Aldous Huxley's Brave New World — How Algorithms & AI are Tipping The World Towards ItHow technology and AI are eerily transforming the world into the dystopian society depicted in Aldous Huxley's Brave New World
When I first read Aldous Huxley’s book Brave New World over a decade or more ago, it was a simpler time. Instagram & YouTube were nascent & not the attention-grabbing behemoths they are today, we were still listening to music on iPods, smartphones weren’t as near their computing power as of 2025, there were no food & delivery apps, or UPI payment and in general, things weren’t as grim. But little did I know back then, that I’d be writing this blog post comparing what I read in the book to its actual societal metamorphosis we’re witnessing in today’s times as of 2025. Whether you’ve read the book or not, Aldous Huxley’s Brave New World, published in 1932, and set in the year 2540, was supposed to be a cautionary sci-fi tale, not a blueprint of society to come. Yet here we are in 2025, watching the world inch closer to his vision, not in leaps and bounds, but gradually. This isn’t through overt dystopian force but rather with the seductive allure of convenience, entertainment, unregulated technology & algorithms and artificial intelligence — the resemblance is uncanny. While George Orwell in his book 1984 published a decade after Huxley’s feared a complete disintegration of society, Huxley warned us of a far subtler dystopia. Huxley envisioned a world where people wouldn’t need to be oppressed because they would be too distracted, too comfortable, and too entertained to care. And it uncannily seems like we are heading down this path. In Brave New World, humanity is engineered into a rigid caste system, conditioned from birth to accept their roles without question. The Alphas rule, the Betas obey, and the lower classes are bred for menial labor. Techno-feudalism (as I’ve explored in an old post linked below) is edging towards this.
Today, the algorithm plays the role of the social architect, quietly sorting us into digital brackets, something akin to a modern-age social caste system. Algorithms dictate which job applications reach human eyes, which individuals and companies sell more, which social media accounts & posts gain visibility, and which people find love on dating apps. AI, in its insatiable hunger for efficiency, has taken on the role of Huxley’s “World Controllers”, but instead of the hypnopaedic sleep-conditioning as envisioned in his book, we get recommendation engines that shape our worldview, telling us what to watch, read, and believe. The frightening part is, however, that we think we’re making our own choices. Entertainment in Huxley’s world, as depicted in his book, is designed for maximum distraction. The ‘feelies’ — his idea of a kind of immersive cinema that stimulates the senses — keep the masses pacified, much like our algorithmically optimized content feeds today. Instagram, TikTok, YouTube, Facebook, Twitter and Netflix, powered by AI, know us better than we know ourselves, serving up precisely the content that will keep us scrolling, consuming, and disengaging from the real world. Furthermore, even the creators of the algorithms that govern social media don’t know exactly what’s happening and how their algorithms run to the finest detail —it’s almost like training a wild animal & setting it loose. The average screen time per day has skyrocketed past seven hours, as per 2025, and every moment of silence is filled with doomscrolling stimulation. There’s absolutely no time for deep thought, no space for discontent but rather just a steady drip of dopamine, a digital soma keeping us unknowingly sedated. Soma is the ultimate tool of societal control in Brave New World. It’s a wonder drug that eliminates pain, worry, and discomfort in Huxley’s reality. Today, we don’t need a government-issued pill like Huxley’s soma. We have AI & algorithm curated happiness. Instagram filters erase imperfections, post likes urge a sense of appreciation, mental health apps gamify mindfulness, and pharmaceutical companies & other corporations promise new chemical solutions & products to help solve our existential crises (The World Economic Forum recently projected that mental health apps would become a $17 billion industry by 2030). In comparison, Huxley’s soma was state-sanctioned. But today, ours is corporate-endorsed. However, the function remains the same, i.e. to keep the population consuming and docile, disengaged from anything that might spark dissent. The moment we search, show interest or speak about something, we get fine-tuned ads selling us products and services to fit exactly what we were searching or speaking about — the lack of privacy is shocking. This aligns with the massive surveillance & control being brought about by our digital world. In today’s world, digital surveillance has become an omnipresent force, seamlessly integrated into our daily lives. Governments and corporations increasingly track, categorize, and influence individuals through data collection, from social media interactions to