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One of science fiction’s most enduring traits is its ability to ruminate upon the ways in which science and technology allow us to manipulate and re-engineer society. In this sense, the distinction between soft and hard science fiction disappears—all science fiction is inherently social, for no matter how much detail goes into describing the technological advances that populate possible futures, the meat of the story is always the effect these technologies have on the people using them. Innovati
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Growing up, I heard Brave New World often mentioned in the same breath as Nineteen Eighty-Four, which led me to believe one was the lesser version of the other. Rereading Huxley's dystopian version of the future, however, it seems like his Brave New World and Orwell's Big Brother are more like opposite sides of a coin. And while the vocabulary of Nineteen Eighty-Four is firmly implanted in our modern speech as a warning against the abuse of power and surveillance, there is little of Aldous Huxle
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Mar 10, 2011
Maree
marked it as to-read

Jan 30, 2012
Terry
marked it as to-read


Jan 01, 2014
Figgy
marked it as owned-but-not-read

Jan 03, 2014
Kevin Xu
rated it
really liked it
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