding of the pigs, with sows in a crate so small that her newborn piglets were crushed to death. Other piglets lay dying next to their helpless mother, while other animals had infected eyes and obvious sores. They also saw a dead pig that had been left to rot among live pigs and dozens of rats running over the animals. Animals right group SAFE say the Government had failed these animals and called for a ban on sow crates. SAFE’s head of campaigns Mandy Carter said activists from Farmwatch visited the farm and filmed the animals living in cruel conditions. The condition of the animals was “disgusting”, and many sows and piglets were suffering. “This Christchurch pig farm is really very bad but the pig industry as a whole is not good,” she said. In the last couple of years SAFE had received footage from about 12 farms across the country, revealing similar levels of cruelty.

 

What you can do to help:

So what can you do to help? if you think that this is wrong and cruel to animals then why not help. People around New Zealand are trying to stand up for animals, and if we don’t then this will carry on. There are starting to be law changes for animals and it’s because of people like you getting involved. SAFE is one of the NZ organisations that believe most New Zealanders would be horrified to see the conditions in which these animals live. Factory farming is a practice that we should all be ashamed of, though it remains hidden from public view. This torture continues while big industries produce ever-increasing amounts of animal products at the lowest cost. SAFE’s Stop Factory Farming campaign aims to open the doors on these hidden practices, and shock the public, so they start to make animal welfare more important than low-cost, mass-produced animal products. You can help by doing as little as donating something to SAFE or SPCA or buying free range meat and eggs or even not eating meat at all!

 

Conclusion:

Today I talked about the conditions that the animals live in and how this affects us and the environment, then what the animals go through and how it affects them physically, mentally and emotionally. Lastly I spoke about what we can do to help. I hope you think about what I have said today and notice how cruel it is to the animals. Maybe even do something to help them, because you and I both know that New Zealand can do much better than this. Every person who has animals knows that each one is an individual, with the capability to enjoy life, to feel pain and sadness, but above all the ability to bring happiness to our lives. So why do we treat them like this?