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    Brave New World Essay

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    BRAVE NEW WORLD ESSAY Throughout the dystopian novel Brave New World‚ Aldous Huxley paints a portrait of destroyed innocence in a bildungsroman storyline. Huxley’s novel resembles the trials and tribulations of Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet as a direct comparison can be made between Juliet and John the [Noble] Savage‚ with their shared innocence destroyed by the undeniable truth of the worlds they reside in. Huxley warns his audience of technology controlling every nuance of a person’s life

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    Brave New World: Religion

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    D. Writings III. Function Explaining unknown Philosophy Supernatural Providing aid Sanctioning conduct Morals Traditions Delegating decisions The Basis of Religion In the novel "Brave New World" civilized society lives in a world of science and technology. Major changes have occurred during the future; Utopia now revolves a religion of drugs and sex. God and the cross have been replaced by Ford and the symbol T‚ the founder of the age of machines. Instead

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    The citizens of Brave New World are conditioned to a lot of subjects at a young age. This includes being comfortable with sexual activity‚ knowing their social caste place‚ and engaging in the use of soma when feeling sadness. While I do believe conditioning in today’s society shares similar views as of that in Brave New World‚ I do not think we are close to that extremity of conditioning. I believe the main difference between conditioning in Brave New World and today’s society is that condition

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    Brave New World Essay

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    Sociology 8 November 2012 Brave New World Essay A novel written by Aldous Huxley‚ Brave New World is a very interesting‚ which is based upon a futuristic society. The entire novel shows the reader that this society obtains pleasure without any moral effects. This Utopian/dystopian society manipulates people’s minds making them believe they are all working together for the common good. Brave New World explores the negatives of a successful world where everyone seems to be content and

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    Brave new world summary

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    Summary of Brave New World Aldous Huxley’s novel‚ Brave New World‚ is a fictitious depiction of a futuristic utopian society. In this world every aspect of life is controlled and manipulated‚ with a specific purpose in mind. Humans are not conceived by parents‚ but rather in laboratories‚ undergoing treatments that enhance or impair the individual’s potential. Society adheres to a caste system in which there are multiple “levels” of intelligence (i.e. alpha‚ beta‚ delta‚ etc.). The book commences

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    Brave New World Essay In Brave New World‚ John the Savage willfully exiles himself from the reservation‚ where he was born and raised‚ in order to travel to the new world; because of his passion for learning and this twisted idea of becoming happy through his acceptance. Aldous Huxley has written a novel where the main character experiences a type of exile that is tragically unhealable while being beneficial. John’s experiences in the world state were enriching; however‚ they were even more

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    the concept of science being a way of life rather than an interest and where individuality‚ love and affection is frowned upon. The society mentioned in this book is “World State” and the people live by the motto “Community. Identity. Stability.” which suggests that the population depend on factories and science labs to create new life and use for employment. The infrastructure in the area is modern and similar to what we have today which is suggested by the line “A squat grey building of only thirty-four

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    Some believe it ’s possible to have a Utopia while others believe there is no way that it can. Plato‚ More‚ Hobbes‚ and Locke are some that have a high idea of Utopias. A Brave New World‚ indirectly supported and refuted some of the ideas of these philosophers in different ways.  A philosopher that can support Brave New World is Plato. Plato was against families‚ and he thought no child should know their parents. This was a very obvious in the book. In the story‚ natural reproduction was not used

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    Aldous Huxley’s Brave New World is a work of science fiction‚ but it is not a work about the dangers of science. Huxley himself says in the forward to the novel that "the theme of Brave New World is not the advancement of science as such; it is the advancement of science as it affects human individuals" (Huxley xi). In the novel‚ Huxley shows that science itself is dangerous and that the true goal of the World State’s research is to advance consumer technology—the aspect of science that directly

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    independent beliefs and mindsets- to be human. The most honored of all creation‚ yet the most rebellious. As human life is deprecated in Aldous Huxley’s Brave New World‚ the human life is equated to nothing more than the dirt from which it came. Huxley parallels himself‚ an aristocratic pedigree‚ to the upper class inhabitants of the brave new world that sought the meaning of human life above the accepted pretense of society. Aldous Huxley depicts the social isolation of the upper class through over-intellectual

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