Humanity And Cloning In Aldous Huxley's Brave New World

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Imagine having to be a child playing sexually with one another instead of being normal and playing with your toys or running outside in the playground. Aldous Huxley was a British writer considered by many as a visionary thinker who published a novel on Brave New World in 1952 right after World War I which impacted the world economy financially and emotionally. Brave new world takes place in London A.F. 632 nearly 600 years into the future. A.F. which is an abbreviated for After Ford, the name of the great industrialist who invented the assembly line and the mass production. Huxley’s purpose of his novel focused on defending a kind on how humanism scientific progression would hurt man kind. The novel brakes into the delineate of what a dictatorship would look like , A new age of society that used genetics and cloning in order to control and condition individuals living in a world where everyone is to be the ideal of a perfect being. After reading Huxley’s brave new world, I believe he is foreshadowing what our society could possibly end up as if we are to be controlled under one government, to be in one society similar to each other, living in a world of lies, disadvantages, no emotions, and no rights .Huxley’s novel is a perfect utopian society that flaws are hyperbolized and gives the reader the dark side of a new age, a new world state.

Society’s focus on perfection, the impact of an individual’s loyalty and fulfillment can change them to be hurt and disappointed .Such as being created to the standards of a perfect society, born from a factory and conditioned... Leaving out the rights and sentiment of the people is not needed to fabricate a thriving and productive society. “That is the secret of happiness and virt...

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...d consuming progress of technology and invention becomes their god. This is where religion is left out, distracting one from reality and wanting things of the world instead. Mustapha Mond responds that humans believe what they are taught to believe “Providence takes its cue from men” he says.
Huxley is actually judging something larger than 1920’s technology and motor, He critizes the way economist and scientists have been thinking for the past 400 years- since Shakespeare’s day. In a society that is conditioned to be perfect, with people and their emotions controlled, taking soma to escape reality, and religion being forgotten and technology advancing. Freedom of speech being cut off. What has humanity come to a world of cruelity Huxley inspires readers to think beyond the novel to the world itself rather than the limit of life. The world itself has gone sane.

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