Wednesday, May 6, 2020

How The Events Of 1984 Have Made Them Who They Are

1984 Chris McCloskey Hillsborough Community College October 27, 2014 Abstract. In these questions I will analyze the characters while focusing on how the events in 1984 have made them who they are. I will also discuss the types of conditioning in the book and give examples of the conditioning. Then I will talk about some of the laws or regulations in the world today that I find to be not-constitutional. Finally I will define progressicism, socialism, communism and Marxism, and who founded them. 1. The characters in 1984 are trained to be collectivists because they stride for social harmony and the satisfaction in life is based on the success of the group as a whole. An example of this is everyone jobs is to make sure that Oceania succeeds against East Asia. (Orwell) 2. The all of the characters that have conformed have the same personalities, they are all obedient. However Winston and Julia are rebellious and stray from the norm. I do not think they have psychological disorder because a psychological disorder is someone who deviates from the norm and those who are found to do so are executed. 3. In the society there is both operant and classical conditioning. One example of operant conditioning is when the prisoners are hung out in front of all the people to see in the streets and on the TVs. An example of the classical conditioning is in the beginning of the book they showed the face of a trader and everyoneShow MoreRelated1984 Research Paper1680 Words   |  7 PagesEveryday we are all in trying to be persuaded into believing something using media and the government, as don’t in George Orwell’s novel, 1984 manipulation is used by the government to persuade the citizens that their leader, Big Brother, is portraying to be. For which ever reason information is manipulated, it is still a form of attempting to persuade opinions. 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