| Aldous Huxley 20th March 1962 The Ultimate Revolution: Huxley lectures on how 'terrorism' has always been used to 'standardise' and place into servitude the population. www.lib.berkeley.edu/MRC/audiofiles.html |
| Press play below to hear Huxley answering questions relating to this lecture |
| Dr. West and Mr. Bin Laden By Eric Cohen Fellow and William Kristol Editor and Publisher, The Weekly Standard, and Co-Editor, The Future Is Now: America Confronts the New Genetics The Weekly Standard December 17, 2001 Before September 11, the issues of human cloning and embryonic stem cells had come to center stage in American politics. On July 31, the House had passed a ban on all human cloning. And after months of deliberation on what to do about federal funding of embryonic stem cell research, President Bush delivered his first special televised address to the nation on August 9. "We have arrived at that brave new world that seemed so distant in 1932, when Aldous Huxley wrote about human beings created in test tubes," he said. Revolutionary advances in biology and genetics have brought us to "the leading edge of a series of moral hazards." How we confront these issues, he added, "may well define our age." Then came the terrorist attacks of September 11. Fears of a brave new world dropped from the forefront of the national mind. It was now death and destruction we feared, not utopian biology. It was bioterrorism we feared, not morally compromising advances in biomedical research. It was human mortality we feared, not a post-human future of would-be immortals. But the announcement by Dr. West's company that it has cloned human embryos reminds us that the forward march of biological "progress" does not halt during wartime; and that even as America rightly defends liberal democracy against terrorism, it cannot ignore the moral problems created by modern technological society. Perhaps it is significant that the genetic challenge and the challenge of terrorism seem to have arrived together. For both require us to confront fundamental questions about life and death, good and evil, civilization and barbarism. The new genetics leads us to expect an indefinite extension of life, to believe that medical science may one day smooth the jagged edges of our mortality. Terrorism confronts us with the permanent fragility of life, and with the destruction that modern technology, in the hands of evildoers, can unleash upon its creators. Aldous Huxley understood the connection. In his novel, the brave new world comes into being in large measure as a remedy for human fear--a way of "perfecting" existence so that men and women can lead long, healthy, and pleasure-filled lives. It is an escape from the burdens of history, suffering, and war. As Mustapha Mond explains in "Brave New World," "What's the point of truth or beauty or knowledge when the anthrax bombs are popping all around you? . . . People were ready to have their appetites controlled then. Anything for a quiet life." For the last decade, Americans have had a generally quiet life--happy, healthy, upwardly mobile, unburdened by history. The holiday ended when the planes hit the first World Trade Center tower. What confronts us now is a band of nihilistic terrorists who despise mere health, comfort, and life. Our enemies worship death--not just our death, but their own apocalyptic, civilization-destroying suicide. Osama bin Laden put it bluntly: "We love death. The U.S. loves life. That is the big difference between us." The challenge to America--a nation that "loves life," and rightfully so--is that confronting such death-seeking terrorism requires a willingness to fight and perhaps to die. It requires courage, and even heroism. Hatred of life and glorification of death lead in obvious ways to evil. But life understood as an absolute devotion to health and material well-being may invite us to tolerate, even celebrate, morally questionable pursuits (like cloning human embryos for research or harvesting organs) and morally debilitating expectations (like a life without challenges, tragedy, or suffering). Thus, Dr. West informs us, "for the sake of medicine, we need to set our fears aside." But are all fears about what man will do with his new genetic powers unjustified? Dr. West doesn't think "the abuse of this technology, its potential abuses, should stop us from doing what we believe is the right thing in medicine." But aren't the likely abuses of a technology as important as its speculative benefits? Dr. West's mission, he says, is "to end suffering and disease." But does pursuing such utopian dreams make us willing to tolerate, accept, and ultimately normalize evil means? As the ethicist Paul Ramsey put it, "any person, or any society or age, expecting ultimate success where ultimate success is not to be reached, is peculiarly apt to devise extreme and morally illegitimate means for getting there." And peculiarly apt, one might add, to redefine the project so that it seems morally blameless, as Sen. Arlen Specter and other zealous advocates for unlimited research have tried to do, by saying that cloned embryos are not really cloned embryos. In short, what America now faces are two grave threats to a dignified human future--one which is obvious, and one which comes so wrapped up with real and apparent goods that it is hard to detect. The first is the dehumanization of the terrorists, who have so little regard for life (including their own) that they make killing their only purpose and modern technology their weapon. The second is the dehumanization of the eugenicists, who seek a brave new world in which technology makes human (or post-human) life perfectly healthy, pleasant, autonomous, and secure--even if some moral boundaries must be breached along the way. Both threats are upon us now. Original link: http://www.newamerica.net/index.cfm?pg=article&pubID=670 |
| Biography The English novelist and essayist Aldous Leonard Huxley, b. July 26, 1894, d. Nov. 22, 1963. His reputation was firmly established by his first novel, Crome Yellow (1921), a witty satire on the intellectual pretensions of his time. Huxley's early comic novels, which include Antic Hay (1923), Those Barren Leaves (1925), and Point Counter Point (1928), demonstrate his ability to dramatize intellectual debate in fiction; he discussed philosophical and social topics in a volume of essays, Proper Studies (1927). In both fiction and nonfiction Huxley became increasingly critical of Western civilization in the 1930s. Brave New World (1932), his most celebrated work, is a bitterly satiric account of an inhumane society controlled by technology, in which art and religion have been abolished and human beings reproduce by artificial fertilization. Huxley's distress at what he regarded as the spiritual bankruptcy of the modern world led him toward mysticism and the use of hallucinatory drugs. The novel Eyeless in Gaza (1936) portrays its central character's conversion from selfish isolation to transcendental mysticism; and in The Doors of Perception (1954) and Heaven and Hell (1956) he describes the use of mescaline to induce visionary states of mind. Huxley, who moved to southern California in 1947, was primarily a moral philosopher who used fiction during his early career as a vehicle for ideas; in his later writing, which consists largely of essays, he adopts an overtly didactic tone. Like his contemporaries D. H. Lawrence and George Orwell, Huxley abhorred conformity and denounced the orthodox attitudes of his time. The enormous range of his intellect and the pungency of his writing make him one of the most significant voices of the early 20th century. |
| Related Article |