Final Justification -Blackfish- “We can tame and love wild animals so we should capture them, to educate and entertain humans.” The real question is, why would someone believe taking these living breathing animals away from the place God put them like it’s okay, as if it’s normal. I think it’s quite obvious i'm against orcas in captivity. “Can you imagine being in a small concrete enclosure for your life when you’re used to swimming 100 miles a day?”-Blackfish.
The Will to Live React: I vividly imagine Pi as a thin man who is desperate for food and water at this moment since he is close to death. I understand that he is doing everything he can to stay alive even if it means doing something that he thinks is wrong. Explain: Pi kills the fish in order to survive since the ocean is his only food source. Pi is also a vegetarian so he demonstrates the will to live by doing whatever he has to do to stay alive even if it means
Soon Pi’s father sees that his son is not wary towards wild animals. His father then forces his children to watch a tiger kill
So he waits for the fish to lose energy and die. Santiago express his commitment to fishing. Only one thing would come out alive, either Santiago or the marlin, maybe neither.
I was sixteen years old, a harmless boy, bookish and religious, and now I had blood on my hands. It’s a terrible burden to carry. All sentient life is sacred. I never forgot to include this fish in my prayers” (Martel 26). This quote expresses the guilt and remorse Pi feels for the life of the fish, even as insignificant of a life the fish had.
After this, Pi describes the killing of the cook/hyena surprisingly easy, this is the shadow self and survival instincts shining through as well. what does this say about pi? Has this changed him? Go into more depth, this seems a little rushed. Concluding
When Pi’s life is put in serious danger, he has to adjust his wants and needs of many different aspects of his life. Pi was living what he called a perfect life. From spending most of his days with animals to practicing swimming, he learned to love everything about his life. However, things changed when a ship that his entire family on sank in the middle of the Pacific Ocean.
As days passed, Pi brainstormed on how he was going to sustain himself. From his schemes on the lifeboat, he became wiser. While looking exploring the lifeboat, he managed to find many things. He discovered a locker full of emergency rations, and was about to compute how long he could live off them. Pi obtained food by using a method: trial and error.
ften children are found with difficult decisions when it comes to entertaining themselves. Some may settle for simple methods of entertainment while others may choose something more safe and reasonable. In the classic children 's book, The Cat in the Hat, by Dr. Seuss, a brother and a sister are looking for something to keep them entertained during a rainstorm. They are torn between listening to a fun-loving cat who visits them while their mother is out, and a sensible fish, who warns them not to do what he says. The children should listen to the fish because he is more responsible, smarter, and is a better influence than the cat.
The Fish The fish is like no other character in the novel. It displays an incredible amount of strength. The biggest example of this is the way that it swims. When it is first hooked it begins swimming against the current of the sea if for no other reason than to show off.
In Yann Martel's book Life of Pi, Pi has to make some tough decisions that will ensure his survival. He courageously decides that he can no longer be vegetarian, for the only way to survive is to get protein by way of animal meat, he stays faithful through the toughest times, and he made the brave decision to keep Richard Parker on the boat with him. Pi makes moral sacrifices, despite his devout religious beliefs, that allow him to survive. " But enough is enough.
There is one moment in the story where all his developed instincts were challenged. He was met with a school of flying fish that would jump out of the water and into the lifeboat. He had wrapped one fish in a blanket and intended to kill it with a hatchet. He could not bring himself to kill this fish with a hatchet, but ultimately cannot go through with it. Pi ends
In this line she uses imagery but combines it with a simile to explain how dry and flaky the fish’s skin is. As the story progress she goes into more detail about what the fish looks like and the story be hide it. “and the I saw that from his lower lip if you can call it a lip grim, wet and weapon like, hung five old and wire leader with the
Other examples of his slipping humanity would be the first time he killed a fish. As Pi addressed in the book, “to think that I 'm a strict vegetarian. . . and always shuddered when I snapped open a banana because it sounded to me like the breaking of an animal 's neck. I descended to a level of savagery I never imagined possible.” (249) He is aware of the changes that are occurring inside of him.
This idea may be based off of the fact that he had to kill the fish in order to survive, and to keep Richard Parker (the tiger) alive as well. Following the time of killing the flying fish (which Pi uses as bait) he catches a dorado, and explains that the food he is catching is for Richard Parker. Pi states, “It was for Richard Parker and he would have dispatched it with expert ease” (Martel 89). Through a religious aspect, it can be seen that Pi did not necessarily change is values, but had to go against his morals because of the specific scenario of survival. This may be true; however, Pi directly mentions that he is changed from the time of killing the flying fish to taking the life away from a beautiful dorado.