Utopia Essay

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    Aequitas A utopia is defined as an ideally perfect place, especially in its social, political, and moral aspects, according to The Free Dictionary. Nothing in the world is perfect, as everyone is different and have different views and opinions. What one might deem to be flawless, another might not. However, even though some countries that exist that are decent, there are a few things that I’d like to add to create what I consider to be a utopia. The name of my utopia is “Aequitas”, meaning…

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    Moore's Utopia Essay

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    was writing Utopia led him to create idealized version of the foreign lands he heard described due to his distaste in the current state of European government and society. By telling a story of a Utopian society, More was able to critique the state of affairs in Europe without explicitly stating his distaste. He uses the fictional Hythloday to first critique European governance and society and then to explain what More believes to be the perfect society. In book one of Moore’s Utopia, More…

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    This reality seems desirable but could never be accomplished without some people getting put down for this society to rise up. A utopia appears perfect but deep down has many fatal flaws that take away freedom and knowledge from the citizens. Our modern day society, even though far from perfect, gives us things a utopia can not. The rules in modern society and a utopia are from far the same. In our society, we can choose our own electives in school, but in The Giver, they have the same classes…

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    In a seemingly way, a Utopia is thought to be an idealistic way of living. A utopia is a perfect place where everyone is happy, free and equal for the most part. usually a utopia seems to be a very wonderful place on the surface, but has corruption under it. by corruption this could mean a harsh government, or a monarchy, a sacrifice or just a bad sponge. distopias on the other hand are the opposite of utopias, for the most part that is. dystopias are just corrupt over all, and dystopia does not…

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    Essay On Unique Utopias

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    Unique Utopias The idea of an “utopia” is often thought about in one way, without any diversity. This is wrong, as no two utopias are exactly the same. One of the main contributing factors in an utopia is the diversity in which makes each society special. Although Victory City and Sacred Mountain Sanctuary have few similarities such as their societal goals, the two communities are extremely different when it comes to their education systems, their way of life, and their economics. To…

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    In Russell Jacoby’s The End of Utopia: Politics and Culture in the Age of Apathy argues that we have lost the determination to envision the good, intellectual collapse, the politics have been reduced to a dry topic, and utopian thinking ought to be included in politics. In Picture Imperfect: Utopian Thought for an Anti-Utopian Age the main argument was on anti-utopianism. Russell argues that politicians once considered utopian ideas you think of the welfare state after the second world war being…

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    bloodshed, a utopia, whereas one society is a place where everything in the world is nothing more but a dark place, where everyone is corrupted and insane in more ways than one, a dystopia. In the modern world, utopias and dystopias…

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    outlook of the future, mask utopias. Many humans have foreshadowed this pleasing outlook, including a recent foreshadowing by Frank Lloyd Wright in 1932. According to Frank Lloyd Wright, the future will present society with " Great architecture, service stations, no longer eyesores, expanded to all include the service and comfort…each citizen will have all forms of production, distribution and self improvement" (The Next City). This depiction further suggests that utopias lead to success among…

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    creating a utopia can help bring to light the many problems that we still need to solve in the world today. Creating a utopia can also help reveal new ideas to implant into society, like Democracy. We use many ideas from utopias to make our world a better place and make it slightly closer to a utopia than it was yesterday. The human urge to imagine and create utopias is a positive characteristic, given that a true utopia is impossible to achieve. To illustrate, we can look at More’s Utopia.…

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    Utopia Vs Dystopia

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    humans have since they are born, and are the elements that humans use to survive; this is why Plato’s government cannot exist and that is why it would decline from aristocracy into tyranny. Utopia by St. Thomas More describes a fantastic Island where the principal law is to pursue the common good. Utopia is different from Plato’s Republic, in that Utopians are allowed to have family, they have a common property, and they can have the power over decisions their states take and they can make…

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