Free Will In Harry Potter And The Sorcerer's Stone

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The Power of Free Will
The journey from childhood to adulthood is filled with many challenges with the desired outcome being a successful entry into adulthood. Almost everyone can relate to learning about the significance of family, how to win the respect of peers, how to value humility, the forces of good and evil, and right and wrong, and when it’s time to rebel or follow the rules. Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone by J.K. Rowling, is an adventure story set in Surrey, England. It’s about the transformation of a timid, weak young boy with a secret gift, into an infamous hero. Harry Potter, escapes a life of abuse to begin a new life filled with adventure and friends who respect him. The recurring theme throughout the book is that we are neither inherently good or bad, rather it’s our choices or decisions that determine who we become and our place in the world.

The author goes to great lengths to create a sense of mystery surrounding Harry Potter. The status-conscious, well-off Dursley family referred to as “ordinary Muggles”, noticed peculiar things starting to happen one day. Strangely dressed …show more content…

As the school year ends their grades at the top of the class, Harry Potter heads home to practice on some magic on his petulant cousin Dudley. The magical, fantasy world of wizards and witches sharply contrast with the dull Muggle world in some respects, although the town’s centers socially and economically function similarly. The people are of mixed blood lines in both worlds but what makes the difference in the social status and power of a person, is individual will, striving. A sense of right and wrong ultimately comes from how responsible a person is toward others. Harry and his friends break Hogwarts’s rules, lie, and solve mysteries to defeat powerful evil forces are awarded the highest honor winning the cup for Gryffindor and secure the Sorcerer’s Stone during their first year at

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