home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Power of The Few Over The Many"
-
-
- The Eleventh Commandment portrayed the state church as being
- the supreme dictator. It is through the eleventh commandment
- that the church held it's power and control over the masses.
- Without the church and it's leaders to guide the masses, their
- society would have collapsed. However, compared to Brave New
- World, the whole society is conditioned to "work for everyone
- else"(Huxley 67) by the abuse and daily consumption of soma.
- Without the drug called soma, their society would have also
- collapsed due to withdrawal symptoms. The underlying reality
- between the two societies is that the masses are manipulated,
- controlled, and brainwashed, without resistance, to obey and
- follow their leaders through various methods of enforcement.
- The Brave New World is controlled by a select few who call
- themselves Resident Controllers and Directors. These elite few
- are able to control the production and selection process of
- societies masses. Mustapha Mond, Resident Controller for Western
- Europe, and the Director of Hatcheries and Conditioning, oversee
- the conditioning of embryos. Their powers and control over these
- particular jurisdictions gave them great power, and with that the
- ability to manipulate others. "'You ass'... said the
- Director,... 'Hasn't it occurred to you that an Epsilon embryo
- must have an Epsilon environment as well as an Epsilon
- heredity'"(Huxley 23). Through a hierarchy of Alaphas and Betas
- down to the lower cast Epsilon, everyone was suited for their
- job. The Director however, through his position of authority,
- was able to "... condition the masses to hate the
- country,"(Huxley 30). In doing so, the Director succeeds in
- creating an obedient society, which obeys and bows to every whim
- of his commands. The Resident Controller and Director were two
- authoritative figures that were able to control whomever and
- whatever each person worked at, even before they were conceived.
- Each cast had pre-conceived morals preached to them through
- conditioning, and to this end effectively brainwashed to the
- point of utter obedience. The outcome of this brainwashing by
- conditioning sets forth a society that exists in two tiers, the
- guardians and the domesticated animals. [who? why?->BNW]
- [who? why?->11th C]
- The church and it's head archbishops are able to control and
- manipulate the masses in North America by preaching the eleventh
- commandment through strict laws and enforcement practices. The
- eleventh commandment ordained that every man and women must be
- fruitful and multiply. Because of this commandment and of the
- militant ruling religionist enforcement, North America alone had
- four billion people, and yet the church continued to preach the
- eleventh commandment and it's practices. The competition between
- continents was the driving force behind the eleventh commandment.
- If it was not the competitiveness between ruling church states,
- the eleventh commandment would have been abolished. Through
- dictatorial control the repercussions of not being fruitful and
- multiplying, or of using contraceptive devices were most severe
- for any man or women, and quite often lead to punishment and
- extermination. Coupled to the acts of punishment, often drugs and
- other brainwashing techniques were used on those who did not obey
- the eleventh commandment. Through control and brainwashing of
- the masses the church was able to manipulate their society to the
- point of total utter starvation.
- [How? BNW]
- Manipulation and enforcement to the masses in the Brave New
- World was very easy for those who were in control. The
- techniques used by those in power were varied between the usage
- of subconscious persuasion, hypnopaedia, brainwashing, and
- chemical persuasion. Pavlovian conditioning was used on young
- children through constant manipulation and repetitive
- hypnopaedia. The use of chemical persuasion however could be
- seen to be more influent on the daily lives of the
- differentiating casts. It was part violence and part
- psychological manipulation for the people who lived in the Brave
- New World. For those individuals who did not conform to the
- standards set forth by their leaders, they were exiled to an
- island where they were left alone for the rest of their lives.
- [How? 11th C]
- While chemical persuasion was prevalent in the Brave New
- World, the accessibility and usage of drugs, especially
- contraceptive drugs, was strictly forbidden by the church. While
- the church enforced their commandments through a strict military
- totalitarian enforcement agency, people continued to seek
- contraceptive drugs. While some people were killed for their
- digressions against the church, most people were brainwashed to
- conform to the church commandments. "...it left a blankness
- where there normally must have been thousands of mostly unnoticed
- messages coursing to his brain. This was brainwashing!"(Lester
- 168). While most people did conform to the church's
- commandments, there were still however a select few who resisted
- the church and sought to move away from the 'arms of power' of
- the church's Archbishops. Through manipulation however, the
- church was able to offer food to those who conformed to the
- church's wishes.
- [Success BNW?]
- As the Brave New World was set in an age of advanced
- technology, anyone's ideas who went against the order of the
- state was considered to be an anarchist. As the world state's
- motto suggested, "Community, Identity, Stability"(Huxley 15) the
- pillars of the social hierarchy where continuously being eroded
- by those who thought and acted differently. The states
- totalitarian controllers ability however to deal with this group
- of individuals through strong persuasion tactics saw that most
- people did keep in line with the states wishes and orders. For
- those who did not coincide with the states beliefs, they were
- exiled.
- [Success 11th C?]
- Although the church was able to preach it's commandments and
- their other mystical religionist practices, there where still
- over one billion people who were seeking to flee to Australia,
- the supposedly safe haven for all Romish religion individuals.
- The church, through it's methods of controlling their society,
- was still able to control a large percentage of the population.
- However, this dictatorial control over the masses was only
- accomplished through the punishment and extermination of those
- who did not conform to the church's propaganda and practices.
- The successfulness of the church's ability to control and
- manipulate, while at the same time brainwashing their followers
- allows them to rule their continent with an 'iron fist'. If it
- were not for the techniques that the church used, their ability
- to control the masses would have been greatly diminished.
- [Conclusion]
- Through reinforcement of desirable behaviour and scientific
- manipulation, the effectiveness of the Director's and Resident
- Controllers ability to control the masses was greater than those
- manipulation methods practiced by the church in The Eleventh
- Commandment. Even though the church had a military totalitarian
- enforcement agency, the leaders in the Brave New World were able
- to repress the masses through dictatorial control through
- punishment and extermination. While in both societies the
- underlying human interaction was the inability to communicate,
- both had the essence of being superficial worlds.
-
-
-