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Individuality In Aldous Huxley's A Brave New World

Decent Essays

As we started class discussion, we spoke of individuality. In some people's reflections on their diaries for class discussion, there was too much of it in “The Brave New World”. Some said there was not enough. What is individuality? Individuality is a person beliefs or way of their life. Being identified as a separate person or “just you”. A person has an individual way of being different then someone else. Being an individual can mean you are a different class than someone else is, or species however. You might look different than someone else but have similar features. In life, there can be twins who are identical in physical appearance but have different beliefs and thought processes. Twins also take up a different part of space in the world we live in. Some have suggested that society views twins as individuals. How does society do that? It seems one of the objections is in “A Brave New World” that everybody was mass produced. In some illustrated views of the novel Deltas look a lot alike. They all fall under the same cells. Why does society regard two physically identical individuals as individuals other than the fact that they don't occupy the same space at the same time and can't? Things happen to people in different ways. Experiences that happen to us …show more content…

My parents German shepard is very smart. He is always aware of his surroundings and knows when not to do somethimg. When my father leaves, he always does things he knows he couldn't get away with when he would be home. For example, jumping on the counters to get food. He is a very large dog in size. However, the Australian shepard is more consious of the things not to do at all times. He knows to always behave himself and never seeks trouble. He is a lover not a figher as the saying goes. The cat is just lazy and whines when he is hungry and wants to go outside or inside. Do the animals know that they know? They know when behavior is

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