Transformation Of Technology In Aldous Huxley's Brave New World

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I have just recently read the novel Brave New World by Aldous Huxley. This novel is Huxley’s satiric vision of the “utopian future” where humans are genetically bred to serve a designated purpose for the rest of their entire lives. Huxley first released a version of this book in 1932. It is remarkable how Huxley made predictions of technological reproduction and manipulation while in a time where technology was not prevalent. Huxley had established himself as a writer and social satirist. A Modern Utopia, by H.G. Wells, which was based on an idealistic vision of the future, inspired Huxley to write Brave New World, a more pessimistic, provoking, and terrifying prediction of the future. This novel follows the story of a world controlled under one world power, where genetic engineering has taken the place of sexual reproduction. Huxley touches a wide variety of topics in his novel. Three of the main ideas Huxley concentrated on were how too many technological advancements can overrun a society, unattainable happiness, and the dehumanization of sex.
The novel begins in the Central London Hatching and Conditioning Center, where a group of students is on a tour with the Director of the Hatcheries. The Director explains that the Hatching Center is where thousands of nearly identical human embryos are produced. The embryos are designed to have a designated class, each class differentiating between social hierarchies. The highest class is the most intuitive and influential, and the lowest class does the scum-work of society. In this society, kids are programmed specifically for what their occupation will be later in life; they are trained to know their likes and dislikes so they will do certain things when they’re older pertaining to the...

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... I think Brave New World is an eerie yet ingeniously crafted novel. Huxley’s ideas of the future were thought provoking and made me reevaluate the society we live in now, and wonder if the society he described in his novel would ever become a reality. Huxley really took us forward into time to a horrific one-world controlled government with no freedom whatsoever, and gave a really unique and different idea of how things could possibly end up if the choices the world decides to make end up backfiring. The relationships between the characters, such as John and Lenina, really made me evaluate the whole idea of emotional relationships being illegal. Huxley had me rooting for them. The themes of too many technological advancements can overrun a society, unattainable happiness, and the dehumanization of sex really made this novel eccentric and a very intriguing story.

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