Considering the language used to describe the brightness of the remembrall, I’d guess that it’s supposed to imply that he’s forgotten something of great magnitude or importance.
Magic doesn’t appear to think in terms of natural laws (insofar as it can be said to think,) so forgetting to apply Newtonian physics in a particular situation doesn’t sound like something the remembrall should mark as a major lapse of memory.
Magic doesn’t appear to think in terms of natural laws (insofar as it can be said to think,) so forgetting to apply Newtonian physics in a particular situation doesn’t sound like something the remembrall should mark as a major lapse of memory.
Regardless of what magic thinks the laws of physics are, it ought to notice how important they seem to Harry. However, I still doubt that they’re important enough to Harry as all that (although the writing in Ch 60 may suggest otherwise).
Considering the language used to describe the brightness of the remembrall, I’d guess that it’s supposed to imply that he’s forgotten something of great magnitude or importance.
Magic doesn’t appear to think in terms of natural laws (insofar as it can be said to think,) so forgetting to apply Newtonian physics in a particular situation doesn’t sound like something the remembrall should mark as a major lapse of memory.
Regardless of what magic thinks the laws of physics are, it ought to notice how important they seem to Harry. However, I still doubt that they’re important enough to Harry as all that (although the writing in Ch 60 may suggest otherwise).