Essay on Brave New World
Imagine a world where all of your fantasies can become reality. Imagine a world without violence or hate, but just youth, beauty, and sex. Imagine a world of perfect "stability" (42) where "everyone belongs to everyone else" (43), and no one is unhappy or left out. This sounds like the perfect world. But it's not. Looks can be deceiving as proven in Aldous Huxley's novel, Brave New World. In his novel, he introduces us to a society that strives to satisfy everyone's wants and needs by inflicting pleasure in order to bring stability. However, in order to truly achieve this stability, old world ideas relating to art, history, and religion are abolished, and are replaced by new age technology. As a result, the people of the Brave New World...show more content...
Without them, we are not humans: we are simply mechanical clones. For instance, take the people of the Brave New World. Their rationality does not come from their hearts or their own minds, but from a machine that feeds them pointless, repetitive rhetoric to keep them happy, under control, and unaware. It is because of this that the people of the Brave New World are shallow, cold, and have no compassion for anyone else, but themselves because they are "conditioned" (40) to be that way. This is clearly evident with the way they react to death. They do not mourn the dead or conduct a funeral like we would. Instead, they burn and destroy the bodies the same way they try to destroy their past. They purposely forget people to prevent individuality. They live in a society that "objects to anything intense or long–drawn" (40), and they believe that "ending is better than mending" (52). It is for these reasons why marriages, parents, and natural births no longer exist in their world. In turn, the people have become completely self–centered and egotistical. What kind of person in their right mind would want to live like this? Clearly, individuality is not worth stability because it's our emotions, whether they're good or bad, and our freedom to chose what we want to believe that separates us from machines, and makes us human.
Furthermore, as technology advances, we are gradually losing control of
Brave New World Essay
Brave New World Aldous Huxley's Brave New World is a fictitious story about a future utopian society where people are mass–produced in laboratories. People have no emotions in this world where drugs and promiscuous sex are greatly encouraged. People are given labels according to their pre–natal intelligence assignment. These different classes all have specific roles within society and nobody is unhappy with their place. The Brave New World he was a fictitious story that sets up a symbolic mirror to our world that shows the reader what our world is slowly evolving to.
As young children, the utopians are conditioned to practice certain rituals, to later benefit society as a whole through the stability that these...show more content...
There are already certain American cities in which the number of divorces is equal to the number of marriages" (Huxley forward).
Huxley is saying that although our society would like to think that it is sexually stable, there is a lack of monogamy among the general population.
Another aspect of the Brave New World culture that is symbolically similar to our own culture, is the very distinct caste system. People of the Brave New
World are "born" with a specified intelligence level. This level of superiority (or inferiority) is group into different castes. For example, Alphas are the smart superior individuals, where as the Gammas are among the lower castes that are mass–produced to be almost identical. This is their way of classifying people according to each individual's biological makeup. Huxley comments on the biological caste system in his forward, "the equivalents of... the scientific caste system [of the Brave New World] are probably not more than three or four generations away." Looking at our society today, we can see many ways in which biology determines personal worth. Many of today's highest paying jobs go to those of biological superiority. Biologically superior supermodels receive millions of dollars because they were born with a pretty face. Athletes get respect and money for playing sports. Biology helps the football player because it makes him fast. By giving them physical superiority, such as
Essay on Brave New World
Back in the 1930's when "Brave New World" was published, no body dreamt that world of science fiction would ever come into reality. Surely there must have been a time though when a machine that could wash clothes too, seemed like science fiction. That machine has come into reality though. With today's technology and already seeing how far we've advanced scientifically, who's to say we
couldn't push further. For that reason, it's believable that the "Brave New World" could come into reality.
One scientific advancement our world has begun studying and mastering, that brings us closer to realizing a B N W reality, is cloning. This process is very much like the Bokanovsky process in "Brave New World." In the B N W The Director of...show more content...
This is just one piece of evidence that shows how this world is coming closer to paralleling the B N W.
Not all proof that we are coming into this reality is scientific, some of it is emotional. People in this day are becoming very aware of the feelings of their fellow man. No one in this world or the B N W wants to offend anyone or make anyone feel any pain, if they can avoid it. People of this world avoid it by not saying offensive things and being politically correct. The people of the B N W avoided this pain by taking Soma, a mood altering drug that constantly makes you feel happy. Another method they used was to ban anything, like books, that made them think and alter they state of happiness. Mustapha Mond, one of the ten World Controllers, basically said that to be happy the world had to make sacrifices. This sacrifice referring to banning books and people no longer having people be free thinkers. In the B N W reality, the savage said to the world controller; "You seem to have paid a fairly high price for your happiness." Which is true, in our reality that would be a huge sacrafice but, we have not gone to an extreme and made sacrafices of not allowing people to be free thinkers, we do want people to be aware of their fellow man. In this way also, we are realizing the B N W as a reality.
The final piece of evidence, that our reality is similar to that of the B N W, is both scientific and emotional. This
A Brave New World? Essay
A Brave New World?
In the novel, Brave New World, by Adolous Huxley we are introduced to a world where an all–powerful government dictates the occupation, intelligence, morals, and values of an individual. The government known as the World State controls the entire process of a human, from life to death. The society is based almost solely on an consumer foundation, where making money is the sole goal of the government. Although the society is radical in its nature there are certain aspects of modern ideology that are present in it. For the purpose of this essay only conservatism will be used to analyze the society of the World State. In latter paragraphs you will see the similarities and differences between conservatism and the...show more content...
Although they do not feel that all changes are bad they do feel that good institutions and ideas will survive because they are good for our society. They believe that which exists will always be better than what radicals will propose. This statement does seem to support for example, the World State because it is an established institution, but it also involves the acknowledging past, which the World State does not do.
The World State also keeps religion from playing any major role in society, which is another idea that the conservatives would oppose. In the World State religion plays no major role in the citizens life other than mere show. The society sees Ford as somewhat of a god–like figure although, it plays no role in their lives or decisions. During a conversation between Mustapha Mond and John, the "Savage", Mond makes it clear that "the concept of God is not compatible with the World State government"(Ward) Therefore, God no longer exists in their society. Even values such as friendship, faith, and family stressed in many religions have been negated. Family is looked at as being almost pornographic. When John, the Savage, brings up his mother, the thought of monogamy causes even Holmholtz, who somewhat questions the society, to laugh. The World State believes that relationships like those in family, can cause a citizen to become emotionally unstable, which they fear can lead to instability in the State. Therefore, the government has eliminated