Brave New World Essay

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    Where a utopian society stands, an outside thought is sure to bring it down. In Aldous Huxley’s A Brave New World, the reader is shown the dysfunctionalities of a seemingly normal techno-topia, where technology reigns in the form of test tube babies and non-invasive crowd controlling measures while sexual activity is downplayed to a mere recreational pastime. Happiness is found through drug-induced holidays by soma, a drug that creates temporary euphoria and is consumed by most of the population

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    In “The Brave New World” there is a board ridden with many new technologies and futuristic improvements that occurred in 1932 that could have only been fantasized and dreamed about. For Aldous Huxley to make these assumptions is quite hysterical and unbelievable because it is very close to how we currently live in modern day america. An abundant amount of the ideas Huxley presented aren’t anything close to how we may have things working currently, but they are very similar to the technologies we

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    Soma In Brave New World

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    eliminate feelings of unhappiness” (Huxley 23). If a drug like Soma were to be created in today’s world it replace all the drugs in the world because there is no side effects. The number of Americans abusing prescription drugs has almost doubled from 7.8 million in 1992 to 15.1 million in 2003 (The Washington Times, 2005), where soma is used worldwide in Brave new world. The drug Soma in Brave New World by Aldous Huxley, could easily be described as a modernized prescription drug. The most common

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    A “perfect” world. A dreamlike reality for which humanity has endlessly yearned for: A ethereal utopia pervaded with peace and contentment. Such a setting of untold and unrealistic wonders is, however, truly an absurd proposition, underneath which lies genuine “imperfection”. Such a premise is illustrated by Huxley in his distinguished novel, Brave New World. The tale features a futuristic, modernized society dominated by science and technology, a peaceful world without conflict, additionally the

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    to a hegemon to which they smiled, not to one from which they cowered in despair. To Huxley, it seemed as if people were forfeiting that which made them human for the sake of expedience. So, Huxley decided to write a novel, which would become *Brave New World*, in order to show humanity what would happen if it continued to lose its soul. However, in his precise calculations, Huxley had made an error—he confused individuality and the soul. As Huxley saw it, a person was only

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    In Brave New World, Aldous Huxley had some ideas that pretty closely relate to our society now. In our society and the society in Brave New World, youth and good appearance is important. There are a lot of other things that are closely related like the technology and relationships. But there are other topics that do not relate at all. Huxley had the idea of mass producing babies with the hatchery. We can’t mass produce babies the way he had imagined but people have what they call “test tube babies”

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    Power In Brave New World

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    It is expected that citizens of the World State carry out their lives in the way that they are premeditated by the government. The author portrays a world where nearly every irregularity has been taken out and people could be considered to be parts of a machine instead of members of a society. In his book Brave New World, Aldous Huxley stresses that those in power have absolute control over the rest of the population, creating a world where people are treated as parts of a machine. Examples from

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    Dystopia In Brave New World

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    World and Matched: the More Preferable Dystopia Introduction A dystopia is a seemingly pleasant world often characterized by totalitarian governments and unjust conditions where citizens are mislead. Two novels, Aldous Huxley’s Brave New World (1932) and Ally Condie’s Matched (2010), both explore these phenomena. In a postmodern society, Huxley characterizes the dystopian evolution of technology as cold and unfeeling. His world revolves around the ideas of efficiency and immaculacy, created by extreme

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    Brave New World takes place in a dystopian future, where people have lost their individual freedoms and human characteristics -their rights to creativity, thinking, and argumentation, in exchange for happiness and ‘equality’. The people in this society are not unhappy with the way things are, and those that question the status quo are seen as strange and dangerous. The main character in Brave New World is Bernard, who has begun to question the system, due to the fact that he doesn’t fit into his

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    Sports in the Mass Society of Brave New World The Second Industrial Revolution, which marked the turn of the 20th century, brought about a rapid industrialisation and modernization process that changed the course of society. Scientific achievements and technological breakthroughs greatly improved peoples’ lives and marked the beginning of an era characterised by the never-ending cycle of consumption. Aldous Huxley goes a step further and in his dystopian novel Brave New World, which was published in 1932

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