Brave New World Rhetorical Analysis

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Prompt: When John talks to Mustapha Mond about the lengths the government would go to ensure stability and happiness. As he noted, “You seem to have paid a fairly high price for your happiness” (230). In Brave new world, do the ends justify the means, or have they paid “too much"? The Price Of Happiness In Aldous Huxley's "Brave New World," society is depicted as a place where everything appears perfect, but upon closer examination, cracks in its utopian facade begin to show. When John engages in a conversation with Mustapha Mond, the Controller of this society, he astutely observes, "You seem to have paid a fairly high price for your happiness" (230). Alluding to the responsibility of suppressing such emotions to achieve such “happiness”. Which only raises a fundamental question: what exactly is the cost of the happiness society offers, and …show more content…

They contend that the stability and happiness enjoyed by the populace justify the measures taken by the government’s evil conduct, even if those measures involve the suppression of individual freedoms. However, a critical examination of the societal structure and its methods reveals significant ethical concerns. The government’s perception of ensuring “stability” is undeniably revealed by overpowering individuals through the acts of treating each norm of the society like a forever clueless dog that’s in need of instruction. Many of them grew up having the wrong perception of what they “believe in happiness and society” (Huxley, 222). So, they’re in a constant state of receiving false advertisements that persuade them to come back for nothing but more blindness of guidance because that’s simply the nature of the society that they’ve unknowingly been implanted in from the beginning. When it’s undoubtedly causing more harm than good. But, what does that say about the government? It is revealed that the government in "Brave New World", employs

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