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    like the society in Brave New World. Our society will not be the society in Brave new World because our society has different point of views than the society in Brave New World. The reasons that I think our society will not be like the society in Brave New World is because giving birth to a baby is okay‚ in our society people date one person at a time‚ and in our society people have more freedom the society of Brave New World. Our society will not be the society of Brave New World because our society

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    By not following orthodox views in society‚ Bernard‚ John‚ and Helmholtz have all displayed unorthodox behavior. Unlike most people in society‚ John refuses to take soma to alter his feelings. John says‚ “I don’t believe it’s right” (Huxley‚ 155). John did not like the idea that his mother was was going to be in a long sleep caused by soma. Bernard shows strange behavior by not having a huge interest in ‘having women’. Bernard said to Lenina‚ “I didn’t want it to end with our going to bed...Not

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    Brave New World Essay “Everybody’s happy nowadays”‚ says the hypnopaedic suggestion. What is happiness? Happiness in the Brave New World is equivalent to experiencing pleasure‚ comfort and an even temper. Put simply‚ is happiness the experience of pleasure? Respond with reference to Brave New World‚ Robert Nozick’s pleasure machine and Nietzsche’s arguments on what it is to live a good life. The Utopia of the future- something every human seemingly wants‚ but is it worth it to throw away everything

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    was an attitude impressed upon the people of Aldous Huxley’s‚ Brave New World. A society free of disease and suffering was achieved through a technique of conditioning called hynopaedia. "Civilization is sterilization"‚ was a hynopaedic slogan used to achieve the ideal society. This idea was manifested through the anesthetizing people’s emotions‚ the sterilization of humans and the cleanliness of society. <br> <br>The Brave New World sterilized people of emotions through the elimination of families

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    In the novel A Brave New World there are several things are abnormal and are frowned upon here on Earth‚ while these things are abnormal here in the novel these things are completely normal and that is just the way that things are done. One such example is shocking babies to train them‚ while on Earth this idea is taboo and highly frowned upon in the novel this is normal and the way that babies learn about how to do things. A second thing that is strange in A Brave New World would be the sexaphones

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    The Giver by Lois Lowry and Brave New World by Aldous Huxley have many similarities. They both take place in futuristic utopias where happiness is the overall goal. Jonas and Bernard‚ the major characters in the novels‚ are both restless individuals who want change. Despite the close similarities‚ there are many contrasts in the two novels. The childhood‚ family‚ and professions arrangements are differently portrayed in the similar novels The Giver and Brave New World. <br> <br>The similarities in

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    Brave New World: The Advancement of Science Christy Campbell Mrs. Doig Eng OAC 2 16 May‚ 1996 When thinking of progress‚ most people think of advances in the scientific fields‚ believing that most discoveries and technologies are beneficial to society. Are these advances as beneficial as most people think? In the novel Brave New World‚ the author Aldous Huxley‚ warns readers that scientific advances can be a threat to society. This is particularly evident in the fields of biology‚ technology

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    Terry Eagleton’s quote compares the nature by which we structure our society with the way in which novelists create entire worlds within their works. When he writes “the only rules which are binding are those which we invent for ourselves‚” he means that the codes we live by are defined by the values and ideologies that we subscribe to. For much of the United States’ history‚ for example‚ African Americans were legally segregated from the rest of society. Why? Because the ideology of the ruling class

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    A look into Brave New World Many times there is an underlying topic to a novel and what it truly means. For Brave New World‚ there are many underlying ideas as to the makeup of Aldous Huxley’s novel. For example‚ themes like science‚ sex‚ power‚ freedom and confinement‚ drugs and alcohol‚ society and class‚ and dissatisfaction as different themes that Huxley produces in the novel. Also there could be many symbols in the novel including‚ bottles and Ford. Not only are these themes and symbols throughout

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    beliefs. Cultures are meant to be different. This helps give people choices to choose how they want to live. People look at the cultures‚ back grounds‚ rules‚ the way of living‚ this helps them decide which culture fits their way of life better. Brave New World is a utopia because it’s a place created by mankind. It’s sort of an imagined place. The government created it themselves. In this utopia birth was changed to the embryos being developed in a bottle‚ children are being raised and taught by the

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