Huxley surmised that life lived as the satisfaction of one desire after another would result in shallow and egotistical people. |
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It is not surprising that the two greatest literary dystopians, Huxley and Orwell, were English. |
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Kass does not suggest that a society anything like that depicted by Huxley will be imposed on us by force. |
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Yet although the writer pokes fun, he teases the verbally prolix, emotionally costive Huxley as much as he does the earnest Wilberforce. |
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Huxley has received widespread recognition for her humanistic achievements. |
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Huxley also typed in the advances Bernard makes to Eton's headmistress during the showing of the Penitentes film. |
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In fact, Huxley argued, a human differs much less from an ape, such as a chimpanzee or gorilla, than an ape does from a baboon. |
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Huxley conjectured that we would be destroyed by the things that delight us. |
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For Huxley, a debate on evolution at Oxford where two thirds of the graduates took holy orders was like entering a lion's den. |
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T H. Huxley, too, had an enormous influence on Morgan, training him in zoology when Morgan returned to London for postgraduate study not long after his geology degree. |
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Huxley had a low opinion of Wilberforce who died thirteen years after the debate following a fall from his horse. |
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Huxley was considered a radical reformer and anti-racist for his era. |
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Fitzgerald, Nabokov, Huxley, and the rest of them failed in Hollywood for a variety of reasons. |
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The deaths of Lewis and Huxley were mute, private events, only reported in The Times three days later. |
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Notwithstanding his own loftier goals, it is questionable whether mescaline and LSD gave Huxley the enlightenment he craved. |
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Moves to prosecute him proved unsuccessful, despite the publicly voiced offence his actions had given to such prominent liberals as John Stuart Mill and T H Huxley. |
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Dr. Huxley told about a coincidce that had befallen him when he produced an artificial animal, the axolotl. |
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Eyeless in Garsington, Huxley orated to the gathering because he was unable to read faces well enough to pursue an ordinary conversation. |
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The kind of political discipline in the world that it would impose is eerily reminiscent of the Brave New World of Huxley and the 1984 of Orwell. |
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It was recognized that fisheries resources were not inexhaustible, as Thomas Huxley had postulated. |
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When I read the reports published by the Department of Foreign Affairs, it looks to me that they were been written by Aldous Huxley. |
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Since the famous Aldous Huxley novel A Brave New World was published, the reality of new technologies has gone way beyond fiction. |
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In 1857, a deep-sea sample was delivered to the famous British scientist Thomas Huxley. |
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That would lead us to think that, as Aldous Huxley the British naturalist put it, it is all for the best in the best of worlds. |
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During the 1960s he associated with Aldous Huxley and Timothy Leary, and was known for his defense of entheogenic plants and chemicals for religious purposes. |
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In a turn that vindicates Aldous Huxley, one in ten Americans ingests their daily Soma supplement in the form of antidepressants. |
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Now it is feared Mrs Huxley, whose signature was on the residents' village green application, might be hit with a bill if the developer looks to recuperate its legal costs. |
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A devotee, Kreeft gives Lewis the big philosophical guns, and has him trouncing Kennedy and Huxley pretty comprehensively. |
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Huxley captures this perfectly in the antiphonal chant of the priests on Belial Day hailing that brief period in which mating is spontaneous and allowed. |
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The work of Ortega, Huxley, and the frankfurt school philosophers gave voice to this fear of homegrown fascism. |
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In particular, where Darwin had seen evolution and a slow, gradual, continuous process, Huxley thought that an evolving lineage might make rapid jumps, or saltations. |
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Huxley founded a remarkable dynasty of English scientists and thinkers. |
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Postman prefers Huxley to Orwell and argues that there is no need for Big Brother to conceal anything from citizens whom technological diversion has largely narcotized. |
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My first book was my undergraduate essay on Waugh, Orwell, and Huxley. |
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In 1935, after taking note of the global imbalance in scientific development, eminent biologist Julian Huxley called for a truly scientific approach to the problem of development. |
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Jobs were very scarce, but in 1919 John Middleton Murry was reorganising the Athenaeum and invited Huxley to join the staff. |
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In these circumstances Miss Ellen Wilkinson met the five Vice-Presidents of the Preparatory Commission and proposed that Dr Julian Huxley should replace Sir Alfred Zimmern for whom another post would be found if he recovered. |
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Amongst his heroes were writers Aldous Huxley, W H Auden and George Orwell. |
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A man of erudition, lightly worn, Huxley seemed to represent all that was best about English intellectual life. This, certainly, is how Huxley's biographer, Nicholas Murray, sees him. |
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The first debates about the nature of human evolution arose between Thomas Henry Huxley and Richard Owen. |
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As individuals and as a nation we cannot allow ourselves to sink into the position forecast by Aldous Huxley in his Brave New World where all we need to do if we feel worried, anxious, or upset is to take a pill. |
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Huxley feared we would become a trivial culture, preoccupied with some equivalent of the feelies, the orgy porgy, and the centrifugal bumblepuppy. |
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The anatomist Thomas Huxley had also supported the hypothesis and suggested that African apes have a close evolutionary relationship with humans. |
