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Isolation In Fahrenheit 451

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Tradition locks one's mind in a prison cell. People's thoughts and opinions are isolated to their own culture's belief and are imprisoned from their surroundings. Tradition is irrelevant because it prevents an individual from growing and learning. Customs stop a person from developing a unique persona. For instance, my mother and other Christians frown upon those who are not abstinent until marriage. This mentality isolates the person from experiences and instead making them ignorant on the topic. The belief is something beautiful to follow, but many when told they're supposed to follow it with no exceptions, end up taking the wrong path and making mistakes because they were not informed. They only have the custom to latch on to and nothing else to grow on since the parents do not educate their kids on the topic. The tradition of waiting till marriage creates a mind that is innocent and unsure of what the world can give. The ideology makes a person unable to evolve and expand as an individual. …show more content…

For example, in Fahrenheit 451 the government does not want the people to have their own personal ideas. The city where the novel takes place has created a custom where people are not permitted to learn from books since they're burned with their knowledge. Also, houses are made so they do not have porches because they create leisure to think that the government does not want for the people. When a person does not have their own thoughts, the whole community becomes homogenous and almost like robots. Mildred and others in the city are lacking awareness of life and find comfort in materialistic things. The absence of identity does not allow the person to learn and expand on their ideas, but creates an ignorant and closed-minded

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