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    The first three chapters of Huxley’s Brave New World already show the alarming‚ but all the same mind-blowing differences between our society and the futuristic society that the novel presents. The reader gains knowledge of the orthodox but profoundly strange ways of the fictitious world through a tour given by the Director of Hatcheries and Conditioning to new students at the building. In these pages‚ I especially noticed the peculiar way babies are made‚ born‚ nurtured‚ and raised. There are no

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    emotions in order to learn how to handle everything life throws at us. According to Bernard in Brave New World‚ ‘[he would] rather be unhappy than have the sort of false‚ lying happiness that he was having here”‚ (179) this quote means that he would rather be unhappy than live in a happy lie. This book describes a utopian world yet there’s a quote in the book that is in direct conflict with the “utopian” world they are living in. What could happiness and unhappiness mean to people? According to dictionaries

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    Brave New World Essay In Aldous Huxley’s novel‚ Brave New World‚ the citizens of the World State are bred into specific caste systems. These consist of Alphas‚ Betas‚ Gammas‚ Deltas‚ and Epsilons. The different caste systems differ from each other in many ways‚ and have multiple purposes. There are many differences between the different groups in the caste system. Alphas are the most intelligent of them all. They wear the color grey‚ and are the tallest and most good looking. While

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    Flowers for Algernon and Brave New World: Science’s Influence on Society "That’s the thing about human life" said author of Flowers for Algernon‚ Daniel Keyes‚ "there is no control group‚ no way to ever know how any of us would have turned out if any variables had been changed" (Keyes). In two societies where science is used to change the order of the world‚ Brave New World by Aldous Huxley‚ and Flowers for Algernon by Daniel Keyes‚ show the impact of science on society. As one book shows the consequences

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    In Brave New World‚ the social caste system is similar to the educational ranks we use in the present day. In the real world‚ people organize themselves by the amount of education. However‚ in this story‚ the people are genetically modified to fit the world’s caste system. In the book‚ the people are split into five social classes; the Alphas‚ Betas‚ Gammas‚ Deltas‚ and Epsilons. They all have been genetically modified to fit society’s needs. All the people have been taught and made to think and

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    change history in order to create a sense of false happiness. In Brave New World‚ the World State does not acknowledge that certain events throughout history even existed‚ and completely erase them from the books. Such a technique used by the government helps “to reveal ironically the inadequacies of the present… by comparing it with the past” (Firchow). Huxley satirizes the modern day consumer society by creating a world in which characters have short-attention spans who think of nothing more

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    Brave New World – Manufactured Happiness Chris Lim Be it resolved that the Brave New World is a utopia because everyone in the World State is truly happy. First of all‚ it is believed that one must suffer unhappiness to truly know and appreciate happiness. However‚ that concept is incompatible with a utopia‚ as the point of a utopia is to be without sadness‚ pain and suffering. In that respect‚ the World State is a utopia. Secondly‚ the concept of knowing unhappiness to know happiness

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    Throughout the world moral and spiritual corruption is found everywhere. Many fall victim to it but some use it as a learning experience.  Both Aldous Huxley and William Shakespeare display the affect corruption has on societies through Brave New World and Hamlet.   The want to be welcomed by others around drives characters towards decisions they would not make otherwise.  Both authors‚ to show a lack of care and affection to those who need it incorporate pain and suffering. Spiritual corruption

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    to share their concerns about humanity. Brave New World by Aldous Huxley presents a dystopian‚ emotionless and controlled world where all individuality is masked by their false understanding of “happiness”. Soma‚ is their armament against the effects of conflict and the only way to indulge in their inescapable life. True happiness is only possible through the perception and feeling of emotions‚ soma simply provides a distraction from the truth of a world gone wrong. In fact‚ it appears the plot‚ tone

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    In the novel Brave New World‚ Aldous Huxley presented a society that in many ways is similar to the society we live in today. One idea that is similar in the novel and today is the idea of personal relationships. It is similar because in the novel people just have sex and move on to the next person and that is beginning to happen with our society today. Research that I have done shows that in today’s society‚ slightly over 50% of the population of America is single. In the novel‚ the society does

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