Peculiar Child Identity

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Often enough, we are told to “live one day at a time”, which brings to the table the question of how one should live life. I, however, wonder if there is a set standard as to how one should live life and, if so, why there is a certain way one thinks they need to live. One should not need to live life any specific way. This idealism is created by those who influence an individual’s identity. Everyone’s self identity is affected by others whether we notice it or not, creating an identity that we portray to others as our actual self. Miss Peregrine’s Home for Peculiar Children, is a film about a boy, Jacob, who discovers clues, left by his grandfather, to a location existing outside the real world and in a different time. This location will come to be known as Miss Peregrine’s Home for Peculiar Children. The setting of the home revolves around one single day where the children live the same day everyday, which revolves around the philosophical aspect of idealism. Each child has a specific chore that they must complete everyday, at the same time, and in the same way. If a duty is not completed the day is changed forever and the children will have to further complicate their daily routine to prevent and mishaps. At the end of the day, Miss Peregrine turns winds back her watch to restart the day and infinitely …show more content…

Furthermore, he advocates that our moral self is guided by feelings and our personal sense of goodness and self worth. On the other hand, Descartes believes we act based on innate knowledge rather than sensory experience or the influence of our environment. “Descartes' official doctrine has it that ideas are innate insofar as their content derives from the nature of the mind alone, as opposed to deriving from sense experience.” (Newman). Meaning, Descartes must believe we create and contain our own perfect ideal since our ideas and knowledge are not affected by

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