financial transactions. China’s “Social Credit System” is a stark example, where an algorithmic framework dictates the lives of citizens through behavioral incentives and disciplining. While Western countries and democracies may not have implemented such an explicit system, similar mechanisms exist in the form of credit scores, algorithm-driven hiring decisions, and predictive policing. What was once a tool to optimize efficiency is now a method of shaping behavior, creating a society where individuals willingly comply with invisible rules in fear of being digitally ostracized. Even human reproduction has become eerily aligned with Huxley’s vision. In Brave New World, babies are no longer born naturally, but grown in artificial wombs. The family unit is obsolete, and sex is stripped of emotion. While we aren’t quite there yet, 2025 has already seen the rise of artificial womb technology, with biotech companies developing exogenesis — womb-like devices capable of growing fetuses outside the human body. Meanwhile, AI & robotics are fueling the rise of synthetic relationships, from AI & robotic companions to deepfake influencers who amass millions of followers despite not actually existing. We are rapidly approaching an era where connection is simulated, relationships are optional, and emotional depth is a thing of the past. Perhaps the most chilling aspect of Brave New World is how dissent is handled. It’s not propagated through force but rather through alienation. Bernard Marx, the novel’s misfit, doesn’t get tortured or executed like Orwell’s character Winston in 1984. But he simply gets exiled to an island, separated from the mindless bliss & voluntary subjugation of the collective. In 2025, cancel culture and algorithmic suppression pretty much serve the same purpose. Step too far outside the Overton window with your digital presence & worldview, and your reach is throttled, your accounts demonetized, your presence online erased. The algorithms don’t need to silence you directly — they just make sure no one hears you in the first place. The prison is now digital, and the punishment for questioning the narrative is irrelevance & your voice being unheard. Meanwhile, science and progress in Brave New World are tightly controlled, not because knowledge is banned but because curiosity itself is discouraged. This draws parallels with AI’s quiet takeover of intellectual labour. Why should students learn when ChatGPT can summarize their exam questions? Why think critically when the algorithm serves up pre-approved answers? AI is making us intellectually passive, replacing inquiry with instant gratification & algorithmic answers and solutions. AI has its pros and cons, of course, but we need to maintain a certain level of critical thinking away from AI and our experiences & perspectives that spring about from our questioning of the human condition, need to be preserved and kept in tact. But coming back, in addition, the World Economic Forum estimates that by 2030, nearly 85 million jobs will be displaced by AI, and while new ones will emerge, they will require humans to fit within the brackets of an AI-driven system rather than challenge it. Entire industries — ranging from legal work and accounting to entertainment, media, tech and customer service — are being automated, leaving millions of skilled workers redundant. While new jobs will emerge, they will require specialised technical knowledge, creating a growing gap between those who can adapt to technology and those left behind. Governments and corporations, who are well aware of the societal instability such dependence creates, may implement more digital controls over financial transactions and employment access, reinforcing the dystopian predictions of Brave New World, where economic autonomy is sacrificed for state-imposed stability. Governments, in the future, may introduce Universal Basic Income (UBI), but this could come with increased digital surveillance, restricting financial autonomy. Even religion in Brave New World, is replaced by the cult of Fordism, where Henry Ford’s assembly line is worshipped as the pinnacle of civilization. In 2025, consumerism is our religion, and the high priests are tech CEOs and venture capitalists. We line up for new iPhones like the citizens of Huxley’s world chant their synthetic prayers. Every few years, a new gadget or trend reaffirms our faith in the system. The deity is no longer a God but technological growth, and widespread technology consumption and the rituals are performed not in churches or temples, but in online & offline product stores, stock markets and Silicon Valley boardrooms. There is, of course, a resistance in Brave New World — a faint, tragic hope embodied by John the Savage. He seeks authenticity in a world of synthetic pleasures, only to find himself crushed by a society incapable of understanding his struggle. In 2025, those who seek depth, who reject algorithmic control, face a similar challenge. The thinkers, the rebels, the nonconformists are not imprisoned, but they are relegated to the fringes, & the