Flowers for Algernon
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is it better to have learned and lost...?
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Kirby
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Dec 18, 2011 02:37PM

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I would maybe see it as cut and dry as that if he had ended up maintaining some of the knowledge, or even "breaking even," but I thought that he ended up much worse off...I mean, his biggest fear was ending up at the warren home and that's exactly what happened to him. I guess that if I thought he could remember that he had made the contribution to science that he was so proud of, I wouldn't be conflicted about it...but I didn't think he did. I assumed that he lost even his hard-won ability to read and write, which is maybe what I found saddest.
and, maybe I'm also conflicted b/c I'm not so sure that it's even always better to have loved and lost...I think there are some situations where it's better to not have loved...

Consider it like falling in love, it can fail miserably and end in heartbreak and depression, but it's still worth it for as long as it lasts - everytime.
And even though the knowledge he gained is lost again to him, it's not lost completly.

Also, Charlie was the way nature intended him to be. Having that operation went against nature.

that's true! :)

Consider it like falling in love, it can fail miserably and end in heartbreak and depression, but it's still wo..."
dang it, gerd, you didn't get my joke, either! :)
yeah, I was thinking along the lines of loving and losing...
while I do agree that in most cases it's better to have fallen in love, I don't think that it's always the case. my uncle recently fell in love for really the first time at almost 60 years old. it was wonderful seeing him so happy while he had his woman, but now his pain is just as deep as his joy was and has already lasted twice as long...I just can't stand the thought of him suffering the rest of his life for a one-year love affair, and I think he'd be better off if she had never waltzed in and out of his life...but I could be wrong.

I also hadn't read it since grade school (and I think I had only read the short story) until last week- and I bawled like a baby just like I did last time! :) but it wasn't just the loss of his high IQ that made me sad- I was also really bummed when it got so high that he couldn't really maintain any relationships and he was so lonely :(
during his last "progress report," he remembers some of his experiences, but I'm pretty sure that afterwards he ends up worse off than he was before the surgery, and has no recollection of his "contribution to science" that he was so proud of...

yeah, that was one of the saddest parts, when he learned the truth about all his "friends."
do you mean, "went against nature," like sorta how that one woman was talking? the woman bakery worker who tried to tell charlie that he should stay the way god made him?

yes, he was never born to be that person, nature never intended him to be that way, and maybe that operation did more damage to him than if he would never have had it. That said though, despite him being happy before the operation, he was only that way because he wasn't aware of how he was being treated.

True. But perhaps life is about living, not evading damage. What's the point of making it to death unscathed? Better to have lived, in my opinion. I'll take the blue pill every time. I'd rather taste both the bitter and the sweet, than to taste nothing at all.


Sometimes, I think it is better not to know some things. But also, there are things I am glad I know. Most importantly, there are things I know that I never want to forget.


Nature isn't a person, it doesn't intend nothing. It is human nature to look for ways to improve itself - make glasses, prosthetics, hearing aids.
Charlie's experience isn't that fantastic, many people lose some of their intellectual capacity with age or due to some health condition. The only difference is that he was smart so briefly and the change to and from smart was so fast, almost abrupt. If you know you're genetically predisposed to get alzheimer's, is it better not to learn too much because you might lose it eventually? Or should you rather cram as much as possible into your head because you only got this long to enjoy it?


My grandfather was a brilliant man. He had a brain tumor that was destroying his mind. He chose suicide to letting it happen, and I think I might as well if that were the case.


True. But perhaps life is about living, not evading damage. What's the point of making it to death unscathed? Better to have lived, in my opinion. I'll take t..."
your statement made me think of this quote by hunter s. thompson- thought I'd share it:
“Life should not be a journey to the grave with the intention of arriving safely in a pretty and well preserved body, but rather to skid in broadside in a cloud of smoke, thoroughly used up, totally worn out, and loudly proclaiming 'Wow! What a Ride!'”

I would maybe see it as cut and dry as tha..."
I disagree. While he was still maintaining most of his intelligence, he did visit the Warren home. He had decided then that it would be a suitable home for him. Before it was just blind fear because of the situation with his parents trying to ditch him there, I assume.
Also, the last line in the book in which he asks that someone puts flowers on Algernon's grave shows that he hasn't lost 100% of his memory of what happened. He does forget about his relationship with Alice, but does attempt to attend her reading and writing class. This signals that he is still ambitious in his quest to learn to read and write (even if he has forgotten how to do so). The fact that he remembers Algernon and his meticulous ritual of placing flowers on his grave shows that with repetition and reminders, he DOES have the capacity to recall details about the time he spent with intelligence. It's there somewhere in his subconscious, just like his childhood memories were before.

