In his 1958 book Brave New World Revisited,
Aldous Huxley wrote the following: “If the first half of the twentieth century
was the era of the technical engineers, the second half may well be the era of the social
engineers — and the twenty-first century, I suppose, will be the era of World Controllers,
the scientific caste system and Brave New World.” Aldous Huxley, Brave New World Revisited
Thirty years prior to penning these words, Huxley wrote his classic work of fiction,
Brave New World. Set in the distant future, this book depicts
a scientifically managed dystopian society. In Brave New World, the ruling authorities
attain mass-compliance not through force, but by supplying the masses with endless streams
of distracting entertainment and manipulating them with drugs and other technological methods. Huxley wrote Brave New World as a warning;
advances in science and technology, he believed, were paving the way for the type of society
depicted in his book. And he cautioned that if a Brave New World
type of order solidifies, it could be the “final” or “ultimate” revolution;
the people will have their liberties taken from them, but they will enjoy their servitude
and so never question it, let alone rebel. In a 1962 interview at Berkeley University,
Huxley explained: “It seems to me that the nature of the ultimate
revolution with which we are now faced is precisely this: That we are in the process
of developing a whole series of techniques which will enable the controlling oligarchy
who have always existed and will always exist to get people to love their servitude.” Aldous Huxley, Interview - Berkeley University
1962 According to Huxley this Brave New World totalitarianism
was most likely to solidify in the 21st century, and so in this video we are going to examine
whether Huxley’s predictions are coming true: Do we live in a Brave New World? In Brave New World Revisited, Huxley wrote
the following: “In 1931, when Brave New World was being
written, I was convinced that there was still plenty of time. The completely organized society, the scientific
caste system, the abolition of free will by methodical conditioning, the servitude made
acceptable by regular doses of chemically induced happiness…these were coming all
right, but not in my time, not even in the time of my grandchildren…Twenty-seven years
later…I feel a good deal less optimistic than I did when I was writing Brave New World. The prophecies made in 1931 are coming true
much sooner than I thought they would…The nightmare of total organization…has emerged
from the safe, remote future and is now awaiting us, just around the next corner.” Aldous Huxley, Brave New World Revisited
In Brave New World, advances in psychology made it possible for the ruling authorities
to use mind control to condition citizens from an early age to think and behave in ways
that were submissive and conformist. Nearly 100 years after Huxley wrote his dystopian
novel, has this type of conditioning left the realm of fiction and entered reality? “Today the art of mind-control is in the
process of becoming a science. The practitioners of this science know what
they are doing and why. They are guided in their work by theories
and hypotheses solidly established on a massive foundation of experimental evidence.” Aldous Huxley, Brave New World Revisited
While the idea of mind-control may sound like science-fiction, in the mid-to-late-20th century
many prominent philosophers, psychologists and scientists joined Huxley in sounding the
alarm bell that research into the fundamentals of this phenomenon were well underway. In 1953, the distinguished British philosopher
Bertrand Russell explained: “It is to be expected that advances in physiology
and psychology will give governments much more control over individual mentality than
they now have even in totalitarian countries.” Bertrand Russell, The Impact of Science on
Society The renowned 20th century American clinical
psychologist Carl Rogers warned that the rapid development of the Behavioral Sciences, which
is a “a cluster of scientific disciplines…including psychology, psychiatry, sociology, social
psychology, anthropology, and biology…economic and political science…mathematics and statistics”
(Carl Rogers, On Becoming a Person), was in the process of becoming what he called an
“‘if-then’ science”. By this he meant that scientists and social
engineers were discovering that if carefully constructed conditions are implemented in
a society, then there is a high probability that the majority of citizens will respond
to these conditions in predictable, and hence, controllable, ways. Or as he wrote in 1954:
“I believe that too few people are aware of the extent, the breadth, and the depth
of the advances which have been made in recent decades in the behavioral sciences…the increasing
