“One believes things because one has been conditioned to believe them.” (Huxley 234) Society conditions people to believe what they want. The way society evolves, people just go along with it. The influences of society can come from technology and media among other things. Television portrays how people should live, act, what they should do and anything that can tell someone how to act. In Brave New World the people are coaxed since before they are born on how to live. They are not allowed to be influenced by anything other than what their society allows them. Books are forbidden because they might give people a different idea of how they should live and what they might feel. This dystopian society is made to not feel emotion and live like they are told.
As science advances, technology advances with it. “- and you can’t make tragedies without social instability. The world’s stable now.
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Today we have amazing technology but people still read books, believe in God, have families and want to live a happy life. “The greater a man’s talents, the greater his power to lead astray. It is better that one should suffer than that many should be corrupted.” (Huxley 148) In today’s society, we praise the accomplishments of people’s talents. In this dystopian society, they disown people that have anything special, for they want everyone to be like everyone else. They do not want people to stand out so they groom them to fit it. Although in today’s society some people strive to fit in and be like everyone else, but if they were made to, they might rebel against that thought. Although isn’t that the goal of the people that can not stray from society, they do not want anyone to be above them because then they won’t be liked for what they can not change. Society is messed up and people should not have to conform to it today or in any dystopian
In Huxley’s, Brave New World, there is a society, known as the World State, where people are divided into different castes, and depending on the caste they are set in determines their place in the community and purpose in the world. If one is an Alpha, he/she will be highly intelligent and be a leader of the free world, while one who is an Epsilon has lowered intelligence and is conditioned to do physical labor. From the process of the human beings being created in test tubes, to their birth and development, they are trained to believe in certain truths. Brave New World is a Utopian novel that uses a form of brainwashing to conform people to the ideal society placed in the plot. Other literature works, and real life occurrences, make it evident that brainwashing is used to condition to believe and behave I certain ways, which become their morals and truths.
Brave New World is an unsettling, loveless and even sinister place. This is because Huxley endows his "ideal" society with features calculated to alienate his audience. Typically, reading Brave New World elicits the very same disturbing feelings in the reader which the society it depicts has notionally vanquished - not a sense of joyful anticipation. Huxley's novel presents a startling view of the future which on the surface appears almost comical. His intent, however, is not humor. Huxley's message is dark and depressing. His idea that in centuries to come, a one-world government will rise to power, stripping people's freedom, is not a new idea. What makes Huxley's interpretation different is the fact that his fictional society not only lives in a totalitarian government, but takes an embracive approach like mindless robots. For example, Soma, not nuclear bombs, is the weapon of choice for the World Controllers in Brave New World. The world leaders have realized that fear and intimidation have only limited power; these tactics simply build up resentment in the minds of the oppressed. Subconscious persuasion and mind-altering drugs, on the other hand, appear to have no side effects.
“Brave New World,” is a novel written by Aldous Huxley where he explains that everything is based on a futuristic science which he claimed sprang forth from him because of his experience as “an ordered universe in a world of plan less incoherence” (River 4 1974). People seem to care more about temporal things rather than emotions. Technology also seems to be the most important aspect and everyone is affected by it in one way or another, whether if it is negative or positive. This does not necessarily mean that everyone is fully happy with technology because in a way they are all slaves to it. Another thing discussed in the novel is the lack of freedom. Due to a lot of technological development there exists this division in between people even before their birth that their fate has already been decided where subsist these casts such as Alphas, Betas, Gammas, Deltas e.t.c. They are pushed away from freedom of choice and forced to live in a bubble of their own.
Hard to think it’s true, but if we are subjected to it everyday, then what are we to do if one day we no longer find ourselves being controlled by propaganda. The diversity of our beliefs would entangle us, make us divided, and would ultimately end us. Aldous Huxley may also tell us that we need control at a certain degree where we don’t feel it, but rather live in it at the right amount that we do not notice it and let it control us. But for the reason that it may go out of hand, then our human instinct of freedom may contradict our own necessity of control. Brave New World claims that everyone should be happy, thus by conditioning the people to believe they are happy and maintain it at that by any means necessary even by eliminating history thus Mustapha Mond’s quote “History is bunk”. In the world of propaganda it is either you control or you are controlled, In Brave New World, even the controllers are controlled to the point that they do not stray away from the path that their predecessors gave them. It’s like part of their culture, and the way the way they were raised had that
Throughout the novel Brave New World the author Aldous Huxley shows the readers a dystopian society where Ford is worshiped as a God, people only live sixty years, where there is a drug exists without the unwanted side effects, and movies where you can feel what is happening. This is what the author thinks the future of the world would be. However, despite the author's attempt to predict the future the novel and the real world contrast because the concepts in the novel like love and marriage and life and death drastically contrast with how they are dealt with today.
Aldous Huxley wrote Brave New World in 1932, with no real way to tell the future and how society would be today. The novel is based around a dystopia, a society that is the opposite of an utopia which is a “perfect” society according to the definition. Today’s society is far from perfect by definition. Huxley’s dystopia was supposed to mimic an almost impossible future, but with how things have changed in the past 90 years that future might not be so far away.
