I’m a little perplexed at how Harry’s medical treatment didn’t seem to work; it sounded like it should have bought several minutes, but the action that followed didn’t seem like it could have taken more than 60 seconds. I’ve only read it the once through, so I could be missing it completely, but the timing felt deliberate. (And all the ticks in 88 seem to emphasize the passage of time, though they could well have just been to emphasize the pressure).
My understanding is that once shock is refractory#Refractory), there is no turning back (in particular, oxygenation at that stage is useless). I’m not familiar enough with the medicine to know if it’s reasonable for her to progress that far that quickly, but my layman’s guess is “probably.”
The description of refractory shock is that the ATP in the body has already decayed and diffused out of the cells. Would someone in that state have any way of speaking? Or do we assume that the Law of Dramatic Death Scenes is written into a magician’s powers?
Would someone in that state have any way of speaking? Or do we assume that the Law of Dramatic Death Scenes is written into a magician’s powers?
The dramatic death scene was my interpretation, but I don’t have much experience with people dying violently (thankfully). I don’t know how realistic dramatic death scenes are or how much wizardly fortitude is worth.
Recalling a video I have seen (forgot the source), the actual damage wouldn’t occur upon hypoxia, but upon re-oxygenation. Lack of oxygen at the cellular level does start a fatal chemical reaction, but the structure of the cells are largely preserved. But when you put oxygen back, everything blows up (or swells up, actually).
Harry may very well have killed Hermione with his oxygen shot. If he froze her before then, it might have worked, but after that… her information might be lost.
One obvious objection: Hermione was still concious enough to say some last words, ruling out advanced brain de-oxygenation. That could be only for the drama, but still.
One obvious consequence: that magic feeling upon death might be linked to plain muggle information-theoretic death somehow. But then, we have horcrucxes and Avada Kedavra… I’m quite confused by HPMOR’s “laws of physics”.
Wizards have souls. - their minds are running on more than just wetware. I am fairly certain of this, because otherwise shape shifting would be instantly fatal.
Wizard’s brain is imaged into magical representation.
Transfiguration then takes place with control by live magical representation of wizards brain. Could this also be connected to how animagi are dementor-resistant?
My understanding is that once shock is refractory#Refractory), there is no turning back (in particular, oxygenation at that stage is useless). I’m not familiar enough with the medicine to know if it’s reasonable for her to progress that far that quickly, but my layman’s guess is “probably.”
The description of refractory shock is that the ATP in the body has already decayed and diffused out of the cells. Would someone in that state have any way of speaking? Or do we assume that the Law of Dramatic Death Scenes is written into a magician’s powers?
The dramatic death scene was my interpretation, but I don’t have much experience with people dying violently (thankfully). I don’t know how realistic dramatic death scenes are or how much wizardly fortitude is worth.
Recalling a video I have seen (forgot the source), the actual damage wouldn’t occur upon hypoxia, but upon re-oxygenation. Lack of oxygen at the cellular level does start a fatal chemical reaction, but the structure of the cells are largely preserved. But when you put oxygen back, everything blows up (or swells up, actually).
Harry may very well have killed Hermione with his oxygen shot. If he froze her before then, it might have worked, but after that… her information might be lost.
One obvious objection: Hermione was still concious enough to say some last words, ruling out advanced brain de-oxygenation. That could be only for the drama, but still.
One obvious consequence: that magic feeling upon death might be linked to plain muggle information-theoretic death somehow. But then, we have horcrucxes and Avada Kedavra… I’m quite confused by HPMOR’s “laws of physics”.
Wizards have souls. - their minds are running on more than just wetware. I am fairly certain of this, because otherwise shape shifting would be instantly fatal.
Or their brains are stored in hammerspace but maintain control of the transfigured body.
Possible analysis of the Animagus xform:
Wizard’s brain is imaged into magical representation. Transfiguration then takes place with control by live magical representation of wizards brain. Could this also be connected to how animagi are dementor-resistant?