Aldous Huxley's Brave New World

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Over the past few weeks, from the many enlightening texts and stimulatory discussions held in seminar and symposium, I have become very interested in what has influenced one’s thoughts and actions and how different experiences can possible change the way one thinks or perceives information. This new information and perceptions have inspired me to look back at my personal media diet history as well as the ideals of those who I have looked up to and inspired me throughout my life. In the fifth grade I wrote a report on Woodrow Willson’s Fourteen Points and the League of Nations for National History Day. I spent months researching and writing about the efforts to create a unified international organization for peace, my parents even hired a…show more content…
De Zengotita said the cult of the child may possibly have been constructed the purpose of readying a baby for a mediated world. So from the very second we are brought into this world may have been conditioned anyway will have an influence on the very way we think and act for the rest of our lives. This is almost like what is described in Aldous Huxley’s novel Brave New World, the conditioning all babies went through taught them how to behave as well as what to like and dislike. I believe that our society does a form of subtle conditioning, through the stories we are told as children, though we may not fully understand or comprehend the underlying message the story may tell, it will be influential in how we make decisions whether we know it or not. Subconsciously we will always make connections between personal experience and situations in childhood stories that may influence how we view something or act in a situation. When I was younger I never really liked the story Where the Wild Things Are, so I never paid much attention to it, but revisiting and now I can see how this story of a boy, who was misbehaving then traveled to a land with monsters that he was king of, actually lead to the moral that children must learn to manager primal desires (as Max…show more content…
In Control Room it is brought up how when there are images of American soldiers being killed and wounded being shown Americans become distressed and offended, demanding that a television station not show such loathsome images, while the images of Arab and Iraqi civilians and soldiers being killed and wounded is something that people have come to accept, as if them being in a state of anguish has become normal to some people. What this makes me wonder is what in our minds makes one life mournful and another ignorable, if both are strangers then why is one more important to us because of where they are from. Ever since we were children we were always taught to be proud of our country and that we are all united or connected in a way that makes us this spectacular unit, I believe this is a contributing factor to why we have such different emotional reactions to seeing wounded Americans versus wounded foreigners. our minds instinctually create connections with those who we share common interests or traits with, but that doesn't explain how completely indifferent so many Americans are to the suffering that lies beyond out borders. It is to my understanding that we have become
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