Children Of Science In Aldous Huxley's Brave New World

1418 Words3 Pages

Alison Gorospe
May 11, 2014
English 24
Professor Katz
Second Draft
Children of Science
Willie Dixon once wrote, "Birth is the sudden opening of a window, through which you look out upon a stupendous prospect. For what has happened? A miracle. You have exchanged nothing for the possibility of everything" (BrainyQuote).
For most individuals, it is an incredible blessing to bear a child and to experience motherhood. Unfortunately, 6.7 million women in the United States are unable to experience the miracle of conceiving a child due to infertility. Luckily, over time, scientists have discovered a solution known as reproductive cloning, a process by which organisms are duplicated and copied. Aldous Huxley, author of Brave New World, embraces this technique with a frightening approach by imagining an entire society manipulated by science and technology. Although Huxley's novel was written in the year 1931, his depiction of what the future will be like is slowly becoming a reality.
Huxley fantasizes about a population of human beings created by a scientific procedure known as the “Bokanovsky Process” rather than the production of sexual mating. In accordance to the novel, Brave New World, ovaries were surgically removed from the bodies of women, kept under an optimum temperature and stored in test tubes. After the eggs were carefully inspected for abnormalities, they were placed into a container filled with spermatozoa. Once they were fertilized, factory workers inserted saline solution into the containers and delivered them to the labelers, where the eggs were given an identity.
Although Huxley’s description of the future seemed improbable, his theory is currently becoming a reality through inheritable genetic modifications and reproduct...

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