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dystopia |
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dystopiaImaginary society whose evil qualities are meant to serve as a moral or political warning. The term was coined in 1868 by the English philosopher John Stuart Mill, and is the opposite of a Utopia. George Orwell's 1984, published in 1949 and Aldous Huxley's Brave New World (1932) are examples of novels about dystopias. Dystopias are common in science fiction.
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Orwell, Huxley, and other dystopians understood that technology wedded to unaccountable power amplifies human weaknesses -- resulting in terror, mass bloodshed, and despotism. Conspiracy folklore does the same thing for the same reason, except that most of these dystopians actually believe in the worlds they've invented. In particular, he approves of the view held in common by the dystopians of unadulterated technological advance as the immediate problem and human nature as the underlying problem. |
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