Preview

Neil Postman's Assertions Analysis

Good Essays
Open Document
Open Document
1043 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Neil Postman's Assertions Analysis
The Legitimacy of Neil Postman’s Assertions Neil Postman made six assertions based on Aldous Huxley’s Brave New World, of which I’ve decided to take a bilateral approach towards. Postman’s assertions about the people accepting their lower social status, embracing a narcissistic and egotistical lifestyle, and controlling citizens via pleasure all contain points that I agree and disagree with. His assertions are somewhat relevant in our contemporary society. Neil Postman claimed in his first assertion that people love their oppression and adore technologies that make them intellectually passive. People of the lowest rank in Brave New World “don’t really mind being Epsilons” (50). Epsilons know other classes are more intelligent than them, but …show more content…
The Betas in Brave New World are egotistical because they believe they’re “much better than the Gammas and Deltas” (21). People in each social class in Brave New World believe they’re better than everyone below them. People in our society build their egos through social media based on how popular they are, how many likes they get on a post, or maybe even by how much wealth they show off. However, not even the citizens in Brave New World were passive people, like Huxley feared they would be. When John stole the soma from the deltas and started throwing them out the window, “A great shout suddenly went up from the mob [of deltas]; a wave of movement drove it menacingly towards the Savage” (146). It is similar to today’s society, where people will fight for what they want. Huxley was able to accurately describe our current society’s egoism with how higher social ranks in Brave New World think of lower ones, however he was not able to provide an example of how passiveness would look in today’s society as mentioned in Postman’s third …show more content…
An example of citizens being controlled by something they love was when Linda returned to the World State and “clamoured for ever larger, frequent doses [of soma]” (103). Linda’s greed for soma, something she had longed for years, drove her to her own death by overdosing. In today’s society the government does not directly control citizens with drugs, however, it allows access to substances such as marijuana, alcohol and cigarettes. However, supplying people with things they desire may be counter productive due to it being distracting, or in the case of drugs, causing impairment while under their influence. The Director of Hatcheries and Conditioning, Tomakin, retired just to take a soma “holiday from humiliation and pain, in a world where he could not see or hear those words, that derisive laughter, could not see that hideous face, feel those moist and flabby arms around his neck, in a beautiful world” (162). While soma may work to control the lower castes as an incentive for them to work, higher castes abusing their opportunities to take soma holidays is counter productive and technically not controlling them to do their work. This can be related to people in today’s society who lack productivity due to their engagement in activities that are distracting. However, inflicting pleasure on citizens can boost their productivity if done correctly, if the society

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Powerful Essays

    tl guide DoubleHelixb 1

    • 2590 Words
    • 9 Pages

    postulated in Aldous Huxley’s classic Brave New World, but from the point of view of a…

    • 2590 Words
    • 9 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    Huxley’s Brave New World (1932) is a satirical novel that presents grossly exaggerated and absurd constructs as the norm. This World State is described as the ideal place; it is the best thing that happened for humanity. It is civilized civilization. The World State is full of everything one could ever want: sex without commitment, easy access to drugs, and essentially guarantees a state of being content through conditioning. Moreover, death is no longer something to fear and feelings do not exist in their full spectrum. It is through Huxley’s use of satire and presentation of these ideals that made me aware of how those aspects form my definition of what it is to be uniquely human.…

    • 745 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Huxley thoroughly condescends the contemporary values of our society in Brave New World. He specifically uses point-of-view, allusion, and motif to create his ironic commentary for which his novel is best…

    • 476 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Examining Aldous Huxley’s Brave New World and George Orwell’s 1984, there are some accurate depictions of public discourse in 1984, but Huxley’s novel includes more relevant examples. Postman bounds the idea of television, a cherished part of our life, as the means of self-destruction in accordance to Huxley’s views. Postman’s assertion of the more accurate Brave New World is evident in freedom, technology and the media.…

    • 515 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    In the book "Brave New World" the author Aldous Huxley wrote about a world different from our own. This world shows that their is not only one way of functioning in a society, in fact the way the World State runs and the way we run are different. For example In their world everyone is bread from labs to be the same and have no unique qualities while in our world we are born from our mothers womb and have individual unique qualities like some are smarter than others or faster than the rest. In their world they breed people from embryos and modify them to fit in within certain social classes like for instance the lowest social class are the elipison who's main work criteria is based on physical labor and need no forms of intellectual thinking. While on the other hand Alphas are the most superior and are taught almost everything that…

    • 532 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Though this feeling of hatred towards the lower castes are not authentic, but is rather artificially evoked. Most importantly, World State needs to drill these segregational thoughts thousands of times into the citizen’s minds; rather than let the thoughts come naturally. This indicates that seclusion is not a natural human instinct, but rather an enforced phenomenon that is taught by the primitive world. Subsequently, egocentric self-glorification that drives these exclusive actions are adapted than rather inherited; as a result, Alphas and Betas are programmed and are not naturally cruel. This is stated in, “In this strange world, there is no space for freedom; all the people’s actions are guided and controlled. Brave New World is a community without freedom. Freedom, in fact, has been sacrificed for happiness and stability” (Farag). Consequently, this critique expresses how World State offers an environment where citizens are restricted to operate in only one way. It also highlights the sacrifice of freedom not only physically, but rather mentally as well. Aldous Huxley’s formation of the higher castes are to exemplify the superior classes of the 20th century, and to clarify their arrogant behaviour. Alphas were conditioned and brought…

