What would a hypothesis about the end of the story look like which uses only information from chapter 1?
Claim: Harry’s war with Voldemort will destroy the world.
Support: In Chapter 1, Petunia says about Lily’s reasons for not making her pretty, “And Lily would tell me no, and make up the most ridiculous excuses, like the world would end if she were nice to her sister, or a centaur told her not to …” Suppose Lily really did say those things, and believed them, and that there was the force of a prophecy behind them. If Lily hadn’t made Petunia pretty, Petunia would not have married Michael Verres, and Harry would not have grown up with science and math and sci-fi (and the attendant humanism) and rationality. A much weaker Harry would have attended Hogwarts, and fought Voldemort, and presumably would have lost. The world would survive, albeit under Voldemort’s thumb.
As a result of Petunia being made pretty, Harry grew up around books that made him strong, strong enough to pose a credible challenge to Voldemort. If they’re evenly matched, and fight to the death, then they take the world down with them.
This feels consistent with the events in the story so far, but it doesn’t really seem that the story is driving towards this conclusion. Except most recently, with the ominous feelings from the various seers following (caused by? who knows) Harry’s ominous resolution in chapter 85.
But it’s all I’ve got for a prediction that’s consistent with the events thus far and is foreshadowed in chapter 1.
I’ve always suspected that Petunia’s paraphrases there of Lily are mostly true — that’s a contributing factor to my believing that some level of apocalypse is in the story’s future — but just guessing that Really Bad Stuff is going to happen seems a far cry from us “getting ‘the plot’ ” from Chapter 1, or chapters 1 through 3.
Neither the remainder of Chapter 1 nor the whole of Chapter 2 seem to have any significant hints. In Chapter 3, here is what I can see that might have hidden meaning:
“I had the strangest feeling that I knew him...” Harry rubbed his forehead. “And that I shouldn’t ought to shake his hand.” Like meeting someone who had been a friend, once, before something went drastically wrong… that wasn’t really it at all, but Harry couldn’t find words.
Maybe we were supposed to get more out of this at the time? Perhaps we were supposed to infer that Quirrell or one of his alter egos had been an up-and-coming hero?
The Killing Curse is formed of pure hate, and strikes directly at the soul, severing it from the body. It cannot be blocked. The only defense is not to be there.
Maybe, contrary to my previous protestations, we are supposed to believe that Harry wasn’t really hit with Avada Kedavra?
(And somewhere in the back of his mind was a small, small note of confusion, a sense of something wrong about that story; and it should have been a part of Harry’s art to notice that tiny note, but he was distracted. For it is a sad rule that whenever you are most in need of your art as a rationalist, that is when you are most likely to forget it.)
I’d always chalked this up as being the revelation Harry has at the end of the Humanism arc: that Dark Lords don’t usually go after infant children, and that there must be an important reason why Voldemort did. But maybe there’s something more to it.
…Or, conversely, maybe we have already figured out the stuff Eliezer was referring to, we just didn’t figure it out as early as he expected. Matheist, do you have a link to that quote? I couldn’t find it by ⌘Fing Methods’s TV Tropes pages.
(Does anyone else find it really weird to read “EY” as a reference to Eliezer? It always reads to me like a Spivak pronoun with faulty verb agreement.)
Caution, possible spoilers, in the form of comments about the guessability (or lack thereof) of the plot. First quote and second quote.
I always assumed that the note of confusion was, “How could anyone possibly know what spells the dark lord cast, and what the effects were, if there were no survivors besides a baby”.
Hmm. It occurs to me that Harry’s life in chapters 1 and 2 bears some similarities to Tom Riddle’s life from canon. Both their mothers used potions to make their fathers love them; both their fathers thought magic was disgraceful; the Deputy Head of Hogwarts visited both of them, showed them magic, made them thirsty for knowledge of magic, and warned them against unacceptable behavior that both of them had exhibited in the past; both of them always knew they were extraordinary, and were proved right when magic came into their lives.
…but even if all that is intentional, which it almost certainly is, I still don’t see what we’re supposed to infer about the entire plot. Is Harry going to grow up, murder his family, create six Horcruxes, and hide them where someone can easily find them and destroy them?