power for control which it gives will be held by some one or some group; such an individual
or group will surely choose the purposes or goals to be achieved; and most of us will
then be increasingly controlled by means so subtle we will not even be aware of them as
controls…it appears that some form of completely controlled society…is coming.” Carl Rogers, On Becoming a Person
In a report released in 2021, scientists on a subcommittee of the Scientific Advisory
Group for Emergencies (SAGE) in the UK admitted to using “totalitarian” mind-control tactics
to obtain mass-compliance. One scientist went as far as to state that
he was “stunned by the weaponisation of behavioural psychology over the last five
years”, while another admitted: “You could call psychology ‘mind control’. That’s what we do… clearly we try and
go about it in a positive way, but it has been used nefariously in the past. Psychology has been used for wicked ends.” Laura Dodsworth, A State of Fear
Along with conditioning the thoughts and behaviors of the citizens, in Brave New World the latest
in technology is used by the ruling authorities to provide the population with “non-stop
distractions of the most fascinating nature”. The purpose of this readily available entertainment
was twofold: firstly, to ensure that the citizens did not pay attention to political and social
realities, and secondly, to promote docility and stupidity and thus create a population
that cared little for freedom. Is something similar happening today? Whether intentionally imposed on society,
or not, one thing is certain: Technology and the endless supply of stimulating yet morally
degrading entertainment that flows from it is creating a passive, ignorant, and spiritually
crippled population uninterested in resisting the implementation of its political chains
- just as Huxley warned: “As the art and science of manipulation
come to be better understood, the dictators of the future will doubtless learn to combine
[techniques of propaganda] with the non-stop distractions which, in the West, are now threatening
to drown in a sea of irrelevance the rational [information] essential to the maintenance
of individual liberty.” Aldous Huxley, Brave New World Revisited
But it is not just an endless supply of distractions which makes possible a Brave New World. Huxley also predicted that in the future certain
forms of technology would be used to increase the suggestibility and obedience of a population,
so that everyone can “be depended upon to behave almost as predictably as machines”
(Huxley). In Brave New World, the technology used for
this purpose was called hypnopaedia, or “sleep-teaching”, which Huxley called “the greatest moralizing
and socializing force of all time”. Every night, while asleep, citizens were exposed
to propaganda and repeated suggestions from the State. Huxley based his idea of sleep-teaching on
the science of hypnosis. Scientists have long known that when an individual
is placed under hypnosis alpha waves are activated in the brain, just as they are when in a light
sleep. In both cases, suggestibility is dramatically
heightened. As Huxley explained:
“Most of the things that can be done with and to a person in hypnotic trance can be
done with and to a person in light sleep. Verbal suggestions can be passed through the…cortex
to the midbrain, the brain stem and the autonomic nervous system. If these suggestions are well conceived and
frequently repeated…new patterns of feeling can be installed and old ones modified, posthypnotic
commands can be given, slogans, formulas and trigger words deeply ingrained in the memory.” Aldous Huxley, Brave New World Revisited
While not subjects of sleep-teaching, many people in the modern world watch television,
on a near daily basis, for hours on end. Scientists have known for decades that television
watching activates alpha waves in the brain, thus placing the individual in a hypnotic-like
trance - primed for suggestions and ready to be programmed. The neurosurgeon Adam Lipson explains:
“There have been EEG studies that demonstrate that television watching converts the brain
from beta wave activity to alpha waves, which are associated with a daydreaming state, and
a reduced use of critical thinking skills.” Adam Lipson
When in a television-induced hypnotic state, cliches and slogans from the mainstream media,
moral values and ideological principles from shows and movies, and suggestions from commercials,
politicians, celebrities, and state-sponsored propaganda bypass the critical faculties and
seep into the foundations of the mind. Over time the typical television watcher is
transformed into an “opinionated robot” - his or her evaluations of the world are
mindless regurgitations of whatever has been absorbed from the TV. Nearly seventy years ago, the medical doctor