    • 622 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Of all the works that Aldous Huxley has produced the most intriguing and philosophical one would have to be Brave New World. Throughout his carrier Huxley has written many satirical novels about the flaws of society but none can compare the symbolism and depth that this novel presents. As the above quote suggests the citizens of this futuristic society known as the World State chose to live a life of hedonism devoid of emotions and beliefs rather than suffer any pain. Both Huxley's focus on the tragic flaws of this society and satirical development of the utopian scheme, lead us to believe the hypocrisy of such a utopian state. Furthermore there are many parallels that can be drawn between our way of life and the society portrayed in the book; these parallels include soma, hynopaedic messages and sex. Huxley uses this parallelism to warn us that the path that our society is taking will lead us to damnation.…

    • 773 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    In both Brave New World and Anthem the underlying themes are very similar. The government controls every aspect of people’s lives, everyone is supposed to be perfectly happy with what role they are given, and the main character do not fit into what the government was deemed normal. While both books have these very similar traits, there are many differences as well; the way the government controls the people, as well as the form of government, the way people of both societies treat each other, and the situation in which the main characters are placed.…

    • 1101 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    Neil Postman argues Aldous Huxley’s novel Brave New World is a more relevant piece of literature based off the future than George Orwell’s 1984. The way I see it, Huxley’s vision focuses on what could go wrong from the inside, rather than Orwell’s idea of an outside force disrupting societal traditions. If the human body can evolve, so can the human mind. Huxley expresses that the people will grow to love their privileges. For example, feelies or orgy porgy make the citizens feel nice, and causes them to continue to participate. These activities do not enlighten or spark any interest in history, self-government, or even maturing as a person. It is what we love most that will kill us, instead of what we hate. We love pleasure, not pain. Orwell…

    • 353 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    In the fictional society, soma is prescribed to almost every single person. On Lenina and Bernards’ date, they had to meet the Warden and “when the Warden started booming, she [Lenina] had inconspicuously swallowed half a gramme of soma, with the result that she could now sit, serenely not listening, thinking of nothing at all, but with her large blue eyes fixed on the Warden's face in an expression of rapt attention" (Huxley 47). Lenina had consciously taken a dose of soma because she had recognized that she was going to be bored and then concluded that the answer to her problem was to take drugs. The citizens had been conditioned to make these type of decisions. Like in Brave New World, modern society prescribes drugs to make the lives of the elderly easier to live. In reality, “antipsychotic drugs are overprescribed for older men and women with dementia”, reports the U.S Government Accountability Office in a Week article. In the same article, Time notes that “the use of antipsychotic drugs may increase the risk of death for dementia patients”. This implies that doctors and care takers are over prescribing drugs to the elderly to have more control over them so they are easier to manage. In Brave New World, the citizens are also given drugs that make their lives better, in a sense, but shorten their life span. In modern society, drugs, that are prescribed to a large group of people, may…

    • 1000 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    In a world where there aren’t enough problems for healthy personal development, do we create artificial mental distress with chemicals for balance? This section of the piece of literature known as Brave New World by Aldous Huxley is a piece of literature that makes a lot of broad points about ideology, has characters that in ways seem to be pawns of these ideologies but lacks a setting, is written in third person, and has a very interesting plot and conflict.…

    • 609 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    I his novel the people of the world state is designed and “programed” to fit within society’s standards. To fit into the country not stand out or have different beliefs or thoughts. This way of behavior control is the first idea that comes to mind. An idea that both the new world and the real world both share is the idea of the “perfect citizen” where how they both carry out this idea verries. In the modern world today “culture's system of social control” creates a social norm and a standard which, “Commonly held conceptions of appropriate and expected behavior in a society” (O’Neil). Dennis O’Neil’s study on global cultures explains that the society and the environment around the area will influence the social norm. Creating standards and actions that their home country wants to shape. In Huxley’s novel environment also plays a role to the shaping of behavior, but unlike the modern age the world state as a more efficient way of shaping its people. Unlike being born from a mother the new state, the people are raised from test tubes called the “Bokanovsky’s process” (Huxley). Allowing the world to create anyone they want by creating “ Ninety-six identical twins” to erase any free thought and creativeness from their society shaping “Community,Identity, Stability” (Huxley). With the same idea in mind both worlds have their own ways of pursuing it, but with the…

    • 1510 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Within contemporary American society, there is a large focus on self pleasure, and being able to stay happy throughout the hardships and struggles of life. Our lives shift in different directions as we change as people, but our end goal is always happiness, whether immediate or requiring investment. Within the shallow society of Brave New World, the people constantly search for pleasure and release, much like our own world. However, they are heavily inclined by the government to search for the short-term solution to curing their desire for pleasure. Through Brave New World, Aldous Huxley provides a relevant warning about a society focused purely on short term pleasure solutions, whether sexually driven, or driven by drugs, and the extensive…

    • 1361 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    The future of America as a superpower depends on educated people who can develop political, financial, and military strategies to keep the country strong. Fridman questions how a country where parents are ashamed of children who choose intellectual activities over sports and social events can maintain its world-class status. Indeed, it seems that soon that football players will control the government and the academic spurned and forgotten. Social rejection befalls intellectuals who desire education and information as well as comparison to an outcast street performer through the term ‘geek’. Fridman develops his argument for the return of respect for those who desire knowledge through real-world examples and thought-provoking rhetorical questions and creates a very persuasive case against anti-intellectualism.…

    • 232 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Neil Postman, author of Amusing Ourselves to Death, compared George Orwell and Aldous Huxley’s, author of Brave New World, visions together. He had established from Orwell that “what we hate will ruin us” and from Huxley that “what we love will ruin us” (Postman). Both men have opposite views on life, Postman seems to agree to Huxley’s view of loving something can destroy a person. He “blames television for most of the problem . . . Internet has more influence than television” (Postman). Postman’s statement is agreeable as today’s world is evolving around the media. Brave New World is strange, yet similar to our world, from the chemistry of treating an embryo to using drug – Soma, to make the people happy. In addition, conformity and technology…

    • 731 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays