Brave New World

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    Huxley 's Brave New World presents a world that is influenced by technology and science where your individuality is taken from you. This society is supposed to be nothing but perfection which creates stability, which maintains order as where people have no emotional intentions and do not think for themselves because they are demoralized and are brainwashed. Even history is fabricated and retold differently to maintain stability and to not let people question the World controllers. World…

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    Brave New World Analysis

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    In the book Brave New World, there is a world where everything has become industrialized, including the people. To create an indestructible society, how people think and what they do is controlled before they even are born. I was disgusted when I read how babies are treated in this story to reach this goal of a rich society. Nobody in this story gets to decide their own future. They are all born in tubes and deprived of nutrients and oxygen until they are perfect or inhibited. As they grow into…

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    Bernard In Brave New World

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    Bernard from Aldous Huxley’s Brave New World desires to break the strong hold that world leaders have on the people and attempts to make a difference. However, once he receives all of the attention he ever wanted, he finds himself changing into something else entirely. Bernard’s intelligence is to be admired but his eventual arrogance and foolishness transform Bernard from the hero to an ignorant fool. Originally, Bernard Marx’s intelligence is his best perk. In Brave New World, a majority of…

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    {Aldous Huxley’s Brave New World emphasizes the destructive outcomes of being unable to find a medium between wanton immorality and rigid moral standards, as well as the dangers of a perfect society.} Brave New World is set mostly in a futuristic, utopian society called “The World State” (Huxley, Brave New World 3), in the year “A.F. 632” (4). In this society, babies are mass-produced in identical batches and “decanted” (9) from bottles instead of born, and sex is used for pleasure and…

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    Morals In Brave New World

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    Morals and Societal Norms of Brave New World In the science-fiction novel Brave New World by Aldous Huxley written in 1932, Huxley explores a futuristic society called the “World State” where people are separated into castes and have specific tasks all for the good of their dystopian society. There are numerous topics discussed throughout the novel that illustrate Huxley’s predictions for the world and society as a whole. Drug use, promiscuity and religion all have an effect on these…

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    Brave New World Comparison

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    years into the future. A world comprised of mind controlling stimulants and impressive technological advancements involving the creation of humans surrounds this futures civilization. Although the author had developed this world multiple decades ago, many of his implied predictions to the future are surprisingly accurate in today’s world. In Aldous Huxley’s novel Brave New World he exposes the reader to a futuristic society both distinct and similar to today’s modern world; this seen through the…

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    In the novel Brave New World, written by Aldous Huxley and published in 1932, the author portrays a dystopian society that is built upon new reproductive technology, sleep-hypnotization, psychological manipulation, and conditioning. Huxley uses many different themes to show the ways of the people in this new society, and to show the reader the way these people truly think and feel. One of the most important themes of this novel is the misuse of technology and science and how harmful it can be…

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    the government situation that we have today is not even close to the troublesome governments that are found in the dystopian novels 1984 and Brave New World. The term utopia describes a world that is filled with peace and happiness. A dystopia, on the other hand is a world filled with manipulation, controlling government, and sadness. In Huxley’s Brave New World he shows the reader his idea of a futuristic dystopia where babies are born in bottles and the citizens are taught their morals through…

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    ‘Brave New World’ by Aldous Huxley is a science-fiction book in which people live in a futuristic society and a place called the World State. In ‘Brave New World’, Aldous Huxley used the idea of consumerism to describe the behaviors and lives of the citizens of the World State. The practice of consumerism by the people of the World State fulfilled their satisfactory and happiness. However, it also blinded purity and truth among its people. Different classes and different genders of people…

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    Brave New World Soma

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    Brave New World, known to be one of Aldous Huxley's works, is a dystopian novel that's focused around a dull, futuristic society. The novel enhances genetically engineered people and subliminal messages set into people to divide people into different castes. In this world, the castes are divided into Alphas, Betas, Gammas, Deltas, and Epsilons, where the lower castes are modified to be more deformed and less intelligent. In this sense, the people are normalized into believing that things are…

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