Naw, the “interesting pattern” is the contrived “fire, earth, water, air, void” pattern to the suggestions. It seems rather out of character for that meme to slip into MoR Harry’s subconscious, though.
These two patterns are the same. Recall that the world is composed of four elemental planes, and each element is attracted to its plane. This explains why rocks fall but air rises in water.
Classically, we would expect the plane of fire to lie above the atmosphere, because fire rises in air. But in this case, fire is the lowest plane.
I now want to see someone write a high school physics’ handbook in which every single fact that gets mentioned is correctly described, but everything is interpreted according to Aristotelian physics.
True, I didn’t look at it that way. It seems more likely that that’s correct—“Why those exact five?”—but why would Quirrell find it so amusing?
edit: Maybe Voldemort has already hidden his Horcruxes in just those manners—we already suspect that he launched one into space. In that case the riddle may be—given that Harry and Voldemort think in precisely the same way, how can Voldemort think of a hiding place that Harry wouldn’t think of himself?
edit2: It’s out of character for them to come naturally to Harry, but not to Voldemort. Voldemort is into that kind of superstitious ambiance—e.g. he wanted precisely 7 Horcruxes, because it’s a lucky number. Harry is part Voldemort, so that’s why they slipped into his subconscious.
Naw, the “interesting pattern” is the contrived “fire, earth, water, air, void” pattern to the suggestions. It seems rather out of character for that meme to slip into MoR Harry’s subconscious, though.
Really? Not “inaccessible places ordered by increasing distance from the centre of the earth”.
These two patterns are the same. Recall that the world is composed of four elemental planes, and each element is attracted to its plane. This explains why rocks fall but air rises in water.
Classically, we would expect the plane of fire to lie above the atmosphere, because fire rises in air. But in this case, fire is the lowest plane.
I now want to see someone write a high school physics’ handbook in which every single fact that gets mentioned is correctly described, but everything is interpreted according to Aristotelian physics.
True, I didn’t look at it that way. It seems more likely that that’s correct—“Why those exact five?”—but why would Quirrell find it so amusing?
edit: Maybe Voldemort has already hidden his Horcruxes in just those manners—we already suspect that he launched one into space. In that case the riddle may be—given that Harry and Voldemort think in precisely the same way, how can Voldemort think of a hiding place that Harry wouldn’t think of himself?
edit2: It’s out of character for them to come naturally to Harry, but not to Voldemort. Voldemort is into that kind of superstitious ambiance—e.g. he wanted precisely 7 Horcruxes, because it’s a lucky number. Harry is part Voldemort, so that’s why they slipped into his subconscious.
*shrug* maybe I’m grasping at straws.