English, asked by krish2812, 11 months ago

What do we learn from the invisible man novel and implementation of it inlife

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Answered by Shreyashgawade2002
0

At first, the idea of being invisible sounds as great as Plato feared: stealing would be easy (money, food, but maybe not cars); you could enter any place you like without paying (Lambeau field, Bob Dylan concerts), or any area typically off limits (female locker rooms, military bases). Revenge would still be as sweet but with the added benefit of going undetected. One could injure or murder with no fear of ending up behind bars. Basically, being invisible would be awesome. You could do whatever the hell you please.


Griffin gives in to many of the same temptations. He robs. He injures. He kills. With no one to witness the crimes, Griffin must be living the good life, right? We expect to read a tale similar to the tale of Gyges, about a character who walks through markets and takes whatever he likes, or walks into any house and heads straight to the bedroom, or indiscriminately (or discriminately) goes around murdering. But even though Griffin is guilty of his share of crimes, his goal is not to indulge in hedonism. His goal is just the opposite: he wants to stop being invisible.

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