• nature

    By "view of nature" Victor Frankenstein in no way signifies what a modern person would
    in using the term "natural view." But just exactly what he does mean is debatable.
    Johnson's 1755 Dictionary gives eleven definitions of the word, none of which conforms
    to our idea of nature as merely an external, visual phenomenon.

    • An imaginary being supposed to preside over the material and animal world
    • The native state of properties of any thing, by which it is discriminated from others
    • The constitution of an animated body
    • Disposition of mind; temper
    • The regular course of things
    • The compass of natural existence
    • Natural affection, or reverence; native sensations
    • The state or operation of the material world
    • Sort; species
    • Sentiments or images adapted to nature, or conformable to truth and reality
    • Physics; the science which teaches the qualities of things

    Given this spectrum of meanings, we might suppose that the first application, from
    Victor Frankenstein's perspective, would be to the last connotation. He is, after
    all, a scientist speaking to another engaged in research and suggesting to him that
    the known boundaries of the discipline are inadequate to the realities he has uncovered.
    And yet the fact that these earlier definitions of nature touch so pointedly on what
    we might ordinarily think of as extraneous categories—moral or theological—should
    prepare us for such an elaboration in Victor's narrative as well. The second and third
    definitions, for instance, pertain as much to what Victor as creator imparted to his
    Creature's mind as to his body, and the fourth might raise the question of his essential
    morality. The seventh might revert to Victor's own psychological shortcomings, or,
    depending on one's perspective, those of his Creature. That "power" is associated
    in Victor's mind with his idea of nature allows us, as well, to cross the one spectrum
    of meanings with another distinctive to that term itself. Again, Victor might think
    of it in a strictly scientific sense, as a producer of essential energy, an aspect
    of the electricity that is understood as a dynamic force by both him and Walton. And
    yet, as we will eventually learn, his existence has in its recent history turned almost
    wholly on an axis of personal power politics as he has struggled with his Creature
    for dominance.