Brave New World: Prophetic Vision or Sci-fi Fiction?

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Brave New World: Fact or Fiction Aldous Huxley’s novel, Brave New World contains many predictions of the future a few centuries in, but the way the book is depicted the future can be defined as today in the year 2017. This novel is written in a satire tone therefore it is not meant to be taken serious but in today’s day and age it is not as far-fetched as it seems. Brave New World can be considered to be a prophetic vison because being published in 1932 the reader would have never expected that the majority of the details within the book would become facts and not fiction in the future. Huxley would have never figured his thoughts and ideas would be true. Huxley incorporates drastic changes in the scientific realm to how their society is formed. The novel takes place in a dystopian society which leaves the reader with the question: Is our society any different than the society in Brave New World? This novel depicts genetic engineering, cloning, and technological advances which all are aspects of science fiction. Huxley writes, “From eight to ninety-six buds, and every bud will grow into a perfectly formed embryo, and …show more content…

One of the topics in this novel that is far-fetched is the Bokanosky Process. The idea of cloning is not far off because scientist have created clones before for example the famous Dolly the sheep. The fact that this society mass produces almost thousands of children at a time is disturbing because not only do they look alike they do not care about it. The society runs on the Bokanosky Process without it they would cease to exist. Huxley writes, “Bokanosky Process is one of the major instruments of social stability.” If it was not for the mass production of babies the society would not function which is something very far-fetched. Making multiple children from one egg is something our society would look down

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