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By: Dan Brown. Dan Brown. Born June 22, 1964 Was constantly solving codes and puzzles as a child Went to Amherst college Moved to Hollywood to pursue a singer/songwriter career Made 2 CD’s, Dan Brown and Angels and Demons, which led him to writing. Protagonist: Robert Langdon.
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DanBrown Born June 22, 1964 Was constantly solving codes and puzzles as a child Went to Amherst college Moved to Hollywood to pursue a singer/songwriter career Made 2 CD’s, Dan Brown and Angels and Demons, which led him to writing
Protagonist:Robert Langdon • World renowned Harvard symbologist • Specializes in religion, but does not follow one religion • Has written many books, including one on the Illuminati, which leads to his quest to help save Vatican City
The Illuminati is a secret, ancient brotherhood that is the most powerful underground organization ever. Started when scientists, like Galileo and Bernini, started to question the Roman Catholic church Have always had conflicts with the church Church killed anyone who had ties to the secret organization. They had disappeared for centuries, but are now making a comeback.
VittoriaVetra • Daughter of Leonardo Vetra, a scientist a CERN who was killed in the beginning of the novel • Scientist who specializes in biology and physics • Helped her father research and create the extremely destructive antimatter
Hassassin • Is of middle eastern descent and has a satanic lust for women • Believes he has been hired by the Illuminati to destroy the church • He kills Leonardo Vetra, all four preferiti, and Commander Olivetti • He is eventually killed by Robert Langdon and VittoriaVetra when they push him over a balcony
Exposition • CERN is a Swiss research facility that houses the greatest scientists in the world. • Leonardo Vetra, one of CERNs best scientists had been working on a top secret project called antimatter, but was murdered and branded with the sign of the Illuminati • Max Kohler, the director of CERN, finds Vetra dead and contacts Robert Langdon, a Illuminati specialist, to help solve the murder.
It is revealed that the Illuminati also took a canister of immensely destructive antimatter, which destroys everything in its path at midnight. • They fly to Vatican City when they get a call saying the canister is hidden somewhere in the city with a security camera watching as it counts down to the explosion. • The pope has recently died so the papal conclave is meeting to elect a new pope, but they discover the 4 preferetti are missing. • Robert and Vittoria meet with the Camerlengo who tells them to start following the path of the Illuminati searching for the preferetti in hopes that they will find the canister & assassin too. • At each stop, Robert finds a cardinal murdered by one of the 4 primordial elements. • When they finally run into the assassin they learn that he is being told what to do by a leader of the Illuminati, ‘Janus’, The assassin manages to kidnap Vittoria, but Langdon finishes the Illuminati path and frees her • After they kill the assassin, they return to the basilica to find Kohler has come to have a private meeting with the Camerlengo and they fear Kohler is ‘Janus’ • After they hear the Camerlengo screaming from being branded with an Illuminati symbol, they barge in & kill Kohler, but right before he dies, he hands Langdon a tape that ‘will explain everything’
Climax • With time running out, they evacuate the basilica, but when the Camerlengo is leaving he has a vision from God revealing the location of the antimatter. • He rushes back in and beneath the Basilica to find the canister. • Him and Langdon take the canister onto a helicopter, where the Camerlengo parachutes safely to the ground and the antimatter explodes in the sky. Everyone believes Langdon died, but he managed to jump and fell into the ocean. • He then returned to the College of Cardinals, who were going to make the Camerlengo pope, and showed them Kohler’s tape, which revealed that the Camerlengo was ‘Janus’ the whole time.
Falling Action • In one final twist, it is revealed that the Camerlengo was the son of the late pope, conceived by artificial insemination. • The Camerlengo feels so much guilt and grief for killing so many people that he soaks himself in oil and burns himself in front of a crowd of onlookers at St. Peters square.
