Do Androids Dream Of Electric Sheep Analysis

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Philip K. Dick’s Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? characterizes individual relationships with the world. Based on false ideas of unity, this society lost sight of humanity. The capacity to be alone with oneself and the silence of the world no longer served humankind as the people embarked on new methods of fabricating escape and refused to acknowledge a new definition of humanity.
Individuals were constantly in motion for the fear that static would overtake them. “Unhealthy” feelings emerged when people “sense[d] absence of life” because they “appreciate[d] the existence of” others like them (Dick 5, 40). Being left alone made an individual susceptible to anxieties of having “nothing left” (222). The emptiness felt by those remaining on Earth caused growing urges to escape to an “instantly available,” “alien,” and “distant” world where the “awful, total power” of silence could be masked (21, 19). The only remedy included constructing false connections to cope with the “silence of the
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Holding the highest power allowed him to form a “distinction between authentic living humans and humanoid constructs” which he placed in a category of “non people” (Dick 132, 188). Although the philosophical beliefs of man stated that everything would one day “merge” into the “identical,” “faceless,” “kipple-piled” “entropic ruin,” the average human felt that he could have no connection to an android or damaged human while still alive (20). On the contrary, each section of society was defective with the similar fear of isolation including Iran Deckard who “heard the emptiness intellectually,” J.R. Isidore who was “smote” by the silence, and androids who found “all [of] Mars” to be desolate and “lonely,” “worse than” Earth (5, 19,138). Man used his social status to ignore the commonalities of humanity because he believed faults evaded