Joost Meerloo warned of the hypnotizing dangers of television, dangers which now apply to
computers, smart-phones, and any other technology which turns the human being into a mesmerized
spectator of a screen. “No longer does man think in personal values,
following his own conscience and ethical evaluations; he thinks more and more in the values brought
to him by mass media…television keeps him in continual awe and passive fixation. Consciously he may protest against these anonymous
voices, but nevertheless their suggestions ooze into his system.” Joost Meerloo, The Rape of the Mind
In Brave New World, suggestibility was heightened not just through the use of technology, but
also with a super drug called Soma. “The systematic drugging of individuals
for the benefit of the State…was a main plank in the policy of the World Controllers.” Aldous Huxley, Brave New World Revisited
Soma had no physiological drawbacks. When taken in small doses it stimulated a
sense of bliss, and in larger doses it generated pleasant hallucinations and a refreshing sleep. It provided what Huxley called a “holiday
from reality”, and most importantly, it made the citizens highly submissive. “As well as tranquillizing, hallucinating
and stimulating, the soma of my fable had the power of heightening suggestibility, and
so could be used to reinforce the effects of governmental propaganda.” Aldous Huxley, Brave New World Revisited
Today, not one Soma-like super-drug, but a whole concoction of drugs including but not
limited to alcohol, marijuana, psychotropics, opioids, and sleeping-pills, are readily used
as a means of escaping reality. The widespread use of drugs in our day has
socio-political ramifications. For a drugged-up society, just like a dumbed-down
society, is more easily conditioned into servitude. The chemical-dependent is not a politically
vigilant person who is ready to defend liberty - and as Meerloo wrote:
“Any man who escapes from reality through the use of alcohol and drugs is no longer
a free agent; he is no longer able to exert any voluntary control over his mind and his
actions…Alcoholism and drug addiction prepare the pattern of mental submission so beloved
by the totalitarian brainwasher…Drugs…can be used to make man a submissive and conforming
being.” Joost Meerloo, The Rape of the Mind
The society of Brave New World was also organized into a scientific caste system. Prenatal genetic engineering produced children
destined to belong to one of five castes. The highest caste, Alpha, was made up of citizens
genetically engineered to be intelligent, strong, and beautiful. The lowest caste, the Epsilons, were short,
ugly, stupid, and treated as slaves. Each of the castes was forbidden to intermingle. Is a scientific caste system possible today? While the widespread use of prenatal genetic
engineering may not be on the near horizon, postnatal genetic engineering and the technological
augmentation of the brain and body is in its initial stages. We are at the beginning of a fateful era in
which man may merge with machine, and the result could be the formation of a two-tiered
scientific caste system. There will be a caste of human beings who
welcome the merger with technology in the expectation of transcending biological limitations. And there will be an all-too-human caste,
composed of people who resist the merger with technology. What restrictions will be placed on those
in this latter caste? What surveillance and control will be possible
on those who accept technological augmentations? What will be the “carrots on a stick”
to entice people to transition into a transhumanist era? Time will tell. “The world of tomorrow will witness a tremendous
battle between technology and psychology. It will be a fight of technology versus nature,
of systematic conditioning versus creative spontaneity.” Joost Meerloo, The Rape of the Mind
If Huxley’s predictions are coming true, what can be done about it? Perhaps nothing needs to be done. Perhaps the Brave New World totalitarianism
which Huxley warned of is not feasible in the long term - not as stable as he thought. Perhaps this form of social order is destined
to crumble under its own oppressive weight. But perhaps Huxley was right. With enough advances in science and technology
a Brave New World order can be achieved, and once fully instituted, this will be the final
revolution. Human beings will be born and bred in conditions
of technocratic servitude that they will not challenge or resist, because it will be a
servitude that most of them love and defend. If this should turn out to be the case, Huxley’s
final words from Brave New World Revisited will prove prescient. “Perhaps the forces that now menace freedom
are too strong to be resisted for very long. It is still our duty to do whatever we can
to resist them.” Aldous Huxley, Brave New World Revisited