Nick Carraway makes objective judgments and evaluations of all the main characters in the Great Gatsby, and he is the central figure in judging all morality in the novel. He judges others according to his moral standards and then gives different people different attitudes based on the result of his judgments.
Nick sees all the evil and stupidity that goes on, and it is not until about the end of the novel that he realizes he does not want to be any part of it. Right before Gatsby dies, Nick says goodbye to him, he screams out, 'They’re a rotten crowd, You’re worth the whole damn bunch put together'. Nick appears to appreciate Gatsby's commitment to his optimal, spoken to by Daisy herself. Gatsby recognizes what he needs, and all that he does in his grown-up life is a way with that in mind. Nick appears to be equipped for disregarding the shadier components of Gatsby's character, similar to the sketchy way he has earned his cash and his ambiguous foundation, and concentrating just on what he sees as the positive pieces of Gatsby's character. In any case, in a similar section of the novel in which Nick says, Gatsby merits the entire bundle set up together. Nick additionally says to the peruser, 'I've always been glad I said that. It was the only compliment lever gave him, because I disapproved of him from beginning to end”. This remark mirrors an inborn indefiniteness in Nick’s viewpoint toward Gatsby, yet regardless of whether he is reproachful of Gatsby. Tom, Daisy, Jordan, they belong to the 'rotten crowd' because they are selfish, materialistic, and cruel. They do not have any spiritual values or compassion for themselves or others. Nick realizes that Gatsby is better than them because of his complete and total dedication to a dream.