I always assumed that the note of confusion was, “How could anyone possibly know what spells the dark lord cast, and what the effects were, if there were no survivors besides a baby”.
That makes quite a bit more sense, and should in fact have been incredibly obvious. I didn’t start reading Methods until the hiatus following the Stanford Prison Experiment arc, and I didn’t start thinking and theorizing until after I’d read all those chapters twice, so I didn’t approach the question with a properly blank slate.
The most frustrating part of that note of confusion lies in the magic of the world, I think. What is actually possible to do with magic? What do witches and wizards think is possible? What does Harry think is possible?
Let me illustrate by looking at the question that you brought up:
How could anyone possibly know what spells the dark lord cast, and what the effects were, if there were no survivors besides a baby?
Prior Incantato: If they got their hands on Voldemort’s wand, then they could see that he cast the Killing Curse. This would be weak evidence indeed, but it is possible to see what he cast. They did not recover Voldemort’s wand, but Harry doesn’t know this. Canon and MoR founded. Harry has no idea of whether or not it is possible.
Legilimency: A somewhat popular fan theory for canon, Dumbledore could have read baby Harry’s mind right afterwards. Canon and MoR founded. Harry has no idea of whether or not it is possible.
Curse Scar: A lot of people make a huge deal out of the scar that Harry has. They seem to feel that it was created from surviving exposure to the Killing Curse, though how that would be known when he was the first ever is something of a mystery. Perhaps because it registers similarly to scars left behind by other Dark curses, at least in terms of being unhealable. See residue. Somewhat canon-founded. Harry has no idea of whether or not it is possible.
Divination/Scrying/Past-Viewing: It might be possible to remotely view the scene, to see what happened, from the past, in real time, or in the future. Divination is real, though it seems to be more cryptic than that, Scrying seems to be unknown, but Past-viewing is clearly not possible after what happened with Hermione, though Harry doesn’t know this yet. Partially founded. Harry has no idea of whether or not it is possible.
Wards: Clearly whatever wards they put up in addition to the Fidelius Charm (because in a more competent world, they shouldn’t have had a single point of failure) did not keep Voldemort out, but that didn’t mean that the monitoring aspects had to have died. It’s possible that there’s a magical video of the whole thing, or a record of what spells were cast where and when. Primarily speculative. Harry has no idea of whether or not it is possible.
Killing Curse residue: Perhaps one way that they could distinguish if the Killing Curse was involved in a death is by checking the bodies to see if there is a residue left over on the corpse. If Harry has the residue but is still alive, that would be strong evidence. Speculative. Harry has no idea of whether or not it is possible.
And this is just what I thought up in a few minutes. Harry could have multitudes of ideas about how magic works and what it could do, but until he learns something, he has no idea of what’s possible. How could the question be “how do they know?” when there are so many different possibilities of how they could know?
We’re not really much better, because though we have a leg up from canon, MoR has already changed some of the rules.
Hm, that’s a very good point. If Harry is aware of his own ignorance, then he might be willing to accept that there are ways of knowing things like “which spell did the dark lord cast”, without actually knowing himself what those ways are.
In that case — i.e. in the case where Harry is aware of his own ignorance and is aware in that moment — then I have no idea what else the note of confusion could be.
As I’ve thought before, the note of confusion could be why a spell that “strikes directly at the soul, severing it from the body” would leave a “burnt hulk of his body.”
It’s not doubtless, there are explanations for why this might make sense—perhaps it does kill at a touch, and then sets the body on fire; it’s magic, who knows?--but this makes the most sense to me.
If Harry’s going to end the world, surely a more likely way—especially given the author’s known interests and opinions—is by bringing about the magical world’s equivalent of a Singularity? MoR!Harry is on record (albeit not in chapters 1-3) as wanting to take over the world and, er, optimize it. There are suggestions elsewhere that terrible things have happened in the past on account of over-powerful magic. (Again, not in chapters 1-3.) Centaurs and other purveyors of prophecy might dread this even if the singularity ends up being a good one, because it would be a point beyond which they wouldn’t be able to see anything.
Another possibility—which again could reasonably be said to be heavily foreshadowed, if it comes to pass, but not in the first few chapters: Harry is somehow going to put an end to magic. (He wants to do away with Azkaban by any means possible, no matter how drastic. He’s already explicitly considered the question of which side he’d be on if it came down to muggles versus wizards, and decided for the muggles.)
