Creativity In Brave New World Persuasive Essay

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The society in Brave New World is a critical and objective analysis of how the world would function in conditions that limit freedom for people within it. It exaggerates and criticizes how the danger of too much conditioning fosters stereotypes and segregation among groups. Through Brave New World, Aldous Huxley argued that dividing and grouping humans is an artificial aspect of human societies and is detrimental to humanity because it leads to lack of creativity, perpetuates otherization and limits opportunities to express free will.
Grouping can lead to unoriginal societies where creativity is not spread because the sharing of ideas cannot happen, since through the communities within it are not intersectional. After the riot that John caused, as a result of him trying to stop the distribution of soma to lower caste citizens, he and Mustapha Mond had a conversation about why there are castes such as Epsilons when there could be just Alphas and Mond responded by saying that, “... An Alpha-decanted, Alpha conditioned man would go mad if he had to do Epsilon semi-moron work… we should suffer acutely if we …show more content…

He explains the religions of the savages and dismisses them as well as barbaric practices by using terms such as “monstrous” and “repulsive,” completely invalidating the experiences and morals of these people; since civilization does not respect the culture of the “savages” they demonize it and label it inferior. This is detrimental to society because it perpetuates the ideas of “self”and “other”, self being civilization and other being the “uncivilized” and alienated. This otherization then is translated into immoral practices like marginalization by the government, an example of this being shown in the interactions between civilized peoples and the savages. Just like artificial grouping leads to marginalization, it also hinders citizen’s freedom of

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