[{"data":1,"prerenderedAt":-1},["ShallowReactive",2],{"archetype-name-map":3,"thinker-aldous-huxley":100},[4,7,10,13,16,19,22,25,28,31,34,37,40,43,46,49,52,55,58,61,64,67,70,73,76,79,82,85,88,91,94,97],{"slug":5,"name":6},"anarcho-capitalist","Anarcho-Capitalist",{"slug":8,"name":9},"establishment-progressive","Establishment Progressive",{"slug":11,"name":12},"progressive-activist","Progressive Activist",{"slug":14,"name":15},"techno-progressive","Techno-Progressive",{"slug":17,"name":18},"patriotic-progressive","Patriotic Progressive",{"slug":20,"name":21},"conservative-democrat","Conservative Democrat",{"slug":23,"name":24},"moderate-conservative","Moderate Conservative",{"slug":26,"name":27},"reform-conservative","Reform Conservative",{"slug":29,"name":30},"religious-conservative","Religious Conservative",{"slug":32,"name":33},"traditionalist","Traditionalist",{"slug":35,"name":36},"national-populist","National Populist",{"slug":38,"name":39},"left-nationalist","Left Nationalist",{"slug":41,"name":42},"welfare-nationalist","Welfare Nationalist",{"slug":44,"name":45},"moderate-liberal","Moderate Liberal",{"slug":47,"name":48},"pragmatic-centrist","Pragmatic Centrist",{"slug":50,"name":51},"authoritarian-left","Authoritarian Left",{"slug":53,"name":54},"authoritarian-right","Authoritarian Right",{"slug":56,"name":57},"democratic-socialist","Democratic Socialist",{"slug":59,"name":60},"christian-socialist","Christian Socialist",{"slug":62,"name":63},"market-socialist","Market Socialist",{"slug":65,"name":66},"trad-socialist","Trad Socialist",{"slug":68,"name":69},"civil-libertarian","Civil Libertarian",{"slug":71,"name":72},"compassionate-libertarian","Compassionate Libertarian",{"slug":74,"name":75},"left-libertarian","Left Libertarian",{"slug":77,"name":78},"traditional-libertarian","Traditional Libertarian",{"slug":80,"name":81},"classical-liberal","Classical Liberal",{"slug":83,"name":84},"social-liberal","Social Liberal",{"slug":86,"name":87},"national-conservative","National Conservative",{"slug":89,"name":90},"neoconservative","Neoconservative",{"slug":92,"name":93},"techno-authoritarian","Techno-Authoritarian",{"slug":95,"name":96},"independent-thinker","Independent Thinker",{"slug":98,"name":99},"market-liberal","Market Liberal",{"thinker":101,"archetypes":141,"traditions":142},{"id":102,"slug":103,"name":104,"sort_name":105,"birth_year":106,"death_year":107,"nationality":108,"era":109,"one_line":110,"bio":111,"portrait_url":112,"has_portrait":113,"sort_priority":114,"is_living":115,"created_at":116,"updated_at":116,"search_vector":117,"primary_role":118,"secondary_roles":119,"notable_quotes":120,"historical_tensions":130,"plcf_score":137,"mesr_score":138,"dipg_score":139,"cult_score":140,"figure_descriptor":108,"figure_class":108,"editorial_review":115},629,"aldous-huxley","Aldous Huxley","Huxley, Aldous",1894,1963,null,"20th Century","Brave New World author, perennial philosophy","Aldous Huxley was a British novelist and essayist whose Brave New World envisioned a dystopia of pleasure, not pain—a world where humans are engineered for happiness and drugged into contentment. Born into scientific and literary royalty (his grandfather was Darwin's defender T.H. Huxley, his brother the biologist Julian Huxley), Aldous turned his penetrating intelligence to social criticism.\n\nBrave New World (1932) depicted a future where genetic engineering, conditioning, and the drug 'soma' eliminated suffering—and with it, freedom, love, art, and meaning. Unlike Orwell's 1984, Huxley's dystopia needed no totalitarian coercion; people chose their servitude. His warning about technological control through pleasure seems increasingly prescient.\n\nHuxley's later work explored mysticism and consciousness. The Doors of Perception described his mescaline experiences; The Perennial Philosophy found common truths across religious traditions. He emigrated to California, where he influenced the counterculture and died on November 22, 1963—the same day as JFK and C.S. Lewis—while on LSD at his request.","\u002Fimages\u002Ffigures\u002Fwebp\u002Fhuxley.webp",true,5,false,"2026-05-04T19:18:37.125364+00:00","'1932':71C '1963':157C '1984':96C '22':156C 'across':140C 'aldous':1A,9C,60C 'art':90C 'author':6B 'biologist':57C 'born':40C 'brave':3B,18C,68C 'british':13C 'brother':55C 'c.s':164C 'california':146C 'chose':105C 'coercion':103C 'common':138C 'condit':78C 'conscious':125C 'content':39C 'control':112C 'countercultur':151C 'critic':67C 'darwin':49C 'day':160C 'defend':51C 'depict':72C 'describ':130C 'die':153C 'door':127C 'drug':37C,81C 'dystopia':23C,99C 'elimin':83C 'emigr':144C 'engin':33C,77C 'envis':21C 'essayist':16C 'experi':133C 'explor':122C 'found':137C 'freedom':88C 'futur':74C 'genet':76C 'grandfath':47C 'happi':35C 'human':31C 'huxley':2A,10C,53C,59C,97C,118C 'increas':116C 'influenc':149C 'intellig':64C 'jfk':162C 'julian':58C 'later':120C 'lewi':165C 'literari':44C 'love':89C 'lsd':168C 'mean':92C 'mescalin':132C 'mystic':123C 'need':100C 'new':4B,19C,69C 'novelist':14C 'novemb':155C 'orwel':94C 'pain':27C 'penetr':63C 'peopl':104C 'percept':129C 'perenni':7B,135C 'philosophi':8B,136C 'pleasur':25C,114C 'prescient':117C 'religi':141C 'request':171C 'royalti':45C 'scientif':42C 'seem':115C 'servitud':107C 'social':66C 'soma':82C 'suffer':84C 't.h':52C 'technolog':111C 'totalitarian':102C 'tradit':142C 'truth':139C 'turn':61C 'unlik':93C 'warn':109C 'whose':17C 'work':121C 'world':5B,20C,29C,70C","writer",[],[121,124,127],{"quote":122,"context":123},"Maybe this world is another planet's Hell.","Attributed",{"quote":125,"context":126},"Facts do not cease to exist because they are ignored.","Proper Studies, 1927",{"quote":128,"context":129},"Experience is not what happens to you; it's what you do with what happens to you.","Various",[131,133,135],{"title":132,"summary":132},"Scientific rationalist who became a mystic",{"title":134,"summary":134},"Elite intellectual who influenced popular counterculture",{"title":136,"summary":136},"Social critic who ended life in Hollywood",90,47,73,75,[],[143,149],{"is_primary":113,"traditions":144},{"id":145,"name":146,"slug":147,"short_description":148},53,"Critique of Modernity","critique-of-modernity","The intellectual tradition that questions the assumptions and consequences of modern Western civilization.",{"is_primary":115,"traditions":150},{"id":151,"name":152,"slug":153,"short_description":154},158,"Political Theology","political-theology","The tradition of reflecting systematically on the relationship between religious concepts and political authority, and on how theological categories underlie ostensibly secular political thought."]