Flowers for Algernon by Daniel Keyes

EPISODE DESCRIPTION: When Flowers for Algernon came out in 1959, It was science fiction. What if you could go in for surgery and come out with more intellectual potential? In this episode of Socratica Reads, Kimberly ponders how some of this concept has actually come to pass (informed by her stint in Joe Tsien's "smart mouse" lab). How has this book influenced our work at Socratica? The message of the book is clear, and sadly at odds with much of academia. Get your copy of "Flowers for Algernon" here:"https://amzn.to/3eFla2NTranscript:Welcome Everybody, to Socratica Reads. My name is Kimberly Hatch Harrison, and I’m the cofounder of Socratica. You know us from our educational videos about math, science, programming, and how to be a great student. Socratica Reads is a podcast about the books we’ve found influential. It really shouldn’t come as a surprise that people dedicated to making the education of the future were heavily influenced by science fiction - the literature of the future. Today’s book is “Flowers For Algernon” by Daniel Keyes. Do you think of this book as science fiction? I read it when I was around 12, and it wasn’t in the sci-fi section of the library, but it certainly follows the typical sci-fi premise - imagine a world with a certain technological advance. How will people behave in this new slightly tweaked future? How will society respond?In this world, as imagined in the late 1950s, there is cutting-edge brain research underway. You can go in for surgery, and come out with a higher IQ. You might think the Algernon from the title is the main character, but no - Algernon is a mouse - a test subject who has had this surgery, and become much smarter than your average rodent. The funny thing is, when I read this book as a kid, it was still science fiction. But when I was in grad school at Princeton, I spent a little time doing research in Joe Tsien’s lab, where we made smart mice. We did this by overexpressing a certain gene active in the brain called NR2B. Mice with extra NR2B could learn how to solve a water maze faster, and they could remember better. Reality was catching up. It is still science fiction to imagine this being used in people, and in Flowers for Algernon we have a cautionary tale. The main character is Charlie Gordon who has very limited abilities, and can only follow simple directions. Even Algernon can beat him at maze puzzles. Charlie goes to a night school for challenged students, and learns to read and write, but will never progress as much as he wants to.  He is a man trapped in a body that doesn’t respond to his hard work. He longs to connect with other people, but of course, people are cruel, and they don’t think of him as a real person, and even the people Charlie thinks are his friends play cruel tricks on him. Could this surgery deliver Charlie into a better life?The researchers ask him to keep a journal, so we hear Charlie’s thoughts.March 11th, the day after the operation. Charlie writesIf your smart you can have lots of frends to talk to and you never get lonley by yourself all the time.I will say it’s hard going reading through Charlie’s journal entries. You ache for him, even as he rapidly improves. You see how he does suddenly understand how people saw him before - there’s a sort of Adam and Eve eating from the tree of knowledge moment, where he is ashamed. Very, very briefly, he’s able to connect with his fellow human beings. But he rapidly passes them. May 15 ...strange how when I’m in the college cafeteria and hear the students arguing about history or politics or religion it all seems so childish.I find no pleasure in discussing ideas any more on such an elementary level. People resent being shown that they don’t approach the complexities of

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Socratica is all about Lifelong Learning. And one of the best ways to keep learning is to READ. What should you read? Everything! Our co-founder Kimberly Hatch Harrison shares what we're reading at Socratica. Current theme: SCI-FI As Ray Bradbury once said,“Science fiction is the most important literature in the history of the world, because it's the history of ideas, the history of our civilization birthing itself. ...Science fiction is central to everything we've ever done, and people who make fun of science fiction writers don't know what they're talking about." Book List: Episode 1: Ray Bradbury's 100th Birthday All Summer in a Day (found in collection A Medicine for Melancholy) https://amzn.to/3aA3UK4 Episode 2: 2001: A Space Odyssey https://amzn.to/35RdGEX