A person who is raised in a religious home is very likely to have different moral standards than to a person who was never taught a religion. The surrounding which a person is grown up in is what shapes and prompts one’s principles. In Brave New World‚ by Aldous Huxley‚ John’s surroundings shape and change the morals he grew up with in the Reservation and the ones he was prompted by in the civilized London; which shows us the theme of culture prompting morals. Since John was a child he was introduced
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Aldous Huxley’s Brave New World addresses the theme of identity in a myriad of different many ways. Huxley addresses the issue of identity from the very beginning of the novel‚ opening with a description of how they create 96 identical humans through a process of splitting one fertilized egg called ‘Bokanovsky’s Process’. Proceeding to talk about the ‘creation’ of humans via an in vitro process involving manipulating them to like or dislike certain conditions depending on their predestined place
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“Happiness At a Price” In the novel Brave New World‚ Aldous Huxley creates a dystopian setting that causes the future to appear frightening. The society becomes continuously more undesirable as the idea of scientific domination over people begins to configure. With a lack of individuality‚ memories‚ love‚ family‚ emotions and truth‚ the Brave New World’s ability to supply happiness is offered with a high price to pay. Children enter The Brave New World in large quantities after being created through
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In Brave New World‚ Huxley exaggerates the fact that a world that strives for stability must eliminate individualism and relationships. One major distortion in Brave New World is the prevention of individualism. In order to live in a Utopia‚ a person cannot be an individual. Huxley makes this clear from the first page of the novel‚ revealing the World State’s motto of “Community‚ Identity‚ Stability.” Conformity is what this society strives for. Individuals cannot make up a community‚ which is why
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psychoanalysis theory‚ society is threatened by people like Bernard who making the unconscious conscious because it threatens their submissive society. Bernard confides to people about the submissive society and makes them conscious of their surroundings. Lenina‚
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1-6 Before I actually opened the book‚ I knew that 1984 by George Orwell‚ Brave New World by Aldous Huxley‚ and We by Yevgeny Zamyatin are the three most famous anti-utopian novels. Utopia sounds like a nice word to me‚ I was expecting a “brave new world” before I opened the book. However‚ the descriptions in the book crashed my imagination. What a world it is! I was surprised that where’s no emotion in the world. Children are not raised by their parents‚ they are produced in a factory
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Extreme Conditioning The citizens of the World State are conditioned to keep stability in their community. They are made to love the conditions of their jobs and castes‚ thus ending labor strikes and bringing a new definition of productivity to the World State. The emotional conditioning prevents insanity and negative feelings between people. The citizens are compliant with their government because of the moral conditioning. The conditioning of the World State citizens is in their best interests
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change as people‚ but our end goal is always happiness‚ whether immediate or requiring investment. Within the shallow society of Brave New World‚ the people constantly search for pleasure and release‚ much like our own world. However‚ they are heavily inclined by the government to search for the short-term solution to curing their desire for pleasure. Through Brave New World‚ Aldous Huxley provides a relevant warning about a society focused purely on short term pleasure solutions‚ whether sexually driven
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In his novel‚ Brave New World‚ Aldous Huxley introduces a society based on consumerism. The World State is a self-sustaining machine‚ in which constant production is supported by constant consumption. Reflecting upon our own society‚ there are quite a few unnerving parallels. Our society too is based on mass production and consumerism. Big brands dominate the economy and available goods. And just as how it is never clear who controls the machine in the World State‚ we too are often left clueless
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Brave New World depicts a world in which Resident Controller Mustapha Mond governs a society where every aspect of an individual’s life‚ from decantation onward‚ is determined by the State. Predestination by God has been replaced by predestination by the government. Through the Bokanovsky Process‚ future-citizens are made with a virtually inexistent level of individuality. Once decanted and technologically altered to comply with their pre-determined caste‚ children are brought up and conditioned
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