Lecture #25 Tuesday May 6, 2008 Brave New World
Preludes
Thomas Henry Huxley (born 1825). At first opposed
evolutionary theory. Changed his mind upon reading
Also had a running debate with Sir Richard Owen, famed anatomist and paleontologist, Owen held the human brain was distinct from that of other apes, especially in having a fold called the hippocampus minor. Huxley proved apes also have this feature,
sinking Owen’s argument.
Eugenics. Francis Galton,
Galton suggested encouraging the “fit” to have more children; this was soon turned on
its head by others into moves to prevent (through sterilization) the “unfit” from having children (which should better be called “dysgenics”).
Eugenics embraced by many socialists and “progressives” such as George Bernard Shaw and H. G. Wells.
1907.
1913 Theodore Roosevelt, in a letter: "Someday we will realize that the prime duty, the inescapable duty, of the good citizen of the right type is to leave his or her blood behind him in the world; and that we have no business to permit the perpetuation of citizens of the wrong type."
1915. John Kellogg in a speech in
1927. Supreme Court decides states have the constitution right to sterilize citizens.
Early (and biased) IQ tests were used to “prove” that people
from
Opposed by religious conservatives, including the Catholic
Church. Also opposed by Josiah Wedgewood IV, member
of parliament and grand-nephew of
In the
Aldous Huxley (1894-1963) Grandson of T.H. Huxley.
His mother died when he was 16, which gave him a sense of the transience of human happiness.
Wrote Brave New World (1932) before the horrors of Nazism and Stalinism were fully known—therefore the dystopia was less brutal that in Orwell’s 1984 (1948).
Synopsis Set in the year 642 A. F. (After Ford), or approximately 2560 AD. A uniform world state. The utmost goal of the society is stability, which is accomplished through conditioning, uniformity, and universal happiness. All citizens are biologically and
psychologically conditioned, and divided into 5 castes, with alphas being the most individualized and the most intelligent, and epsilons devoted to the most menial of tasks.
Happiness is from sex, comsumption of material goods, and soma:
“All the advantages of Christianity and alcohol; none of their defects”. Anything that’s for individualism—mother, father, monogamous love, religion, poetry,
Shakespeare—is a threat.
But not everyone is happy: one of those set apart from the others is Bernard Marx, alpha in intellect albeit not in stature. He is a pervert—he wants to love Lenina Crowne, and her alone, and not to share her. In particular he does not want to share her with his boss, the
Director of Hatcheries and Conditioning (D.H.C.).
On vacation Bernard take Lenina from
Bernard takes both Linda and John back to
But John, the Savage, upsets the equilibrium in
Both Bernard and the Savage have long conversations with
Mustafa Mond, one of the ten World Controllers, who debates the system with
them. Mond sends Bernard to an island of misfits, but keeps the Savage in
Torn between the stupifying lifestyle of
Analysis:
“Words can be like X-rays, if you use them properly—they’ll go through anything. You read and you’re pierced.”
The novel is a dystopia; it is also satire, and the clue lies in the title, taken from Shakespeare’s The Tempest. (Act 5 Scene 1 Lines 181-4)
Miranda O wonder!
How many goodly creatures are there here!
How beauteous mankind is! O brave new world
That has such people in’t!
Huxley’s world is not new: it simply takes the worst of both capitalism and communism.
BNW begins and ends with images of death:
“Cold for all the summer beyond the panes... Wintriness responded to wintriness. The overalls of the workers were white, their hands gloved with pale corpse-coloured rubber.
The light was frozen, dead, a ghost.”
It ends with the suicide of the Savage.
Huxley suggests that his future world, made in the image of Our Ford and Our Freud, is not worth living.
Major theme of the novel: a debate over the right of individuals to self-discovery vs mass happiness and stability.
Individualists, like Bernard Marx or the Savage, who are outsiders wherever they go
vs. the endless twins (clones)
Does science serve the masses or the individuals?
Does it serve the powerful or the powerless?
BNW is ambivalent: although Huxley suggests this future is undesireable, both Bernard and the Savage are neurotic and unpleasant, unlikeable people, not very satisfactory heroes.
The Savage is a poor foil for Mustafa Mond (Mond = world). John rejects Mustafa’s philosophy that stability, based upon shallow happiness, is the highest good.
But John’s tormented, self-hating religiosity is not very appealing either.
Although BNW borrows many of the ideas of eugenics, including the caste structure,
what happens is not really eugenics, but biochemical and psychological manipulation.
In many respects, this is the triumph of nuture over nature—but just as repellant as eugenics.
Huxley in his forward says, “The theme of Brave New World is not the advancement of science as such; it is the advancement of science as it affects human individuals.”
Note, however, that his predictions are wrong (so far): we have not entered an age of widespread nuclear power, and it has not (yet) ushered in an age of totalitarian governments.
Brave New World and science
Three simulations of future science:
Bokanovsky’s Process.
“We check the normal growth and, paradoxically enough, the egg responds by budding.”
These are in fact clones (genetically identical)
Huxley makes his technology plausible through paradox: science often appears to work in ways opposite to our intuition.
“In vitro” (in glass) biological conditioning of fetuses:
Training future workers to be biologically attracted to heat, darkness, and being upside-down.
“Hypnopaedia:”
sleep-training of children to repeat slogans played to them while they
slept. Here Huxley makes his science plausible through limitations:
hypnopaedia is useless for understanding or insight, but is ideal for
propaganda.
Like the movie Gattaca, BNW warns us against the misuse of science.
Mustafa Mond makes this argument (Ch 16): “Every discovery in science is potentially subversive; even science must be treated as a potential enemy... Science is dangerous; we have to keep it most carefully chained and muzzled.... truth’s a menace, science is a public danger. As dangerous as it’s been beneficent.”
Huxley disagrees with the Controller’s aims, but they both make the same point.
Mustafa Mond: “… people in the time of Our Ford...seemed to have imagined that [scientific progress] could be allowed to go on indefinitely, regardly of everything else. Knowledge was the highest good, truth the supreme value... Mass production demanded
the shift [from truth and beauty to comfort and happiness]. Universal happiness keeps the wheels steadily turning; truth and beauty can’t.”
Questions to think about:
Whose side do you think Huxley is really on? Mustafa Mond’s, or the Savage’s? Do you have evidence from the text?
Who do you think is right? How does one balanced happiness and stability against individual rights (including the “right” to be unhappy)? And what if that unhappiness lies in the “system” that makes many others happy?
Does science and technology appear to be leading us closer to or further away from a Brave New World? Which elements of science and technology?
Is science and technology ever “too dangerous” to pursue? How do we make that choice? Who gets to make it?