Both Mary Shelley and Charles Dickens
use delusion to add complexity to their characters in Frankenstein and Hard Times. Victor
Frankenstein and Thomas Gradgrind start out as rational characters, but
eventually turn to madness and irrationality as the novels develop. Both Victor
and Gradgrind structure their lives around Utilitarianism ideas which in turn lead
them to act irrationally and even go mad.
Gradgrind’s irrationality spawned from the way he structured
his school curriculum around the Utilitarian ideas of the 19th
century; Utilitarianism is essentially the idea that people should structure
their lives and society to do the greatest good for the greatest number of
people [COMPOUND SENTENCE – TWO SENTENCES OF MIRRORING LENGTH CONNECTED
BY A SEMICOLON]. However, this is a problem because the individuals who are not
part of the greatest number of people are forgotten and not taken care of. Utilitarianism is fundamentally
arguing that there is no point to try and satisfy everyone because it is
impossible, so instead they should try to satisfy as many as they can
[DIRECT OBJECT (IT)]. As both Gradgrind and Victor later exemplify, people
instead need to believe that everyone can be made happy, and then strive to do
so in as many ways as possible rather than initially setting their standards
low. However, to the people of Coketown, Utilitarianism ideas would be the
perfect way to structure a society. Coketown’s school system is completely factually based, and Gradgrind,
the school principal, sees no value in concepts such as: grief; affection;
anger; desire; or empathy [SEMICOLON USED AS A SUPER COMMA]. He is very
logical, so a society based off numbers makes perfect sense to him. However,
because Gradgrind structured his life around Utilitarianism ideas, his children
made irrational decisions based off that upbringing, such as robbing a bank and
marrying an unstable, greedy man.
A society based off Utilitarianism
essentially strips all the value from the individual and leads people, such as
Tom and Louisa Gradgrind, to act selfishly because they are trained to believe
that they do not need to worry about individuals around them, only the greatest
number of people. Because
Gradgrind taught these values in his school and in his home, his children grew
up with the same beliefs [SENTENCE BEGINNING WITH ‘BECAUSE’]. Tom
Gradgrind grew up to be narcissistic and egotistical. He showed this when he asked
Louisa, his sister, to marry Bounderby as a favor to him even though he knew
she did not love Bounderby at all. Louisa, on the other hand, is actually rather selfless because she
agreed to marry Bounderby for her brother [USE OF A SUBJECT COMPLIMENT].
However, this is because
she was naturally born selfless, and as a result of her father’s upbringing,
she led a confused life where she was always fighting her emotions and selfless
nature because it was what she had always been taught [‘HOWEVER’ USED IN
A SENTENCE]. Despite her
selfless nature, she blindly followed what her brother asked of her because it
was a logical idea, and eventually lived a childless and depressed life during
her marriage and thereafter [OBJECT OF THE PREPOSITION USED IN A
COMPOUND SENTENCE].
Utilitarianism,
the idea of creating happiness for the greatest number of people possible,
seems like the ideal way to structure government because the largest amount of
people possible are made happy; however, numbers aren’t everything
[COMPOUND SENTENCE - ONE LONG SENTENCE CONNECTED TO A SHORT SENTENCE BY A
SEMICOLON]. Life is more complicated than Utilitarianism’s cut and dry way approach
to happiness. Sissy Jupe was right when she said it in fact matters a great
deal if there are a few deaths per one thousand men; for the families of those
few men, the deaths are devastating. Everyone should be happy, instead of just the greatest number
[COMPLEX SENTENCE WITH 10 WORDS OR FEWER]. There is more power in the
individual than Utilitarianism allows; each individual has the ability to have
a profound impact on someone or something. Then he individual all the power in the world
[FRAGMENT USED AS A RHETORICAL DEVICE].
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