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    Brave New World If a person walked past twenty people‚ at least half of them would be using technological devices. People can send photos‚ papers and videos with the click of a button. These new scientific creations have been said to make life simpler for the common person. It is said that technology is the key to success and progress in a society but many argue that it is religion and faith instead. Which is true? What really leads to improvements? Is it technology‚ or does "technological process

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    Propaganda in Our Age: The Subtle Totalitarianism of Huxley’s Brave New World Aldous Huxley’s Brave New World is often cited as one of the most influential and compelling works of the 20th century. Published in 1932‚ the dystopian novel’s depiction of the use of mass media and propaganda by a massive centralized government is widely considered to be decades ahead of its time. Many of Huxley’s predictions seem eerily accurate and are still frequently brought up today in discussions about the use

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    Brave New World Explore the ways in which Huxley explores the idea of escapism and pleasure. Support your answer with details from the novel. In the "old world" people had to deal with melancholy and abuse‚ and pleasure was received in different ways than in that of the new world. Huxley depicts this in his novel‚ Brave New World by establishing the idea of escapism and pleasure. He portrays some people as wanting to decamp from reality and explains that people in this utopian society get their

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    Societies: Two Twisted Foundations Aldous Huxley’s Brave New World and George Orewell’s 1984 were both composed surrounding times of war in the twentieth century. The authors were alarmed by what they saw in society and began to write novels depicting the severe outcomes and possiblities of civilizaton if it continued down its path. Although the two books are very different‚ they both address many of the same issues and principles. In Brave New World Huxley creates a society which is carefully balanced

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    what so ever in Brave New World. No mother or fathers. Babies are born with no family. No dads‚ moms‚ siblings. They’re on their own. They are brain washed to think that everyone belongs to everyone. They are encouraged to have meaningless sex. In our time we have morals. Most people disagree the idea of pre=marital sex. We think for ourselves. We stick with our families and love them and support them. The huge difference between the family society in Brave New World and our world.... would be that

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    people in the Brave New World society take soma whenever they get a bad feeling like its nothing instead of learning to put up with them. When they do this they are not experiencing all aspects in life such as the hardship life brings. They also don’t know the consequences that taking drugs like soma gives you. This is evident when the book says‚ ‘”But aren’t you shortening her life by giving her so much?”… “In one sense‚ yes‚” Dr. Shaw admitted.’ (Huxley 154) The people in the Brave New World society

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    authentic and concrete than the ideas depicted in “unreal” mass media. In Brave New World Revisited Huxley describes human reaction to mass media as “the tendency to response to unreason and falsehood- particularly in those cases where the falsehood evokes enjoyable emotion.” (Huxley) Even more‚ it is ordinary in human society to get consumed by the irrelevant information circulated by the media. Many news outlets such as “E! News” deliver unnecessary information about celebrities and reality television

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    novel “Brave New World”‚ main characters John the Savage and Bernard Marx struggle to fit in a world which has achieved happiness and refuse any form of change. The World State also declines the need to have any other truth than its own. With the use of technology‚ they use a hallucinogenic drug‚ called “soma”‚ it encourages social stability and by conditions citizens avoid the truth. The actions taken by the World State to make society happy‚ produce a more steady and comfortable world but fail

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    Religion in the All World State In the following essay the role of religion in the Novel Brave New World is going to be analyzed. Religion is an underlying and important topic in the All World State which is according to the conditioning of the inhabitants. The religion in Brave new World is totally different to the religion we know and practice today. For example as we Christians have God and Jesus as symbols for our faith‚ the people in the All World State (AWS) belief in Henry Ford‚ who partly

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    Neil Postman argues Aldous Huxley’s novel Brave New World is a more relevant piece of literature based off the future than George Orwell’s 1984. The way I see it‚ Huxley’s vision focuses on what could go wrong from the inside‚ rather than Orwell’s idea of an outside force disrupting societal traditions. If the human body can evolve‚ so can the human mind. Huxley expresses that the people will grow to love their privileges. For example‚ feelies or orgy porgy make the citizens feel nice‚ and causes

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