it’s completely appropriate to feel revulsion at the idea of killing the one person in the trolley problem… as long as you feel five times as much revulsion at the idea of letting the five in the trolley die.
That’s what I mean by an irrational degree of revulsion. As far as we can tell, it doesn’t even occur to him that a Horcrux trades off a finite life for an infinite one.
creating a Horcrux requires genuine hatred and malevolence.
There are mind-altering spells. The clinic doctor can make you evil enough to cast the spell, and then do Finite Incantatem once the process is done.
Haha, good point. Still, this is all in the hypothetical false world that Harry should have inferred from the information available to him, in which Horcruxes grant undyingness rather than just making backups.
That’s what I mean by an irrational degree of revulsion. As far as we can tell, it doesn’t even occur to him that a Horcrux trades off a finite life for an infinite one.
There are mind-altering spells. The clinic doctor can make you evil enough to cast the spell, and then do Finite Incantatem once the process is done.
Does that mean your backup copy will be of the evil you?
Haha, good point. Still, this is all in the hypothetical false world that Harry should have inferred from the information available to him, in which Horcruxes grant undyingness rather than just making backups.