In the
nineteenth century, when inventions were booming, a new problem was introduced:
“We had learned how to invent things,
and the question of why we invent
things receded in importance” (42). This seems similar to the question Bernard
faced in the novel, as he also questioned the why, and so did a child in the beginning of the novel. However, no
one else wished to know the why, since
the how has become the only important
thing in their society. Thankfully, in our world there is still a small hope,
because “although technocracy found no clear place for the human soul, its citizens
held to the belief that no increase in material wealth would compensate them
for a culture that insulted their self-respect” (48). This sets us apart from
the people in the novel because we still have self-respect, not just a
dependence on our society and a desire for progress.
Sunday, October 2, 2011
Technopoly and Brave New World
Neil
Postman's Technopoly makes many
connections between Aldous Huxley’s Brave
New World and similar situations, to the real world. Postman distinguishes
the difference between a technocracy, “a society only loosely controlled by
social custom and religious tradition and driven by the impulse to invent,” and
a technopoly, which is a “totalitarian technocracy” (41, 48). Postman even
ventures to say that the United States is a technopoly, which is slightly
frightening since he also compares it to Brave
New World. The underlying reason why technopolies are so powerful is broken
down when they are compared to how things are run in Brave New World: “Technopoly eliminates alternatives to itself in
precisely the way Aldous Huxley outlined in Brave
New World. It does not make them illegal. It does not make them immoral. It
does not even make them unpopular. It makes them invisible and therefore irrelevant”
(48). This is easily seen in the novel since everyone believes they are working
for what they believe in, which is progress.
However, they cannot see that they are actually working for what their leaders
believe in, since they are brainwashed not to see it.
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