Society In Brave New World

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Immediately evident in the first two chapters of Brave New World, contemporary readers will quickly realize that Huxley's vision for creating life is far from ordinary. As an explanation, Huxley details in the Foreword to his novel that those in control of the new world are not true madmen; their goal is not anarchy but social stability (xii). Genetically populating a society based on specific needs is nothing new for utopian novels, however, as noted by Congdon, Huxley, in his essay "A Note on Eugenics," discusses eugenicists' fears that raising an entire society of superior individuals would cause that society to "‘live in a state...of chronic civil war'" (90-91). This concern of trying to perfect society too quickly is manifested in Brave New World with Mustapha Mond's explanation to John the Savage of the collapse of the Cyprus experiment, the creation of an island society inhabited solely by Alphas that rapidly deteriorates into civil war. …show more content…

Fortunately, the World Controllers "‘realized that force was no good. The slower but infinitely surer methods of ectogenesis, neo-Pavlovian conditioning and hypnopaedia'" are the correct way to ensure a successful planned society (Huxley 50). Therefore, as a critical utopia, Huxley targets the nineteenth-century utopia which "assumes that scientific progress leads to an ideal world," notes William Matter in "The Utopian Tradition and Aldous Huxley" (148). With a critical eye on scientific advancements, Mustapha Mond explores this same concept in a discussion with John the Savage: "‘We believe in happiness and stability. A society of Alphas couldn't fail to be unstable and miserable.'" In fact, "‘An Alpha-decanted, Alpha-conditioned man would go mad if he had to do Epsilon Semi-Moron work…Alphas can be completely socialized—but only on condition that you make them do Alpha

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