I believe man suffers from an appalling ignorance of his own nature. I produce my own view in the belief that it may be something like the truth. - William Golding. Personality is everything. Personality is what makes up a person’s character. Acknowledging a person’s character can help understand their behaviors. In Lord of The Flies, Piggy is one of the most important characters in the book. With introverted thinking, and an extroverted intuition, Piggy can be described as a character with a powerful intellect. Piggy’s personality is an INTJ because he’s introverted, highly intuitive, a logical person, and judging. Piggy is an introvert. Although he does have moments and ideas, he’s a reserved person. He has trouble communicating his …show more content…
In this case, he’s stuck on an island with other boys who realize what they have to go through in order to survive. Any ideas that contribute to their survival is considered important. That is where piggy comes in. “‘Only piggy could have the intellectual daring to suggest moving the fire from the mountain.”’(Golding, 129). When Piggy suggested moving the fire from the mountain to the beach, the boys become completely baffled at such a thought. This is important because the idea was so outstretched from anything that they have ever thought before. But at that time there was nothing much to do after Jack left the group. “Now that there was something to be done they worked with passion. Piggy was so full of delight and expanding liberty in Jack’s departure, so full of pride in his contribution to the good, that he helped to fetch wood.”(Golding, 129). Once they fully comprehended what they had to do to survive, the boys pour all their passion out into one objective; building a fire. This is all thanks to Piggy. Piggy is a logical person. For everything that happens on the island, he uses logic to reason with. In fact, he was in doubt of the beast’s existence, saying that there wasn’t anything in the forest. All that doubt is quickly lifted after seeing what he thought was the “beast”. “‘Of course there isn’t nothing to be afraid of in the forest. Why--I been there myself!’”(Golding, 83). Piggy
Piggy lectured them by asking how they could " expect to be rescued if [they] don't put first things first and act proper?" (45), which is something they did not want to hear, this was proven time and time again when the boys not let him speak without interruption even when he had the conch shell. Piggy's greatest asset was also his weakest point; the only way he could relate to the other boys was at an intellectual level, whereas the other boys could only relate on an emotional level. Ironically, in spite of his intelligence and logic, rational thought, from the beginning of the novel, Piggy was a social outcast.
At the beginning of the novel, the boys were trying to start a fire. The boys then used Piggy’s specs to light the fire. “Ralph moved the lenses back and forth, this way and that, till a glossy white image of the declining sun lay on a piece of rotten wood”(40). Using Piggy’s specs to start the fire was a scientific method to create and it contributes to the fact he represents a scientific approach. Also, it was Piggy’s idea to make shelters so the boys could sleep in them for the night. “The first thing we ought to have made was shelters down there by the beach”(45). By building shelters, the boys can sleep and stay dry when it's raining. This would also establish a settlement so they won’t have to continuously move to different areas of the island. Even though Jack’s tribe unknowingly murdered Simon, Piggy tried to keep the reason why they killed Simon rational. He tries to think that the death of Simon was justifiable. Ralph argued that the death was murder and Piggy complained “What good’re you doing talking like that”(172). Piggy is trying to find a formula that would explain Simon’s death. In other words, Piggy is one of the only characters in the novel who takes a scientific approach
From the beginning of the book, Piggy is represented as a realist and pragmatic character. The boys are stranded on the island with no adults, yet throughout the book, Piggy acts as an adult. Everything Piggy does is well thought out, and logical. He is the ‘brains behind the operation’. We see this throughout the book. clearly, Piggy is a static character. Piggy continues to have faith in technology and uses his brains to help everyone, and that’s how he is from beginning to end.
Piggy is the closest to an adult on the island, wanting to defend the conch, and wanting to keep rules and order. Without these Piggy will be
When the group were discussing about the fire, Piggy says, “ ‘Cos the smoke's a signal and we can't be rescued if we don't have smoke” (173). Piggy is working to help out the boys by trying to inform them about their situation, and how they can fix it together. Piggy is the voice of reason out of all the boys by telling them how things will affect them as a group, and that is just like how the superego tells the ego on how the action will influence society. Piggy always wants what is best for the group, and wants them all to get off the island safely. When the group decided to move the fire from the mountain, Golding describes, “Piggy was so full of delight and expanding liberty in Jack's departure, so full of pride in his contribution to the good of society, that he helped to fetch wood” (129). Piggy wants to guide the boys on the right path of survival, and enjoys when he is able to help. His involvement in book by helping Ralph and the other boys is based on the focus of the superego to help the needs of society.