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In a previous era, the most prophetic evocations of where we were headed were produced by two Old Etonian novelists – George Orwell and Aldous Huxley. |
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The possibility that dinosaurs were the ancestors of birds was first suggested in 1868 by Thomas Henry Huxley. |
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Thomas H. Huxley stood staunchly on the ground that the great steps in the world's progress have been made and will be made by men who seek knowledge simply because they crave for it. |
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Aldous Huxley, who listened to Gesualdo's music while taking mescaline, was so carried away by it that he once made up stories about him in a lecture. |
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Students will study the utopian and dystopian ideas in the works of Plato, More, Shakespeare, Swift, Shelley, Stevenson, Wells, Huxley, Burgess and Atwood. |
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After reading all his books, I moved on to Aldous Huxley. |
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The following year the two sections were amalgamated and Vic Huxley proved to be the winner. |
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Early in his career Huxley edited the magazine Oxford Poetry and published short stories and poetry. |
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This terminology was originally introduced by Huxley as part of his concept of memetics analyzing the transmission of cultural information. |
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The biologist and humanist, Julian Huxley, the first Director-General of UNESCO, managed to ensure that science was made an essential part of the Organization's mandate when it was set up at the end of the Second World War. |
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It is spiritless to escape into the ill-conditioned state forecast by Aldous Huxley in Brave New World where all we need to do if we feel worried, anxious or upset is to take a pill. |
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It was, however, as Charles Darwin's alter ego, an attack dog for the theory of evolution, that Huxley gained his greatest notoriety. |
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Gray and Lyell sought reconciliation with faith, while Huxley portrayed a polarisation between religion and science. |
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Lyell had already popularised human prehistory, and Huxley had shown that anatomically humans are apes. |
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According to his cousin and contemporary, Gervas Huxley, he had an early interest in drawing. |
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Following his years at Balliol, Huxley, being financially indebted to his father, decided to find employment. |
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During World War I, Huxley spent much of his time at Garsington Manor near Oxford, home of Lady Ottoline Morrell, working as a farm labourer. |
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In 1937, Huxley moved to Hollywood with his wife Maria, son Matthew, and friend Gerald Heard. |
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In 1938, Huxley befriended Jiddu Krishnamurti, whose teachings he greatly admired. |
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Huxley became a close friend of Remsen Bird, president of Occidental College. |
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The novel won Huxley a British literary award, the 1939 James Tait Black Memorial Prize for fiction. |
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Huxley had deeply felt apprehensions about the future the developed world might make for itself. |
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In 1953, Huxley and Maria applied for United States citizenship and presented themselves for examination. |
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From 1941 until 1960, Huxley contributed 48 articles to Vedanta and the West, published by the society. |
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Huxley also occasionally lectured at the Hollywood and Santa Barbara Vedanta temples. |
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The correspondence between Huxley and the society are kept at the Cambridge University Library. |
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They took the name of the band from Matthews' experience working in a mental health facility as well as the novel The Doors of Perception by Aldous Huxley. |
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Not long after, Huxley wrote his book on widely held spiritual values and ideas, The Perennial Philosophy, which discussed the teachings of renowned mystics of the world. |
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Huxley then said that his sight improved dramatically with the Bates Method and the extreme and pure natural lighting of the southwestern American desert. |
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Hooker increasingly doubted the traditional view that species were fixed, but their young friend Thomas Henry Huxley was firmly against the transmutation of species. |
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Amongst early favourable responses, Huxley's reviews swiped at Richard Owen, leader of the scientific establishment Huxley was trying to overthrow. |
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Even Darwin's close friends Gray, Hooker, Huxley and Lyell still expressed various reservations but gave strong support, as did many others, particularly younger naturalists. |
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It was, and is, widely believed that Huxley was nearly blind since the illness in his teens, despite the partial recovery that had enabled him to study at Oxford. |
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Huxley was commissioned by Walt Disney in 1945 to write a script based on Alice's Adventures in Wonderland and the biography of the story's author, Lewis Carroll. |
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Thomas Henry Huxley applied Darwin's ideas to humans, using paleontology and comparative anatomy to provide strong evidence that humans and apes shared a common ancestry. |
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He was the third son of the writer and schoolmaster Leonard Huxley, who edited Cornhill Magazine, and his first wife, Julia Arnold, who founded Prior's Field School. |
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Thomas Henry Huxley, one of Darwin's strongest advocates, proposed a close relationship between birds and small, meat-eating dinosaurs, or theropods. |
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Among those who became Hollywood scriptwriters during the 1930s were Nathanael West, William Faulkner, Robert Sherwood, Aldous Huxley, and Dorothy Parker. |
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He cites Thomas Huxley, Darwin's Bulldog, as an example of one who espouses a veneer theory, and castigates him for straying from his Darwinian roots. |
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In Brave New World, set in a dystopian London, Huxley portrays a society operating on the principles of mass production and Pavlovian conditioning. |
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While Lawrence was in New Mexico, he was visited by Aldous Huxley. |
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About 1939, Huxley encountered the Bates method for better eyesight, and a teacher, Margaret Darst Corbett, who was able to teach the method to him. |
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