Flowers for Algernon Argumentative Essay In the short story, “Flowers for Algernon” written by Daniel Keyes, Charlie Gordon made a disastrous mistake; proceeding with the operation to raise his IQ. The surgery backfired on Charlie in numerous ways. One of the reasons being, Charlie learned that who he thought were his close friends did not appreciate him. Charlie was the first human to ever be tested on; therefore it was bound to fail. Lastly, Charlie was not informed on all of the possible outcomes of the surgery, since he was obviously blindsided by his excitement. Initially, the operation enhanced Charlie’s cognitive and mental abilities. When Charlie’s IQ tripled he realized the truth about how his acquaintances legitimately treated him. In Charlie’s eyes his two best friends were Joe and Frank. Before Charlie received the surgery, they did not cope with him as a friend, but Charlie failed to recognize it. Charlie was unaware of the meaning of “pulling a Charlie Gordon.” Once Charlie became rather intelligent, he noticed what it truthfully meant; it was to take advantage of him. Charlie had a job at a factory with Joe and Frank, until the entire faculty wrote and signed a formal petition to have Charlie lose his job. At one point in the story Charlie was inside a restaurant. A mentally impaired waiter was being harassed because he …show more content…
He desperately wanted to be used for the experiment; furthermore, the doctors felt as if he was the ideal person to do it. Charlie lacked popularity and a family; therefore nobody would be emotionally affected if something were to go wrong. Both Dr. Nemur and Dr. Strauss performed the same operation on mice, outrageously expecting the duplicate results for the humanoid. If the surgery went as planned, society would no longer have the burden of the “Charlie Gordons” in the world, but the outcomes were neither expected nor