Significance And Power Of Knowledge In Fahrenheit 451 By Ray Bradbury

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How does a person view the significance and power of knowledge? Ben Carson says, “If we commit ourselves to reading thus increasing our knowledge, only God limits how far we can go in this world.” (Carson, “Think Big Quotes”). In Ray Bradbury’s novel Fahrenheit 451, Bradbury shows the reader the importance books have to further develop one’s knowledge and how easily society disregards books and can be enslaved by government and the technologies of the world. Knowledge is powerful and intimidating to those who do not understand its importance. I suspect that knowledge is what led Montag astray from the life he knew and what his world thought to be so threatening
Ray Douglas Bradbury is an American born writer who is considered one of the greatest fiction writers of all time. He was born on August 22, 1920 to Leonard and Ester Bradbury in Waukegan, Illinois. …show more content…

He began writing early in life around the age of 12 and made a career of it around 23 or 24. When Bradbury graduated high school in 1938 he could not afford to further his education formally by attending a university or college, instead he would go to the public library on a daily basis and educate himself through reading books. Bradbury married Marguerite “Maggie” McClure in 1947 and had four daughters named Susan (1949), Ramona (1951), Bettina (1955), and Alexandra (1958). (“Ray Bradbury” Bio). Over Bradbury’s extensive writing career, he had published over 30 books, close to 600 short stories, numerous poems, essays, screenplays, and plays. Considering Bradbury had such a distaste for television it was interesting to learn that he wrote multiple screenplays. Bradbury’s most famous, yet still most controversial novel is Fahrenheit 451. Over 60 years since the novel was first published and it is still circulating the academic world in junior highs, high schools, and colleges. On top of Bradbury’s novel Fahrenheit 451 still being

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