In the story “The Veldt,” Ray Bradbury writes about a family that lives in a futuristic house that fixes all of their problems. In “The Veldt,” Bradbury writes, “this house which clothed and fed and rocked them to sleep and played and sang and was good to them.” The house literally did everything for them. The technology was used for …show more content…
Kind of like the family in the story “The Veldt.” In the story it states, “Like too many others, you've built it around creature comforts. Why, you'd starve tomorrow if something went wrong in your kitchen. You wouldn't know how to tap an egg.” In their society, everyone relies on technology to do everything for them. They don't know how to do a lot the stuff that people are used to doing now. The technology is taking them over and isolating them from the rest of the world. Although the technology isn't ruining the lives of people now as bad as it is in “The Veldt,” it is still the same concept and is technically doing the same thing to people's lives.
In the novel “Fahrenheit 451,” Ray Bradbury writes about a society in which technology has taken up so much of people's lives that they don't have time to read books. Bradbury notices that technology makes people become less personable and less capable of independent thought. Bradbury observes that the more addicted people become to technology, the less they socialize and the less they care about other people. Which in the story, it gives firemen a reason to start fires to places containing books instead of stopping the fires. But, the story is fiction and placed in the future, so the chances of that happening are pretty