Books that Shaped the World
What if the greatest threat to freedom isn’t oppression, but comfort? In this episode, we explore Brave New World by Aldous Huxley, one of the most unsettling and prescient works of modern literature. Unlike traditional dystopias built on fear and surveillance, Huxley presents a society that maintains control through pleasure, distraction, and engineered satisfaction. We unpack the novel’s core argument, that people can be conditioned to surrender autonomy willingly, and examine how ideas like “soma”, consumerism, and constant entertainment show up in modern life. This episode goes beyond summary to explore the psychological depth of Huxley’s vision: why humans avoid discomfort, how distraction shapes behaviour, and what is lost when stability becomes the ultimate goal. If you’ve ever wondered whether modern life is making us freer, or simply more comfortable, this conversation will challenge how you think about choice, control, and what it means to live meaningfully.
25 episodios
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