In 1931 Aldous Huxley published Brave New World, giving a look into a dystopian society of the future. The book is written in a modernist literary view, and is a dramatized version of the issues surrounding the world during the early 20th century. Throughout the book, literary theories and schools of criticism such as Marxist Criticism and Gender Studies can be seen in Huxley’s representation of the main characters of the story and their interactions; he shows the disparity of society when they loose their ability to feel or have emotion, and uses the inter-workings of the World State to show class differences and the consumerist society that has formed due to the importance put on economic prosperity.
...terature or life and does not have a deeply satisfying sense of family and love. Brave New World suggests that the readers should seek freedom, knowledge, and love in their lives by producing humans in test tubes and simultaneously rendering family, marriage and love obsolete , removing religion and all prior knowledge of art and history humans would lose their nature and become like robots; emotionless and without freedom or independent thought. The pursuit of happiness is a long, treacherous road that is superficial and misguided. Individuals should seek meaning in life and happiness may or may not follow. Having meaning in life is much more satisfying and meaning cannot be achieved without the freedom to seek the answers to many controversial questions, without the knowledge of what it means to be human or without another individual to share this experience with.
Imagine living in a society where there is no sense of independence, individual thought or freedom. A society where the government uses disturbing methods that dehumanize people in order to force conformity upon them. Taking away any sense of emotion, It would be very undesirable to live in a society with such oppression. Such society is portrayed in Aldous Huxley's novel Brave New World. The World State uses social restrictions to create permanent artificial personalities for people within the society. The World State also uses controlled groupings of people to brainwash them further to be thoughtless people with no sense of individualism. Lastly, the World State uses drugs to create artificial happiness for people, leaving no room for intense emotion which causes people to revolt against the World State. Within the novel Brave New World, it is seen that the World State eliminates individuality through social restrictions, government controlled groupings and the abuse of drugs to maintain control of the population.
Aldous Huxley’s Brave New World is set in a society that seems more like a fantasy than a possible reality like we know today. In his novel, people are no longer born, but instead manufactured on an assembly line and therefore created into a caste system from which no citizen can escape. There is no emotion other than happiness. Not because all others are banned, but because there a scientifically not made within these humans. Because every citizen believes they are in paradise, they do not see the biggest fl...
We are not in the Brave New World, although some features of our society do resemble the World State. I feel that this dystopia is not possible anywhere in the foreseeable future, for the mere fact that no one would voluntarily allow themselves to be completely controlled by the government. We put so much value in things like our relationships, nature, and religion that it would be a long time before anyone would give up these parts of life. I feel that Huxley created the World State so that our society would see similarities between Brave New World and our own world. As long as there are similarities we have a hard time totally disregarding the dystopia that Huxley created. It keeps us on our toes, so that we will watch out for the government and keep our minds open for the future.
For years, authors and philosophers have satirized the “perfect” society to incite change. In Brave New World, Aldous Huxley describes a so-called utopian society in which everyone is happy. This society is a “controlled environment where technology has essentially [expunged] suffering” (“Brave New World”). A member of this society never needs to be inconvenienced by emotion, “And if anything should go wrong, there's soma” (Huxley 220). Citizens spend their lives sleeping with as many people as they please, taking soma to dull any unpleasant thoughts that arise, and happily working in the jobs they were conditioned to want. They are genetically altered and conditioned to be averse to socially destructive things, like nature and families. They are trained to enjoy things that are socially beneficial: “'That is the secret of happiness and virtue – liking what you've got to do. All conditioning aims at that: making people like their inescapable social destiny'” (Huxley 16). Citizens operate more like machinery, and less like humans. Humanity is defined as “the quality of being human” (“Humanity”). To some, humanity refers to the aspects that define a human: love, compassion and emotions. Huxley satirizes humanity by dehumanizing the citizens in the Brave New World society.
The society of the Brave New World is quite different from ours, with their lack of spirituality proving that point. “The pleasure-seeking society pursues no spiritual experiences or joys, preferring carnal ones. The lack of religion that seeks a true transcendental understanding helps ensure that the masses of people, upper and lower classes, have no reason to rebel” . Another main difference, is the absence of mothers and fathers, and the technology that makes it possible. “Brave New World is a futuristic society designed by genetic engineering, and controlled by neural conditioning with mind-altering drugs and manipulative media. It predestines human embryos to certain levels of intelligence, and chemically does away with the concept of old age”. Today, the technology is simply not available to create hundreds of humans from the same egg. Yet another prophecy that differs greatly from those of today, is the use of soma and casual sex. In today’s society both of these things are frowned upon greatly. However, in the brave new world, they are promoted. The prophecies promoted in Aldous Huxley’s Brave New World, are quite different from those promoted in today’s society.
The inability to conform in society can lead to unhappiness and the feeling of inequality
While science has made us digital, yes, really fast modern generation, it is also unfortunate to see the way man has misused it to pose serious danger to his own existence. Though nothing much can be done to reverse the misgivings from search innovations it is paramount for the nations to adopt measures that would facilitate peaceful existence with the positive contributions that science has given us. The international nuclear disarmament program and combined efforts to mitigate on global climate change are steps towards the right direction, though many nations continue to deny their guilt in making the world an inhabitable place.