stroopwafel said:
A vampire would not be alive but rather 'undead' b/c a vampire lost its human essence(feeling and emotion) to bloodthirst.
Ahhh but look at one of the most classic examples of the vampire, Bram Stoker's Dracula. He was an emotional being.
Frankenstein's monster is simply the revived essence of a human being. Albeit in a nasty shell.
That's the thing though, The Monster never really had a body of its own, it was sewn together from various other corpses. Does Frankenstein create a soul/essence and inject that into the monster? No, he simply uses science and chemistry to animate a body made from various other bodies.
Vampires and other non-mindless forms of the undead are certainly self-aware and know fully what they are and what their existence is all about.
For the record, I'm on the "it's alive" side of this argument, I'm just playing devil's advocate against the points that you've raised.
Altorin said:
considering we're discussing a fictional thing, there probably is no right answer
That's why I was hoping this would make for a fun discussion. :3
BeeGeenie said:
Now this is an interesting debate.
The monster awakes with no memory of it's previous life, and must learn most of it's higher thought processes, ie. speech, reading, etc. This suggests that he is a new "being," not an old one brought back to life,
But the parts that The Monster is made of are old bits and pieces from other dead bodies, it never had a body of its own to begin with.
The monster seems to believe that he is an entirely new "soul," rather than a revived one. So he would probably not define himself as un-dead. As far as he is concerned, he was "born" to Frankenstein.
Also, at the time the book was written, modern Zombies were not a thing, so I think it's safe to say that Mary Shelley considered him to be alive.
True and true, however the fact remains that since The Monster was never alive to begin with (before existing as The Monster), then it never had a soul of it's own. Does it create its own soul? If so, how? By learning, speaking, and thinking? We then run into the vampire argument and most people tend to think of vampires as being soulless, like most other undead. The Monster little more than a walking masterpiece of scientific achievement, simply all the physical and chemical requirements needed for a body to function. Frankenstein could accomplish that, but he couldn't create a soul.
Jamash said:
Being a Golem, Frankenstein's Monster would be classified as a Magical Creature rather than Undead, although the traditional Fantasy setting and rules might not apply.
Ahhhh but golems are more or less mindless, bound to the mage or magic that animated them. Destroy the source of magic and you can effectively stop the golem, returning it to the unanimated components that it's made of (in this case it would be the bits and pieces of dead bodies). The Monster, on the other hand, is free thinking. It learns, talks, has free will, etc.
Part of the answer may depend on what you believe happened to it's brain, mind and soul. Was it the same brain, mind and soul that it was previously, a brain that hadn't experienced complete brain death and was just revived in another vessel, or had the brain suffered complete brain death, was completely blank and then revived, but without a soul or identity and was just biological computer with no identity or memory that began to learn as it grew?
I'd say the latter, all things considered. I'm pretty sure that everything that makes up The Monster's body is completely dead, and as far as The Monster is concerned, its entire existence started when it woke up on Frankenstein's slab. Unlike Robocop who struggles with regaining the memory of his past life, no such memory exists to be regained for The Monster. For all intents and purposes, it is an entirely new entity, having to learn everything from scratch.
Again, to all of the above: I'm just playing devil's advocate here since "It's Alive!" seems to be winning out. Personally I'm glad it's that way because when I had this discussion with my friend, that's what I was arguing. But he still came up with some good counterpoints to the points I was raising. That's why I thought it'd be fun to bring this debate to the forum. :3