Makes me think of the assisted living question - would you rather have your mind go or your body go first?



I believe he was better off as he is, and that IQ score is overrated, because one can be quite happy and productive -as much as he/she can be- with any level of IQ. I loved the simple Charlie, and I mourned him when they turned him into something that he isn't.

I agree wholeheartedly. I felt that this was the powerful message of this story.

Secondly, when he goes to see his mom, it is surprisingly Norma who gives him the acceptance he has so craved all those years. He admits that, had he not been smart, Norma wouldn't have talked to him in the candid and caring way that she did.
I guess whether or not it is better depends on who you ask. For Norma, it was certainly better since she could talk to her brother and together work through some of the terrible moments that comprised their childhood and shaped their lives. Not sure if it was better for Alice Kinnian, who essentially gained and then lost someone she loved, though I do believe the old saying "better to have loved than lost than never to have loved at all."

Consider it like falling in love, it can fail miserably and end in heartbreak and depression, but it's still wo..."
I see it similarly, even though I feel awful for him, but he contributed to the world. I actually love this about the book. You really have to think about if it was better "to have learned and lost".


In Charlie's case, he is aware of the decline but at no point does he wish he remained the 68 IQ who had no idea he was the butt of all jokes. He even asks a question like, "what is worse: to be dumb and not know it or to be smart and lonely?" That he is asking the question shows that it is his opinion that his former situation is a bad one.
Also, I would say that he is still better off at the end because the guys at work stick up for him and genuinely treat him right (because enough time has passed and they looked in the mirror and realized they were picking on a mentally retarded person). Charlie may not remember many details of his intelligence, but he knows that he has grown and gained the respect of his peers. Ultimately he decides to do what he does, but I would argue this point with anyone, and I get a funny feeling that I can make a lot of correct assumptions about people who argue that it is better that Charlie remain a 68 IQ who is unwittingly the butt of all jokes and has the respect of nobody his entire life. Hell, he even made a friend, never mind the species of the poor guy. So yeah, sign me up for option A every time.

I know it's science fiction, but much like stories like Orwell's "1984," I find so much real-life truth to that movie. And I have asked myself many times which pill would I choose? I, too, can understand taking the blue pill, or choosing ignorance over unhappiness. But I like to think that I'd down the red pill. After all, as Nick wrote, "it's living. It's a story." And a much more interesting one!


Well, now I'm rather curious about these assumptions you're making...

As to whether he would have been better off without it happening I can't really decide.



Hey Kirby, I was in a particularly assholier than thou mood when I posted that, wasn't I? Haha. I think what I meant was that to argue that Charlie is worse off from having gone through the experience reeks of fear. It is purely a fear-based argument. "It ended a "bad way" for Charlie, and because it could have ended "badly" for him, then he was better off not trying it." Look, that type of argument just might add more years to one's life, but it also makes sure to strip most of the life from one's years. But hey, to each his own. I was just saying that we are all evaluating whether a third party, Charlie Gordon, was better or worse off for having done this, and I read it to be pretty obvious that his own opinion was that he was better off. And if I'm conceding "to each his own" opinion on how to live one's own life, then shouldn't we all concede to Charlie his own?
I think that was the gist of my assumptions. To call them "correct" was kind of pompous. But I stand by the reasoning. Cheers, all.

Hmm. Maybe you are right, I don't have the story in front of me, but my recollection is that by the end his spelling is pretty bad again. The one thing that I love, love, love is in that final entry and postscript Charlie misspells all kinds of words, but he spells Algernon's name right. I just think that is so beautiful. I suspect Keyes did this intentionally.

Yeah I'm sure it was done intentionally, because the fact it presented the story the way he did with the misspellings in the beginning and end seemed to be well thought out characterization. I agree a beautiful touch on one magnificent story.

If Charlie wanted to be smart then he should be allowed to be smart,
I think that "nature" isn't perfect and we should try to make our-selves better.
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