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Frankenstein
or, The Modern Prometheus
by Mary Shelley
Editorial review
Written by an 18-year-old in the summer of 1816, Frankenstein is the founding text of science fiction and a still-unmatched moral analysis of what it means to make something you do not stay to care for. In the AI era it reads less like horror and more like a memo.
AI-generated summary
The young scientist Victor Frankenstein assembles and animates a being from inanimate matter — and then abandons it in revulsion. The novel alternates Victor's confession with the creature's own articulate, agonized account of what it is to be brought into the world unloved.
Key takeaways
- 1
Creation entails responsibility for what is created.
- 2
Loneliness, not malevolence, is the seed of monstrosity.
- 3
The pursuit of knowledge without ethical care is its own catastrophe.
- 4
We owe more to what we make than its mere existence.
The right reader
Anyone working in or thinking about technology, biotech, or artificial intelligence. A short, deeply contemporary 200-year-old book.
What it touches
How it reads
Romantic, melancholy, prescient.
Reading difficulty: Moderate