peripheries dismissed as outdated, irrelevant, and made digital outcasts. We also see it in declining attention spans, the aversion to discomfort, the glorification of artificial ease over real experience. The true horror of Huxley’s dystopia is that it doesn’t need oppression — it thrives on consent. The people of Brave New World are not suffering to rebel in resistance; they are enjoying themselves into oblivion. This is precisely what we are seeing today. AI and algorithms don’t demand obedience — they simply make distraction more appealing than resistance. So where does that leave us? Unlike Brave New World, our future isn’t preordained. AI and algorithms are tools, not fates. But to avoid slipping fully into Huxley’s nightmare, we must recognize the trade-offs we are making. Convenience is not always freedom. Comfort is not always progress. And a world that is perfectly optimised for pleasure may ultimately leave us benumbed and disillusioned. In a world increasingly governed by algorithms and digital interactions, we risk losing the essence of what makes us human. To resist becoming cogs in an AI & algorithm-driven system, we must prioritise real human connection — both in external discourse & conversation and in our internal dialogue with differing viewpoints. We must also lead our lives with experiences that are more attuned with what it means to be human — whether that’s travelling & exploring, spending time with nature, social interaction that isn’t digital, reading, art & music and so on. Freedom, autonomy, and the right to anonymity must be fiercely protected, especially in financial, political, and personal matters. Things aren’t perhaps all doom and gloom if you analyse economic data of today over decades compared to Huxley’s era and even before that, as I’ve explored in an old post (linked below). But this is more to do with passively accepting technology’s iron claw over our attention & our existence, mirroring Huxley’s society in Brave New World. Furthermore, we must raise the next generation of youth with a deep sense of independence and a critical eye towards these perils, which is crucial as well. Huxley’s vision of a world where family, friendship, and community have disintegrated & one where emotions and critical thinking have been suppressed, and replaced by superficiality and amusing distractions, seems to be how things are progressing, for now at least. If we surrender these fundamental aspects of our existence to technology & its creators & proponents, we risk losing what truly makes us human. Huxley warned us — now, it’s up to us to listen. Thank you for being a valuable subscriber to my newsletter Light Years! If you liked this post & found it informative, feel free to share this publication with your network by clicking the button below… I hope you found this post informative & it helped you in some way. As always, feel free to subscribe to my publication Light Years & support it & also share it if you’d like. Get it in your inbox by filling up the space below! 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Saturday, 1 March 2025
Aldous Huxley's Brave New World — How Algorithms & AI are Tipping The World Towards It
March in
March in like a Lion - Out like a Lamb. I am always amazed at how right-on this cliché is here in the Windy City every March 1st. The month of March is abundant with ‘Holy Days’, finding voice through many cultural expressions. With the New Moon, we just entered the Holy month of Ramadan - one of the Five Pillars of Islam, observed by Muslims worldwide marked by fasting from dawn to sunset , prayer, reflection, & community. It is also the time in which the Quran was revealed to the Prophet Muhammad. March 4th is Fat Tuesday & the Festival of Mardi Gras. Which then sends us into the Lenten Season, with Ash Wednesday on March 5 – Beginning for us a recapitulation of Christ’s Temptation in the wilderness. Immediately after being Baptized by John the Baptist, Christ goes into the desert where he fasts for 40 days & nights. After this trial, the adversarial forces try to tempt Him. In the Lord's Prayer, we speak: "Lead us not into temptation" - a humble, trusting petition to enable us to overcome the onslaught of temptations that are constantly bombarding us. Prayer & watchfulness are the chief weapons against the lure of temptation. We can remember that God does not allow us to be tempted beyond the capacity of our strength. Lead us not into temptation - Help me to cleanse my Astral body of all false desire. Fill me with Love, that my cup may overflow to benefit all worlds. March 13th is the Jewish carnival-like celebration of Purim - commemorating a time when the Jewish people living in Persia were saved by Esther. We will also experience a Global Event: Total Lunar Eclipse Begins: Thu, Mar 13, 2025 at 10:57 pm CDT Maximum: Fri, Mar 14, 2025 at 1:58 am CDT Ends: Fri, Mar 14, 2025 at 5:00 am CDT Duration: 6 hours, 3 minutes 14 March is Marie Steiner von Sivers Birthday in 1867. 