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    As a tyrannical government is allowed to rule freely over the illiterate masses, technology became so advance in a way wherein work that should be done by people are being replaced by robots, virtual centers are being safe havens for the people who choose to refuse to live but rather exist in something that isn’t real and tangible. Raissa Claire U. Rivera’s “Virtual Center” is a unique but horrifying example of a society built in Class Division which showcased the poor versus the rich, and the…

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    society sees everyone belonging to every one else. Huxley sees a change in his society’s morals and exaggerated them in his book several different ways such as the censoring of the word mom, the erotic play of children, and the production of humans. Huxley not only uses these to show a change in morals for the book but to also support how he sees his own society’s morals changing. Through the use of concrete diction, figurative language, and imagery Huxley gives a very detailed description of a…

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    Would you rather live in a world of constant, but artificial happiness or one that is constantly striving for improvement? Our society is inherently flawed, as a we as humans, but we continue to grow and improve. Aldous Huxley examined a world where some of these foundations were removed and thereby creating a Utopia in his novel, Brave New World. He did so by handing the all controlling government power over the people. Humans hatched from test tubes and genetically engineered to be of a…

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    Brave New World Symbolism Within Aldous Huxley’s Brave New World there's numerous symbols that allude to the actual world and concepts. Each part of the world is engineered in a way so that control and happiness are paramount. Everyone is happy doing their assigned tasks and beauty and learning anything outside of their field is shunned. Birthing tubes and hardcore drugs, the New World is a demonstration of what happens when one seeks a utopia. Soma, assembly line people, cognitive…

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    everyone is happy in their pre conditioned lives. The occupants of this Brave New world society can’t see it for what it really is but we as readers recognize the negative side effects of civilization deprived of humility, passion, morality and basic family values. Humans in the world state…

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    How far has the world really come since Aldous Huxley Wrote his book ‘Brave New World’? In his book he states how babies are made in the future. I think that we are a little bit of the way to being like what he states in the book. In the book babies are made out in tubes and they do things to make one egg in to twins then so on and keep doing it till they get 96 identical twin that each batch they give them drugs and alcohol to make them at a certain stage so they all have the same job that they…

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    by Aldous Huxley, weaves a tale of satire following members of a dystopian society in the not-so-distant-future. This novel was written during a time of great social, political, and technological change. Preceding* the publication of this novel, was the *completion* of World War I and the rise of totalitarian states in Europe. Countries such as ____________, ______________, and _______________ all began to see the surge in the totalitarian government, causing many people, including Huxley…

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    Brave New World Comparison

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    Compare and Contrast Essay Through the imagination and creativity of the author Aldous Huxley one is exposed to a controlled society hundreds of 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…

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    Bernard In Brave New World

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    Aldous Huxley´s book the ¨Brave new world¨ may be relevant today. In today's world and Huxley´s book, external forces can influence and change the way people think without their knowledge or in some case, if they are willing. Bernard Marx, is a principal character because he alters his personality, which influences the other characters in the novel. In the beginning, Bernard is shrewd and makes individual and sensible choices. But at the end, he changes and begins to make selfish, reckless, and…

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    Personal relationships with your significant others have been similar from 1931 to 2015. In our society now, they have changed from and two in the dystopian novel Brave New World. In Brave New World, there is a sense of freedom that Aldous Huxely writes about. The society in the novel are expected to date more than one person at a time. They have a type of freedom where they can go wherever they want with whomever they choose. In chapter 6, Bernard Marx and Lenina Crowne have an engaging…

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