Q. Entry of your choice.
-> What is the greatest human nature revealed in the novel?
I think it is that people always try to justify themselves when they do bad things. The government in Ender's Game intentionally made the Wiggins family to bear a "third" for humanity's sake. Ender killed Stilson while he was trying to scare him, and his reasoning was that he was protecting himself. In the mind game in chapter 6, reveals that Ender is supposed to break the rules to win the game. I think the question made by these examples is that "is it acceptable to do anything when necessary?" There is a sentence in the book saying, "Breaking orders is wrong, but a wrong that is committed in the cause of winning is fine for Ender." In chapter 4, freedom are taken away from people and the government uses people as tools to survive. Therefore, it is proven that everyone makes justifications. I think that the ultimate justification in the Ender's Game is "saving the world." For this reason, many had died, envied, and hated each other. When Graff tells Ender at the end that it was a game, his reasoning was that it was for humanity's sake. I don't think this must happen in real life despite of any condition or situation. I think when we die, we should die with pride instead of all the unmanly struggles.
-> What is the greatest human nature revealed in the novel?
I think it is that people always try to justify themselves when they do bad things. The government in Ender's Game intentionally made the Wiggins family to bear a "third" for humanity's sake. Ender killed Stilson while he was trying to scare him, and his reasoning was that he was protecting himself. In the mind game in chapter 6, reveals that Ender is supposed to break the rules to win the game. I think the question made by these examples is that "is it acceptable to do anything when necessary?" There is a sentence in the book saying, "Breaking orders is wrong, but a wrong that is committed in the cause of winning is fine for Ender." In chapter 4, freedom are taken away from people and the government uses people as tools to survive. Therefore, it is proven that everyone makes justifications. I think that the ultimate justification in the Ender's Game is "saving the world." For this reason, many had died, envied, and hated each other. When Graff tells Ender at the end that it was a game, his reasoning was that it was for humanity's sake. I don't think this must happen in real life despite of any condition or situation. I think when we die, we should die with pride instead of all the unmanly struggles.
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