Aldous Huxley was a British writer, poet and philosopher from a family of intellectuals. As a young man he studied at the prestigious Eton School, where he had the opportunity to interact with members of the Bloomsbury Cluba group of prominent intellectuals in the literary, social and artistic fields.
His first novel, The Crome scandals (1921), was a satire on those members, who felt slighted by the work.
Only in 1932 did he publish the book that would position him as one of the most important thinkers of the 20th century: A happy world, which tells of a society governed like a dictatorship without the citizens realizing it. The book is a preview of technological development and consumer society.
Huxley died on November 22, 1963 for throat cancer. Two years earlier, on May 12, 1961, there was a fire in his Hollywood home where he lost much of his writings, but managed to save the manuscript. The islandthe writer’s latest novel.
The best quotes of the writer Aldous Huxley
1) “We live together, we act and react with each other, but always, in every circumstance, we are alone.”
2) “Love drives away fear and, reciprocally, fear drives away love. And not only does love drive away fear, but also intelligence, goodness, every thought of beauty and truth, and only the mute remains desperation; and in the end, “Fear succeeds in expelling humanity itself from man.”
3) “All people always get what they ask for. The problem is that before they get it they are never aware of what they asked for.”
4) “Seeing ourselves as others see us is an extremely desirable gift. Slightly less important is the ability to see others as they see themselves. But what if others were of a different species and inhabited a different species? Radically strange universe? Like, how will sane people ever know what it’s really like to be crazy?”
5) “The more complex the technologies, the greater the need to create organizations capable of keeping them under control.”
6) “The more sinister a politician’s desires, the more pompous, in general, becomes the nobility of his language.”
7) “How do you know if Earth is just hell on another planet?”
8) “An uninteresting truth can be overshadowed by an exciting falsehood.”
Source: Clarin
Mary Ortiz is a seasoned journalist with a passion for world events. As a writer for News Rebeat, she brings a fresh perspective to the latest global happenings and provides in-depth coverage that offers a deeper understanding of the world around us.