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The thesis dwells on two themes —science and society, war and world, inH.G. Wells s three early science fictions (The Time Machine, The Island of Dr.Moreau and The War of the Worlds) in the light of Critical Theory with itstechnocracy and authoritarianism.In his science fictions, Wells exerts hisimagination to the full and reflects and foresees the crises of contemporarysociety, especially those brought about by the development of science andtechnology in the modern world.Science fiction becomes a device for Wells todelineate mans response to advance in science and technology."Wells in hisearly years was far from being an unquestioning positivist.His attitude toscience was,in fact,skeptical…"<(1)>In The Time Machine,he presents,prospect of class division and alienation of man in modern society, i.e. whenmaterial life is bettered off human beings begin to decay physically andaccount of how Dr. Moreaus misuse of antiseptic surgery and his specialscientific knowledge of laws of growth to control the Beast People causes theirphysical sufferings and grotesqueness and mental distortion. Thus he foretellsthe source of ideological transformation in advanced industrialized society—science and technoloay as ideology. In The War of the Worlds, Wells dealswarfare. In a literary way he criticizes Western expansionism in his made-upstory about an imagined invasion of planet Earth by cruel, powerful beingsfrom Mars. Meanwhile, Fascism is predicted in this very novel through theexposure of the Earth Peoples sadistic lust for power over those inferior tothem and their masochistic craving for submission to those superior Mydiscussion of the two themes in the three novels, with the aid of Marcuse,Habermas and Fromms Critical Theory concerning technocracy andauthoritarianism, attempts to help the reader gain a new insight into the valueof H. G. Wellss science fictions.