Thursday, November 7, 2019
John Stuart Mill V. HG Wells essays
John Stuart Mill V. HG Wells essays    In the coming of the 20th century many attitudes began to     change. Views traditionally held started to be questioned. This     is most evident in the literature of the time. Many wrote about     social change in various forms. Mill in his book The Subjection     of Women challenged the long held belief that women were     inferior. He used examples from society to show that other     injustices were righted and so to should the subjection of women.     Wells? book The Time Machine was a warning to people about the     consequences of further social wrongs. Together they lay an     	The main topic in The Subjection of Women is obviously the     treatment of women. Despite this Mill also comments on other     aspects of society. He does not solely concentrate on women's     rights. This allows a comparison to other works about different     subjects. Wells only briefly addresses women in his book, but we     can still compare the two on different ideas.     	Mill starts discussing how power is doled out. He submits     that in older times power was taken by those with greater force.     Might makes right, is the gist of his argument. He calls this a,     ?... primitive condition ...?(Mill 7). In more civilized times,     he contends, this should not be so. The need for physical     superiority is gone and this tradition of dominance over women     should be ended. Wells also addresses this in his work. In the     future his time traveler sees that future humans are still     subject to the idea that physical superiority still counts. The     Eloi are delicate creatures that no longer are strong or brave.     There hasn't been any need for physical readiness for generations     of Eloi. This ends up being there downfall. Their inability to     defend themselves has subjected them to fearing the Morlocks. The     Morlocks now controlled the planet because they were physically     	Physical superiority was the origin of class differences. As     rich men could hire people to fight and have bette...     
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