Most people try, fail, and never try again, but not because of their capabilities but because of their personality. Piggy has great capabilities as well as a great personality, but throughout the novel, he has never really gotten the chance to reveal his great potential. Piggy is more logical and innovative than most of the boys stranded on that island. Unlike the other school boys, Piggy thinks practically about their situation and tries to reason with it as well as resolving it. On page 34, Piggy points out that no one knows where the boys are nor that a crash had happened by saying “Who knows we’re here?
To be a great leader you have to be intelligent and that is Piggy’s strongest quality. Piggy demonstrates his intelligence in various times throughout the novel. One of the events is with moving the fire. Everyone was terrified of “the beast” that was on the top of the mountain near the fire. The boys gave up but piggy stayed determined he suggest they move the fire by the campsite. He also recognizes that the conch can be used to form unity and organization. Piggy knows
Piggy in The Lord of the Flies was a very smart, yet unheard, voice. He was a friend to Ralph, and if listened, to he probably would have changed the outcome of the book. In Lord of the Flies, Piggy can be seen as an outcast in three different ways. The first way was that he was never able to talk. He was never given attention, and had to demand attention even with the conch. The next way was how he was excluded from physical activities because of his “ass-mar”. The final way is how unimportant he was as a person compared to how important his belongings and ideas are.
Piggy, though not the most memorable in The Lord of the Flies, resonated the most whilst reading this book. Piggy is the stereotypical nerdy kid who seems to be perpetually bullied, even when he is on a deserted island. He has pinkish skin with glasses and asthma with a belly that ate perhaps too much candy from his aunt’s candy shop. While Piggy is almost useless physically, he is very strong mentally, and proves this when he formulates the idea of the conch, but is too weak to blow into it and call everyone. Piggy seems socially awkward, as if he hasn’t spent much times with his fellow peers and rather passed the time with the adults in this life. We see this when Piggy frequently parrots his aunt’s advice such as “My auntie told me not to run… on account of my
Piggy has been shown as a weak individual since he suffers from many physical and medical issues, however could be displayed as the most rational
In William Golding’s Lord of the Flies, a group of British boys suddenly become stranded on an island, all alone, forced to form their own social system. Throughout the novel, William Golding reveals his main character 's strengths and weaknesses in their attempts to lead. The character Piggy demonstrates the benefits and limits of intelligence in maintaining civil order.
The agony that Piggy is put through due to his looks acts as a vulnerability. Though that maybe his weakness, his strength, on the other hand, is his mind. His ability to come up with ideas keeps the society together and running. “‘Ralph!’ Ralph looked up. ‘We can use this to call the others. Have a
Piggy is shown throughout the book with glasses. Glasses can be used as a symbol for being smart. Piggy shows many times that he is logical in his thinking. When the boys are fighting Piggy states, “Which is better -- to be a pack of painted Indians like you are, or to be sensible like Ralph is? Which is better -- to have rules and agree, or to hunt and kill? Which is better, law and rescue, or hunting and breaking things up?” (180) By stating this Piggy shows that he has reasoning. Piggy states this near the end of the book in chapter 11. By this point Jack and some of the other boys have killed and become more savage. Piggy realized that there were better ways to live and act than that. By stating his opinion we see Piggy is unlike the other boys because he is using reasoning outside of himself while the other boys are more focused on doing what they want. This excludes Piggy from the others. Another time Piggy’s intellect may have outcasted him was when he spoke of the beast and of
Piggy is one of the smartest boys on the island, however the other boys bully him and don’t take him seriously (or as a joke), this is due to his physical appearance He is fat, wears spectacles, has "ass-mar", is against fun and hunting, and almost irritatingly worthy. He's also a social outcast
The three parts of the personality types are, id, ego, and superego. The main characters are Jack who has the id personality, Ralph who has the ego personality, and Piggy who has the superego personality. This makes up what type of a person they are in the novel. I d is a personality type that seeks for wants and needs but denies reality in anyway they can.