1. Why is Dr. Shaw glad "to have had this opportunity to see an example of senility in a human being." (p. 155)?Dr. Shaw is glad "to have had this opportunity to see an example senility in a human being," because he can study the a human who was born into the World State, but was forced to abandon the ways of the World State for those on the reservation, and he can study the way this has affected her, but also the way returning to the World State and it's standards, affects her, which he can see through the amount of soma she is taking, will kill her within two months.
2. Why are people saying behind Bernard's back that, "He won't find another Savage to help him out a second time." (p. 157)?
People are saying behind Bernard's back that, "He won't find another Savage to help him out a second time," meaning that his success at finding a Savage will not last, and he will go back to being odd, and depressed, unlike everyone else around him. His success with John, and the excitement to from Society to study the oddity who proclaimed the ex-Director to be "my father!," will eventually end, as John is either returned to the reservation or integrated into the World State.
3. Why do the Eton students in the Beta-Minus Geography room laugh at the religious activities of "savages"? Why do you think it significant that there are no twins at Eton? Do you think that is still true today?
The Eton students in the Beta-Minus Geography room laugh at the religious activities of the "savages," because it seems so ridiculous and foreign to them that they can not take it seriously, or understand it at all. I think it is significant that there are no twins at Eton, because there must be individual thinking, not thinking as a whole group. This is so that Etonians can react separate of each other in unexpected emergencies. I think that today, everyone thinks individually, whethe s/he is a twin or not. Twins may have similar ideas, however, in this day and age, everyone is there own person, and completely different from those around them.
4. How do children in the World State learn about Death?
Children in the World State learn about Death starting at eighteen months old, and spends two days a week at the Hospital for the Dying. They keep all the best toys there, and they are given chocolate ice cream on death days. This way "they learn to take dying as a matter of course"
5. Why do lower-caste workers receive daily Soma rations? Do we do this today?
Lower-caste workers receive daily Soma rations for completing their day's work. Today, this is like giving a child a snack of cookies everyday after s/he gets home from school as a sort of reward for going to school.
6. Why does John tell Lenina that, "I don't think you ought to see things like that." (p. 169)?
John tells Lenina that "I don't think you ought to see things like that," because he thinks the film was "base," and "ignoble." He finds the film horrible because of the Beta-blonde's becoming a mistress to all of her rescuers, and the perhaps because of the racial allegations the film presented.