3.14 is also Pi day The 15th is the famous Ides of March; which we all know is the day Julius Caesar was warned by the soothsayers to beware; the day he was assassinated. But did you know that according to the ancient Roman calendar, the Ides of March was considered New Year’s Day, & marked the 1st day of Spring? March 17, brings us the ‘wearing of the green’ for St. Patrick’s Day. This former pagan used the shamrock to teach folks about the Trinity. We celebrate Spring or Vernal Equinox, on 20 March this year, also known as: Alban Eilir, Eostar, the Feast of Annunciation of the Blessed Virgin Mary, Lady Day, Festival of Trees, NawRuz, Ostara, & the Rites of Spring – when the Sun, because of the ‘precession of the equinoxes’, enters the sign of Pisces, as opposed to the lunar cycle used by the ancients. Day & night are equal, poised & balanced, but about to tip over to the side of light. It is sacred to the twilight time of dawn, youth, the morning star & the East. The Saxon goddess, Eostre (from whose name we get the direction East & the name of the Holiday Easter) is a dawn goddess, like Aurora & Eos. Just as the dawn is the time of new light, so the Vernal Equinox is the time of new life. The Equinox is all about harmony & balance – that brief yet eternal time of equilibrium, when day & night are of equal length. The Iranian New Year celebration, Norooz, or ‘New Day’ also begins March 20. In 622 AD, Mohammed led his followers from Mecca to Medina to escape assassination. According to the story, when his pursuers reached the cave where Mohammed & his followers had taken shelter for the night, they found a dove nesting in front of it & the entrance covered by a spider’s web. So the pursuers passed on, leaving them in peace. Mohammed continued on to Medina, where he & his followers were able to worship freely. Muslims consider this flight — or Hijrah — to be the beginning of their calendar year. People worship quietly on this day, which begins with the 1st sighting of the crescent moon, & in keeping with the rebirth of nature is also considered the 1st day of Spring. For those working within the Christian Community Church, the 4 weeks of Passion-Tide begins 23 March.Julian P. Gufogg Two other holidays also get mixed up in this ancient symbolism of Spring’s fertility. March 25th is called the ‘Annunciation of Mary.’ – the day that the Angel Gabriel announced that Mary, the Christian version of The Sophia, was pregnant with the son of god ; who is born 9 months later, on Dec. 25th. How’s that for a nice little spring fertility symbol. March 25th is the Deathday of Novalis – age 28 in 1801 On Saturday, March 29, 2025, the Moon passes in front of the Sun, casting its shadow across the Atlantic Ocean for a partial Solar eclipse. The 100 year anniversary of Rudolf Steiner’s Deathday in 1925 comes the next day - 30 March It is also the first day of Eid Al-Fitr commemorating the end of the fasting month of Ramadan. It begins at sunset - on the night of the first sighting of the crescent moon. It is also fitting that March is International Women’s month, since this is the time of the rebirth of nature. It’s a gentle reminder that we give birth to the future. The future is in our hands, the hands of the midwife, the lap of the mother, & the hands of the Peacemaker. So let’s honor ourselves & thank the powers of love & light, knowing, March may come in like a lion, but it goes out like a lamb – As we re-conceive of ourselves in alignment with the powers of Spring… Peace & Blessed Bee… ~hag 1 March 2025 – “Speaking with the Stars” WHAT IS YOUR DESTINY?From Necessity to Freedom – The Evolution of Human Consciousness - w/ Hazel Archer-Ginsbergfor The Minneapolis Theosophical Society Monday 10 March 2025 - on ZOOM - 7–9 pm CDT From the vaporous cleft of Mount Parnassus, and the birth place of Greek Philosophy, to Michelangelo’s Sistine Chapel, and the Holy Grail – From Prophesy to Warning, from Fate to Karma, From Destiny to Free Will. Hazel Archer-Ginsberg – Interdenominational Minister, Essayist, Presenter, Poet, Anthroposopher - Founding member of the Grand Lodge of (MA) Mysteria Mystica Americana - Cognitive Ritual: ~Confessions of a Modern Rosicrucian, & the ‘I Think Speech’ Podcast - YouTube Video Recordings Zoom: https://us02web.zoom.us/j/84368789880?pwd=bUI5b3FZcHNoc3NLaXpUbktHejRGUT09 If you want to support the Biodynamic Farming done on Zinniker Farm, you are invited to become a paid subscriber, with all donations going directly to the farm The Cognitive Ritual is a Free Will Offering to All worlds. Please Share freely Greetings Friend, you currently a free subscriber to Cognitive Ritual. Thank you for receiving my workings freely offered. For the full experience, upgrade your subscription. ALL donations go to support Zinniker Farm - The oldest Biodynamic Farm in America! Together we can spiritualize the Universe. XOX ~hag © 2025 Hazel Archer-Ginsberg |
Aldous Huxley's Brave New World — How Algorithms & AI are Tipping The World Towards It
How technology and AI are eerily transforming the world into the dystopian society depicted in Aldous Huxley's Brave New World ͏ ͏ ...
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