In Brave New World by Aldous Huxley he challenges the mind with a new abstract world society today is foreign to, pushing the boundaries of societal rules. Babies are made in jars developing through their nine months on a conveyor belt. No one here has a mother or any relationship greater than a one time fling. How can this be? Well, the children are conditioned and modified to live a predestined life set out for them by the man in charge. The lower class look almost like clones due to the advances in twin research. Bokanoskifying , “a bokanoskified egg will bud, will proliferate, will divide. From eight to ninety-six buds, and every bud will grow into a perfectly formed embryo, and every embryo into a full-sized adult” (Huxley 6). This raises the question, how does the genetic altering affect evolution?
It is possible genetic coding could cause the end of evolution, adaptation. …show more content…
Just because they didn’t want them to have six toes when they were born. Now not only does genetic recoding raise red flags about the risks of ending the human species it also possesses the fear of a mistake. Mistakes happen all the time, especially in new science that is still being tested and discovered. “Darnovsky says genomic editing of human embryos should not be allowed for several reasons: The technology is new, and the risks of a mistake are magnified by the fact that the genetic changes would be passed along to offspring” (Adams 1). Starting as a simple mutation fix to a now an even more aggressive mutation can be passed on. This could cause a forced and unnecessary adaptation in humans. In the book Huxley talks about an unwanted side effect from their modifications, some of their women grow mustaches but are sterile and cannot