OK. I think over here especially the only "canonic" interpretation was that what he wrote was a dystopia which criticised capitalist society.
It's the way I like to see it too.
Did anyone know that BF Skinner wrote a piece of fiction?
I missed this. Have you read it?
No, I only recently just learned about it - actually, it's been a few quick realizations that led me to conceive that many scientists I've been interested in write fiction to assert their theoretical considerations.
Just letting you know that the Aldous, in particular, may have been trying to design a blueprint to enslave the masses
.
I think I have heard about this. A drug that is actually good for people, maybe that would be a "blessing" rather than an enslavement. The question is, would the drug liberate people from enslavement, or would it just make you accept the ongoing enslavement that is ever present? Will a drug cause enslavement no matter how it works?
Hmm... in this perspective, I'm offering that Aldous is telling the "elites" that they may be able to dose the masses into compliance. Though, I prefer Alia's view where he's making commentary about the "cultural daze."
Did he talk about this in other books?
I think that
Island is a must read. But he's chemically-interested in many of his books.
Doors of Perception,
Heaven and Hell.
I think I have heard about this. A drug that is actually good for people, maybe that would be a "blessing" rather than an enslavement. The question is, would the drug liberate people from enslavement, or would it just make you accept the ongoing enslavement that is ever present? Will a drug cause enslavement no matter how it works?
I think that if we had a drug that was easily available, socially accepted, cheap (not to mention, distributed freely by the government) and free of immediate negative effects (like hangover in case of alcohol, which to a great extent fulfils the first three points), it would be very hard for anyone to stop taking it. Our brains' reward system is very powerful. And I don't think it would liberate people from enslavement, especially if the government was the only source. It would be more like this - you spend the whole day doing your tasks, even if you hate them, because you know that in the evening, before going to bed, you would get your fix and everything would be wonderful.
This is the, let's say, "negative" conception of
Brave New World.
Reminds me of
Equilibrium.
You describe more or less the status quo today. Alcohol, caffeine, nicotine etc make enslavement more bearable to the general public, so they are legal. I was thinking more of if we could create a drug that would take away anxiety and fear, and not make you indifferent/apathetic but rather more focused on fulfilling your human potential. If it were distributed by a government, it would be a completely different kind of government(since they too take the drug). Now that could be a brave new world:)
Again, this comes up in
Food of the Gods. Have you read it yet, Royce?
The bold is likely to happen. As we continue to learn about the brain and the efficacy of nootropics increases, I expect to see the rise of a society where certain jobs, government positions, etc - to the dangerous edge - require you to amend some cognitive augmentation specific to increase your social/cultural functionality...
It's scary because the status quo shouldn't be a static thing, in my opinion. When you have powerful chemical or surgical tools to enforce the intentional ritual of things as
before you affected such changed, we can only expect to see a strange ingrown situation unfold.
Well, alcohol, for one, has nasty and immediate side effects and in addition getting drunk is not socially acceptable in certain circles, so it's not the perfect drug I was describing.
The one that you are describing - I suppose some of prescription anti-psychotics and anxiolytics could have that potential, but they are also addictive and their list of side effects is very long. Although in some cases they work miracles (I've seen that myself). So perhaps if you could create something on that basis but not addictive and easily tolerated, this would change the world and society.
I think, Royce is onto something in suggesting that certain drugs, in certain circles, both slip notice
as drugs, and work to orient group-think... coffee addicts, smokers, alcoholics - we all recognize our own and they shift us into particular patterns of behavior.
But I would really hope that we can affect change for the better without needing wholesale sociocultural dosing...