Scout is still a young girl who does not fully understand certain issues in life. She presumes that she knows the answers, however, in reality we know that it is only what she thinks and not the true meaning of the subject at hand. Dill asks her "Scout, let's get us a baby." (Harper 143), though Scout does not know where they can get one, she remarks that her "Aunty" (Harper 144) told her that God drops them into the chimney. Dills explanation however is quite far-fetched, he explains that a man rows to an island where the babies are kept and he breathes life into them. Moreover, Dill elucidates to Scout that you get them from each other. Scout portrays child-like innocence as she does not know the complete human nature and she still trusts story like answers that build her imagination.
It suddenly starts to snow in Maycomb when Scout looks out the window; she allows her imagination to roam. She thinks "The world's endin', Atticus!" (Harper 64). Her sudden conclusion is a result of her naivety, since she has yet to learn about the world she lives in. Anything unnatural might cause her to relate it to something she already knows about, leading her to sudden uneducated conclusions. Scouts character is meant to be simple-minded because of her young age and childish