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  • Essay / Brave New World, by Aldous Huxley - 623

    Brave New World by Aldous Huxley is written with the idea of ​​a totalitarian society with total social stability. Huxley demonstrates how a stable world robs a person of their individuality, something that was also lost in Ayn Rand's Anthem. Brave New World illustrates the great sacrifice necessary to achieve such a stable world. This novel envisions a world where the government has complete control over people in its mission of social stability and conformity. The result is that the government has created a society without love, without freedom, without creativity and without a human desire for happiness. In the first chapter, the World State and its motto “Community, Identity, Stability” (page 1) are introduced. . The motto is inscribed on a shield hung in a sign above the Hatchery and Conditioning Center in central London; and this motto encompasses the slogan of this ideal society. Huxley explains that the main goal of this society is for people to be happy at all times and that is why he designed the motto. It demonstrates the idea of ​​a "community", that is, when all people are...