I don’t assign a terribly high probability to either of these. There seems to be no shortage of mutually incompatible outcomes with a certain degree of foreshadowing, and if there’s a good way to decide between them then I haven’t spotted it yet.
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What would a hypothesis about the end of the story look like which uses only information from chapter 1?
Claim: Harry’s war with Voldemort will destroy the world. Support: In Chapter 1, Petunia says about Lily’s reasons for not making her pretty, “And Lily would tell me no, and make up the most ridiculous excuses, like the world would end if she were nice to her sister, or a centaur told her not to …” Suppose Lily really did say those things, and believed them, and that there was the force of a prophecy behind them. If Lily hadn’t made Petunia pretty, Petunia would not have married Michael Verres, and Harry would not have grown up with science and math and sci-fi (and the attendant humanism) and rationality. A much weaker Harry would have attended Hogwarts, and fought Voldemort, and presumably would have lost. The world would survive, albeit under Voldemort’s thumb.
As a result of Petunia being made pretty, Harry grew up around books that made him strong, strong enough to pose a credible challenge to Voldemort. If they’re evenly matched, and fight to the death, then they take the world down with them.
This feels consistent with the events in the story so far, but it doesn’t really seem that the story is driving towards this conclusion. Except most recently, with the ominous feelings from the various seers following (caused by? who knows) Harry’s ominous resolution in chapter 85.
But it’s all I’ve got for a prediction that’s consistent with the events thus far and is foreshadowed in chapter 1.
I’ve always suspected that Petunia’s paraphrases there of Lily are mostly true — that’s a contributing factor to my believing that some level of apocalypse is in the story’s future — but just guessing that Really Bad Stuff is going to happen seems a far cry from us “getting ‘the plot’ ” from Chapter 1, or chapters 1 through 3.
Neither the remainder of Chapter 1 nor the whole of Chapter 2 seem to have any significant hints. In Chapter 3, here is what I can see that might have hidden meaning:
Maybe we were supposed to get more out of this at the time? Perhaps we were supposed to infer that Quirrell or one of his alter egos had been an up-and-coming hero?
Maybe, contrary to my previous protestations, we are supposed to believe that Harry wasn’t really hit with Avada Kedavra?
I’d always chalked this up as being the revelation Harry has at the end of the Humanism arc: that Dark Lords don’t usually go after infant children, and that there must be an important reason why Voldemort did. But maybe there’s something more to it.
…Or, conversely, maybe we have already figured out the stuff Eliezer was referring to, we just didn’t figure it out as early as he expected. Matheist, do you have a link to that quote? I couldn’t find it by ⌘Fing Methods’s TV Tropes pages.
(Does anyone else find it really weird to read “EY” as a reference to Eliezer? It always reads to me like a Spivak pronoun with faulty verb agreement.)
Caution, possible spoilers, in the form of comments about the guessability (or lack thereof) of the plot. First quote and second quote.
I always assumed that the note of confusion was, “How could anyone possibly know what spells the dark lord cast, and what the effects were, if there were no survivors besides a baby”.
Hmm. It occurs to me that Harry’s life in chapters 1 and 2 bears some similarities to Tom Riddle’s life from canon. Both their mothers used potions to make their fathers love them; both their fathers thought magic was disgraceful; the Deputy Head of Hogwarts visited both of them, showed them magic, made them thirsty for knowledge of magic, and warned them against unacceptable behavior that both of them had exhibited in the past; both of them always knew they were extraordinary, and were proved right when magic came into their lives.
…but even if all that is intentional, which it almost certainly is, I still don’t see what we’re supposed to infer about the entire plot. Is Harry going to grow up, murder his family, create six Horcruxes, and hide them where someone can easily find them and destroy them?
That makes quite a bit more sense, and should in fact have been incredibly obvious. I didn’t start reading Methods until the hiatus following the Stanford Prison Experiment arc, and I didn’t start thinking and theorizing until after I’d read all those chapters twice, so I didn’t approach the question with a properly blank slate.
The most frustrating part of that note of confusion lies in the magic of the world, I think. What is actually possible to do with magic? What do witches and wizards think is possible? What does Harry think is possible?
