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Huxley

[ huhks-lee ]

noun

  1. Al·dous (Leonard) [awl, -d, uh, s], 1894–1963, English novelist, essayist, and critic.
  2. Sir Andrew Fielding, 1918–2012, English physiologist: Nobel Prize in Medicine 1963 (half brother of Aldous and Sir Julian Sorell).
  3. Sir Julian Sor·ell [sor, -, uh, l], 1887–1975, English biologist and writer (brother of Aldous).
  4. Thomas Henry, 1825–95, English biologist and writer (grandfather of Aldous and Sir Julian Sorell Huxley).


Huxley

/ ˈhʌkslɪ /

noun

  1. HuxleyAldous (Leonard)18941963MBritishWRITING: novelistWRITING: essayist Aldous ( Leonard ) (ˈɔːldəs). 1894–1963, British novelist and essayist, noted particularly for his novel Brave New World (1932), depicting a scientifically controlled civilization of human robots
  2. HuxleySir Andrew Fielding19172012MEnglishSCIENCE: biologist his half-brother, Sir Andrew Fielding, 1917–2012, English biologist: noted for his research into nerve cells and the mechanism by which nerve impulses are transmitted; Nobel prize for physiology or medicine shared with Alan Hodgkin and John Eccles 1963; president of the Royal Society (1980–85)
  3. HuxleySir Julian (Sorrel)18871975MEnglishSCIENCE: biologist brother of Aldous, Sir Julian ( Sorrel ). 1887–1975, English biologist; first director-general of UNESCO (1946–48). His works include Essays of a Biologist (1923) and Evolution: the Modern Synthesis (1942)
  4. HuxleyThomas Henry18251895MEnglishSCIENCE: biologist their grandfather, Thomas Henry. 1825–95, English biologist, the leading British exponent of Darwin's theory of evolution; his works include Man's Place in Nature (1863) and Evolution and Ethics (1893)


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Example Sentences

The work of Ortega, Huxley, and the Frankfurt School philosophers gave voice to this fear of homegrown fascism.

In a turn that vindicates Aldous Huxley, one in ten Americans ingests their daily Soma supplement in the form of antidepressants.

The deaths of Lewis and Huxley were mute, private events, only reported in The Times three days later.

Julia Huxley left her son with a deathbed letter he kept all his life: ‘Judge not too much and love more.’

Notwithstanding his own loftier goals, it is questionable whether mescaline and LSD gave Huxley the enlightenment he craved.

Huxley quotes with satirical gusto Dr. Wace's declaration as to the word "Infidel."

Then my luck changed and I found myself under one of the very greatest teachers of his time, Professor Huxley.

But since Huxley wrote those words more evidence has been produced.

His criticism of Huxley's statement is based on two grounds.

I have quoted Lord Macaulay and Huxley as ridiculing those who entertained such an idea.

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HuxleianHuxley, Aldous