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    Hypnopaedia; it is a process whereby one hears a recording during the period of time when he/she is asleep and is able to repeat it word by word‚ as though memorised‚ the next day‚ without having to actually be conscious or awake while listening to it. In Brave New World‚ it is also described as ‘sleep-teaching’‚ and is focused on drilling moral values into the children’s minds. “You can’t learn a science unless you know what it’s all about‚” thus hypnopaedia is not used on intellectual education in this

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    Brave New World Response

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    Brave New World                                                                                               Paola Padilla By: Aldous Huxley                                                                                      Honors English 10 Genre: Science Fiction/ Dystopian August 30‚ 2013 Reading Response Journal “Stability‚” said the Controller‚ “stability. No civilization without social stability. No social stability without individual stability.” (Huxley‚ 42) We are reading the

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    Castes In Brave New World

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    Brave new World is a sci-fi dystopian novel that takes place in the year 2540‚ or 632 AF (after Ford). It portrays a world that has advanced in genetic engineering‚ population control‚ the banning of natural reproduction‚ sleep-teaching and numerous other technology. Everyone is sanctioned into castes‚ Alpha‚ which is the highest caste‚ and the most physically superior‚ Beta‚ Gamma‚ Epsilon‚ and Delta. The controlling government‚ known as the world state‚ is managed by ten world controllers‚ spread

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    Soma - Brave New World

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    ORAL PRESENTATION ABOUT SOMA IN THE BOOK BRAVE NEW WORLD the topic i will present is the theme of drugs as a requirement maintain social stability‚ as a contribution for people’s happiness and most importantly drugs related to a perfect world. In the real world‚ in our reality‚ drugs are seen as extremely dangerous and the consumers are excluded from the moral society‚ seen as outcasts that go in the wrong path or that will never achive real happiness and a right life. However‚ drugs‚ in the last

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    What is totalitarianism? Totalitarianism is a form of government in which the government completely reminisced one’s individuality and freedom. In Aldous Huxley’s novel‚ “Brave New World‚” totalitarianism is perfectly demonstrated in which humans are scientifically made and have no control over their desired purpose on earth. Totalitarianism is also seen in George Orwell’s novel‚ “1984‚” where the government has eyes on everything. This means there is no privacy what so ever. The uncontrolled power

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    Preventing a Brave New World Derek Brown Grantham University Abstract This paper wills discuss Leon Kass’s conclusion that reproductive and therapeutic cloning of human embryos is unethical. It will also converse the steps in Kass ’s argument for his conclusion and will talk about the strengths and weaknesses of this argument? Preventing a Brave New World You ever see the mover Jurassic Park? Did you take notice the basis of the of is about cloning dinosaurs DNA; I know for one‚ the world

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    In Brave New World it shows many different advances and beliefs than what we’re used to. I will be stating a few of these examples such as the differences in technology and how different they live‚ and what they believe in. Aldous Huxley’s Brave New World is a well-developed‚ example of a society lacking morality‚ compassion‚ and individualism. In the beginning of the novel it starts by taking the reader through a series of events that led up to how they produce identical cloned human beings. They

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    In 1932‚ Aldous Huxley wrote a book entitled Brave New World. It was a novel of a dystopian future where persuasion and science were effectively combined to control the population. Huxley warns his readers about the problems associated with the advancements of subconscious persuasion techniques because he saw people becoming susceptible to them during the Age of Television Addiction. He critiques this by setting a character contest between John the Savage and Mustapha Mond‚ which reveals the characters

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    Brave New World Analysis

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    In the novel‚ 1984 by George Orwell and Brave New World by Aldous Huxley are both about dystopian societies where the government is corrupted. Both novels are similar due to both conveying the government as corrupted in a satirical way. Also‚ both books purposes are to portray the possibility‚ to what might happen to a society where a government has too much power‚ and how far the government will go to maintain total control and totalitarianism. Both novels also convey gender roles where women are

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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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