Let me illustrate by looking at the question that you brought up:
Prior Incantato: If they got their hands on Voldemort’s wand, then they could see that he cast the Killing Curse. This would be weak evidence indeed, but it is possible to see what he cast. They did not recover Voldemort’s wand, but Harry doesn’t know this. Canon and MoR founded. Harry has no idea of whether or not it is possible.
Legilimency: A somewhat popular fan theory for canon, Dumbledore could have read baby Harry’s mind right afterwards. Canon and MoR founded. Harry has no idea of whether or not it is possible.
Curse Scar: A lot of people make a huge deal out of the scar that Harry has. They seem to feel that it was created from surviving exposure to the Killing Curse, though how that would be known when he was the first ever is something of a mystery. Perhaps because it registers similarly to scars left behind by other Dark curses, at least in terms of being unhealable. See residue. Somewhat canon-founded. Harry has no idea of whether or not it is possible.
Divination/Scrying/Past-Viewing: It might be possible to remotely view the scene, to see what happened, from the past, in real time, or in the future. Divination is real, though it seems to be more cryptic than that, Scrying seems to be unknown, but Past-viewing is clearly not possible after what happened with Hermione, though Harry doesn’t know this yet. Partially founded. Harry has no idea of whether or not it is possible.
Wards: Clearly whatever wards they put up in addition to the Fidelius Charm (because in a more competent world, they shouldn’t have had a single point of failure) did not keep Voldemort out, but that didn’t mean that the monitoring aspects had to have died. It’s possible that there’s a magical video of the whole thing, or a record of what spells were cast where and when. Primarily speculative. Harry has no idea of whether or not it is possible.
Killing Curse residue: Perhaps one way that they could distinguish if the Killing Curse was involved in a death is by checking the bodies to see if there is a residue left over on the corpse. If Harry has the residue but is still alive, that would be strong evidence. Speculative. Harry has no idea of whether or not it is possible.
And this is just what I thought up in a few minutes. Harry could have multitudes of ideas about how magic works and what it could do, but until he learns something, he has no idea of what’s possible. How could the question be “how do they know?” when there are so many different possibilities of how they could know? We’re not really much better, because though we have a leg up from canon, MoR has already changed some of the rules.
Hm, that’s a very good point. If Harry is aware of his own ignorance, then he might be willing to accept that there are ways of knowing things like “which spell did the dark lord cast”, without actually knowing himself what those ways are.
In that case — i.e. in the case where Harry is aware of his own ignorance and is aware in that moment — then I have no idea what else the note of confusion could be.
As I’ve thought before, the note of confusion could be why a spell that “strikes directly at the soul, severing it from the body” would leave a “burnt hulk of his body.”
It’s not doubtless, there are explanations for why this might make sense—perhaps it does kill at a touch, and then sets the body on fire; it’s magic, who knows?--but this makes the most sense to me.
If Harry’s going to end the world, surely a more likely way—especially given the author’s known interests and opinions—is by bringing about the magical world’s equivalent of a Singularity? MoR!Harry is on record (albeit not in chapters 1-3) as wanting to take over the world and, er, optimize it. There are suggestions elsewhere that terrible things have happened in the past on account of over-powerful magic. (Again, not in chapters 1-3.) Centaurs and other purveyors of prophecy might dread this even if the singularity ends up being a good one, because it would be a point beyond which they wouldn’t be able to see anything.
Another possibility—which again could reasonably be said to be heavily foreshadowed, if it comes to pass, but not in the first few chapters: Harry is somehow going to put an end to magic. (He wants to do away with Azkaban by any means possible, no matter how drastic. He’s already explicitly considered the question of which side he’d be on if it came down to muggles versus wizards, and decided for the muggles.)
I don’t assign a terribly high probability to either of these. There seems to be no shortage of mutually incompatible outcomes with a certain degree of foreshadowing, and if there’s a good way to decide between them then I haven’t spotted it yet.
However, Eliezer has said that he doesn’t plan on putting a Singularity in the story.
rot13 please!
Eliezer has stated this publicly (not using the word “singularity”, but I assume that’s what Randaly was thinking of), so it’s not subject to the spoiler policy in this thread’s parent post.