Resolution • The conclave elects a new pope and Robert Langdon recieves the “Illuminati Diamond” as a gift
Setting • Present Day in Vatican City and around Rome
Themes • New World Order • An effort to bring the entire world under one government for global peace • The Use of Nuclear Weapons • Groundbreaking science being used badly • Science Vs. Religion • How and why are we here?
My Rating: 8 • Angels and Demons is exciting, fast paced, and is based on things that really exist, which makes it more believable, but I think it has too many twists sometimes.
Science Vs. Religion • How did we get here? Were we created or did we evolve randomly? Are we the product of purposeful intelligence or are we merely the end result of countless cosmic accidents?
How It Began.. • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nM005RLmpi8&feature=related Gravitationalist. "Religion vs Science (2 of 2)." YouTube - Broadcast Yourself. 13 Apr. 2007. Web. 28 Feb. 2010. <http://www.youtube.com>.
Evolution Creationism Implies that the intricate design of all things must have a Designer Creationist believe everything was put on the earth to serve a purpose • Implies that the intricate design of all things is a result of random chance and impeccable timing • Evolutionists believe the universe exploded out of nothing in the “Big Bang” • (Cline Austin, NY Times)
Stem Cell Research • Stem cells are cells that can transform into any other type of cell that has been killed by injury, diseases, or cancer • The richest source of stem cells in an embryo, before the cells begin to • differentiate "What is Stem Cell Research?" Popular Issues - AllAboutPopularIssues.org. Web. 17 Feb. 2010. <http://www.allaboutpopularissues.org>.
Religion believes this is awful because we would be doing God’s job in creating Science believes this is great because we could cure a huge range of medical problems
PROS • Reduced risks of transplantation • Could give great insight on the basics of the human body • Could Cure • Alzheimers • Birth Defects • Spinal Injuries • Parkinsons • Heart Disease • Diabetes "Stem Cell Research-Pros and Cons." Scientific Method - Understanding Science, Research and Experiments. 2008. Web. 28 Feb. 2010. <http://www.experiment-resources.com>.
CONS • It’s messing with human life • We’re trying to play God • Can lead to cloning in the future • We are not yet sure of all possible outcomes and risks "Stem Cell Research-Pros and Cons." Scientific Method - Understanding Science, Research and Experiments. 2008. Web. 28 Feb. 2010. <http://www.experiment-resources.com>.
Bibliography "Angels and Demons." The Internet Movie Database (IMDb). Amazon.com, 2009. Web. 02 Feb. 2010. <http://www.imdb.com>. Brown, Dan. Angels and Demons. New York, NY: Pocket, 2009. Print. Cray, Dan. "God vs. Science." Breaking News, Analysis, Politics, Blogs, News Photos, Video, Tech Reviews - TIME.com. CNN, 05 Nov. 2006. Web. 16 Feb. 2010. <http://www.time.com>. Cline, Austin. "Science vs. Religion, Evolution vs. Creationism." Agnosticism / Atheism - Free Inquiry, Skepticism, Atheism, Religious Philosophy. The New York Times Co., 28 May 2006. Web. 17 Feb. 2010. <http://www.atheism.about.com>. Dawkins, Richard. "Is Science a Religion." The Humanist - a magazine of critical inquiry and social concern. The American Humanist Association, Feb. 1997. Web. 16 Feb. 2010. <http://www.thehumanist.org>. Gravitationalist. "Religion vs Science (2 of 2)." YouTube - Broadcast Yourself. 13 Apr. 2007. Web. 28 Feb. 2010. <http://www.youtube.com>. "Stem Cell Research-Pros and Cons." Scientific Method - Understanding Science, Research and Experiments. 2008. Web. 28 Feb. 2010. <http://www.experiment-resources.com>. The Official Website of Bestselling Author Dan Brown. Web. 28 Feb. 2010. <http://www.danbrown.com>. "What is Stem Cell Research?" Popular Issues - AllAboutPopularIssues.org. Web. 17 Feb. 2010. <http://www.allaboutpopularissues.org>.