#brave new world

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Aldous Huxley’s The Doors of Perception

A review and exploration.

The brain, Aldous Huxley asserts, is like a reducing valve, filtering out great masses of unnecessary experiences, creating a unified, simple experience of the world. Although Huxley’s Doors of Perception is based around his experience of the consumption of the psychedelic drug mescaline, the wealth of wisdom within the book stretches far beyond that of speculation…

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Anyway, watch Brave New World. Really devos it hasn’t been renewed for another season, it’s SO good

Rainy. Time for tea.Forever one of my all time favourite books, which really sums up my personalit

Rainy. Time for tea.

Forever one of my all time favourite books, which really sums up my personality and obsessions. Sometimes I get pretty terrified at how more and more there are glimpses of that science fiction dystopia in our current societies.


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You’ve been sucked in by The Hunger Games, Divergent and The Maze Runner, but what about the classics? These weren’t the first books to delve into the “what ifs” of dystopia. If you’re digging these societies (at least, when they’re fictional), you should check out these books.

• Fahrenheit 451. In this book, books are not allowed. If any are found, they are burned. But what happens when you find a book and you don’t have it burned? It’s an interesting take on how society views books, and the power that they can bring you.

• Brave New World. Everyone is kept happy by a society that gives them - but are they really happy? They are molded into caste-like systems and raised to do jobs. There is no competitiveness, but there is also no real freedom.

• A Clockwork Orange. A teen talks about his violent adventures and his experience being “reformed” by the state; in the process, however, they take away his free will. He is then forced to face the effects of his decisions. The book questions the cost of actions.

• The Giver. This utopia turns out to really be a dystopia, as you learn that pain has been substituted for sameness, which keeps people from feeling true emotions. It makes you question where the line is drawn to protect people.

• Atlas Shrugged. Major industrialists have abandoned their industries due to new regulations, and they then begin to fail. It asks, “What is the role of man’s mind in existence?” With a focus on objectivism and capitalism, you’ll really think on this one.

There are others out there, such as 1984 and Battle Royale, so you’ve got a lot to satiate your appetite for a dismal future.

 

Repost instagram.com/therealjosephmorgan

Repost instagram.com/therealjosephmorgan


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Nina as Mustafa Mond in ‘Brave New World’ (2020)

The Baby Factory: Now with applied alcohol solutions to ensure proper social cast!  

The Baby Factory: Now with applied alcohol solutions to ensure proper social cast!  


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Another Bernard doodle

Kinda venty, Im just projecting it onto him

Here have a doodle of a suffering boy uwu

His name is Bernard and he comes from a book called Brave New World by Aldous Huxley (really good dystopian novel, recommend highly)and i doodled him. A lot.

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