If McGonogall is right, then agreed on (1). But not (2): if wizards have integrated a magic source into themselves sufficiently to use it, presumably destroying it could have knock-on effects. If I strap a jetpack to myself, something which strikes directly at the jetpack could still lead to me being left in small, burning fragments when it exploded.
That’s a good point. And even if the magic doesn’t explode, the body might have grown dependent on the magic; we know that wizards don’t break easily, and it seems reasonable that there might be other health benefits as well.
Indeed, especially the really old ones who presumably haven’t bothered to use anything else to sustain their bodies. Rather like vampires descending into dust as the supernatural forces holding them together disappear and the entropy catches up with them.
Which is why newly-created 25 year old vampires becoming grave dust in Buffy always distressed me.
If McGonogall is right, then agreed on (1). But not (2): if wizards have integrated a magic source into themselves sufficiently to use it, presumably destroying it could have knock-on effects. If I strap a jetpack to myself, something which strikes directly at the jetpack could still lead to me being left in small, burning fragments when it exploded.
That’s a good point. And even if the magic doesn’t explode, the body might have grown dependent on the magic; we know that wizards don’t break easily, and it seems reasonable that there might be other health benefits as well.
Indeed, especially the really old ones who presumably haven’t bothered to use anything else to sustain their bodies. Rather like vampires descending into dust as the supernatural forces holding them together disappear and the entropy catches up with them.
Which is why newly-created 25 year old vampires becoming grave dust in Buffy always distressed me.