Satire in Brave New World is very evident. Huxley satire in his novel is two directional; first on scientific technology and second on an over-regulated and materialistic society. Huxley is warning that if science is taken to the extreme, science will in fact control man not man control science. Certainly within the novel, man has become a commodities and he has no longer become as a result of sexual relations but rather scientifically controlled test tube breeding. Huxley does not only wish to ridicule but rather he wishes the latent evil present in science which is now playing an even greater dominant role in our society today. Huxley also wishes to provide an alternative a world not based on science rather humanity with all the risks and uncertainties and even pain. The humanity, which should be present in all humans, is mostly present in John the Savage, a person not from the Brave New World society. "I don't want comfort, I want God, I want poetry, I want real dangers, I want freedom, and I want goodness. I want sin." Therefore Huxley provides a society which there is no link between humanity and the natural world and by providing an alternative he provide John an outcast from his birth place because of colour and an outcast of the society of Brave New World because of the people's lack of humanity.
The novel Brave New World uses a dytopic tale style to examine the importance of humanity's relationship with the natural world. Huxley shows the after effects of a society where the link between humanity and the natural world is indistinct. Through using the dystopic tale style of the narrative, the novel that is supposedly depicting a perfect world, a utopia, present the reader with the opposite, a world where the natural has become a victim of technological and scientific advancement and man need to control nature. Thus Huxley shows the responder a world where the link between humanity and the natural world is unavailable except in a few characters which show it slightly and in John the Savage.