Sunday, March 24, 2019
Wisdom Leads to Suffering in Brave New World by George Orwell Essay
Solomon spoke once, after a life filled with great learning of temperament- chochmah tataah- that all of life exists for vanity, that designing erases itself from existence and man is left with only a mean, purposeless life. Orwell, in 1984, realizes in his work that insight gained of the workings of a dystopic society, leads only to the denudation of purposelessness- the reduction of life to something other than that it purports to be. Orwells attack of scholarship takes mildew through his usage of juxtaposition in denotation explanation, the telling nature of Winstons state post-discovery, and a most mystifying metaphysical description the peril of knowing too much.In the same way that Solomon captured the center of attention of chochmah tataah, the wisdom of the external, so Winston gains more knowledge of the external world, in the same way that Solomon (or a Qohelet pretending to be him) wrote of despair issuing from wisdom in Ecclesiastes, Winston finds himself suff ering more than the people nigh him, due to his wisdom. In 1984, Doublethink forces the entire society, both the proles (because of their intelligence quotients) and the higher echelon of people (in order to nurse power), into a stupor which leaves the with egress any knowledge of their situation in life, and completely- obliviously- happy. though Orwell paints a picture of a crumbling world, the people within see no need to improve it because the simply choose to ignore problems. The people around Winston find themselves duped into believing blindly, without wisdom, and are content while Winston, aware of his surroundings, forever and a day struggles. Orwells message here screams to the reader that knowledge leads to pain. Winston, strolling to work hotshot day, sees a man with a twitch- fightin... ...fering and death of the combatants. The only outcomes of increased knowledge and wisdom of the external- chochmah tataah, exist as oppression and death.Orwell, though speaking ou t against the oppressiveness of societies, argues more strongly that humanitys gain of wisdom about corruption leads only to suffering. The author of 1984 brings these points to increaseion in his character analysis, and his analysis of reality itself. In the same way that Adam sampled the fruit of The Tree of Knowledge of Good and Evil and gained only death, the addition of wisdom to the human consciousness leads only to suffering. The epic told to represent this story by Orwell ends with the argument that War is peace. Freedom is slavery. Ignorance is strength. (4), the argument that when ignorance is lost, suffering and weakness follow. exit cited Brave New World, by George Orwell.
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