This is a new thread to discuss Eliezer Yudkowsky’s Harry Potter and the Methods of Rationality and anything related to it. This thread is intended for discussing chapter 116.

There is a site dedicated to the story at hpmor.com, which is now the place to go to find the authors notes and all sorts of other goodies. AdeleneDawner has kept an archive of Author’s Notes. (This goes up to the notes for chapter 76, and is now not updating. The authors notes from chapter 77 onwards are on hpmor.com.)

Spoiler Warning: this thread is full of spoilers. With few exceptions, spoilers for MOR and canon are fair game to post, without warning or rot13. More specifically:

You do not need to rot13 anything about HP:MoR or the original Harry Potter series unless you are posting insider information from Eliezer Yudkowsky which is not supposed to be publicly available (which includes public statements by Eliezer that have been retracted).

If there is evidence for X in MOR and/or canon then it’s fine to post about X without rot13, even if you also have heard privately from Eliezer that X is true. But you should not post that “Eliezer said X is true” unless you use rot13.

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I can't believe Hermione Granger has been framed for murder by Tom Riddle....again.

8westward9y
"Let's see how you like everyone thinking you defeated the Dark Lord and you not remembering it." -Harry

On /r/HPMOR, some have been speculating that Dumbledore coated the Philosopher's Stone with Bahl's Stupefaction, which you might remember from chapter 63:

"Bahl's Stupefaction," Moody said, naming an extremely addictive narcotic with interesting side effects on people with Slytherin tendencies; Moody had once seen an addicted Dark Wizard go to ridiculous lengths to get a victim to lay hands on a certain exact portkey, instead of just having someone toss the target a trapped Knut on their next visit to town; and after going to all that work, the addict had gone to the further effort to lay a second Portus, on the same portkey, which had, on a second touch, transported the victim back to safety. To this day, even taking the drug into account, Moody could not imagine what could have possibly been going through the man's mind at the time he had cast the second Portus.

This would explain why Voldemort let Harry keep his wand after swearing the Unbreakable Vow, and now also might explain Harry's recent actions.

That's a literal Idiot Ball reference, not to mention canon. I don't think we'll see it.

2Luke_A_Somers9y
But it's not an idiot ball if there's an actual legitimate reason for being stupid. Like, in The Naked Time and The Naked Now, the initial infections were pure idiot ball. The subsequent infections, and the crew doing spectacularly stupid and even suicidal things, were not.
5DanielLC9y
I kind of wish Harry just figured out how to escape earlier. It would have been awesome for him to end the Unbreakable Vow by transfiguring the other wand into a flashbang.
5shminux9y
I hope Eliezer pulls something like this to justify the Villain Ball.
2Astazha9y
I'm a fan of this.
0Decius9y
Voldemort, having spent more than five minutes looking into weaknesses, has figured out how to be immune to things that are common knowledge.

Any volunteers to tell invincible resurrected Dark-Lord-slayer Hermione what grade she got in Defense Against the Dark Arts?

She initially got a fail grade for dying, but then Professor Quirrell let her retake the test.

She got a Dreadful for dying . . . then Professor Quirrell revived her and re-graded her Troll.

Sshall ssacrifice my fallback weapon, and girl-child sshall gain troll'ss power of regeneration.

6Jost9y
Well, she’ll get an Outstanding for “defeating the Dark Lord”. So that pretty much cancels her Fail grade, right?
2Velorien9y
Except there's no Defense Professor available to award her a new grade, and by the time a new one is recruited, it'll be next year and her achievements from the previous academic year will no longer be relevant.

Yup. The fact that she defeated the Dark Lord right after the Professor who flunked her failed to do so will only serve to underscore the injustice.

2TobyBartels9y
Headmistress McGonagall has good grounds to overrule this now.

Oh. I was expecting something like...

-

Chapter 116, alternative version

Harry spun his Time-Turner and returned six hours into the past. Then he took his broomstick and hurried towards Hogwarts.

This time he decided not to repeat his usual mistake. If Lord Voldemort could learn, so could Harry. He didn't have to solve all the problems of the world alone. And Professor Quirrell, his alter ego, was not the only available option.

He hesitated a bit before knocking on Headmaster Dumbledore's door. This is going to be so awkward, he thought. He tried to imagine what to say. Hello, Headmaster. Professor Quirrell is Lord Voldemort, and I have killed him in the future. By the way, it was me in Azkaban, sorry about it, I didn't know back then. Anyway, you are going to die in the mirror soon. To avoid a time paradox, could you just send a copy of yourself or something? Please hurry, we don't have time, you have to trust me! Ironically, that would sound really insane, but Harry now trusted Headmaster Dumbledore to be able to deal with the news. Dumbledore was willing to sacrifice his own life, if it meant destroying the Dark Lord, but Harry hoped there would be a way to avoid it. The timeline had... (read more)

Harry spun his Time-Turner and returned six hours into the past.

Harry only has one hour left on his Time-Turner for the day; he used five hours to do everything he did with Voldemort after Voldemort sent him the forged note at the Quidditch game earlier.

9shminux9y
HPMoR!Harry would never ever do that.
4SilentCal9y
Hardest part to fake is Harry's sense of doom/scar pain/resonance: there probably has to actually be a Riddle in the Voldemort-body as it gets stunned, obliviated and transfigured. Better make sure it's a Horcrux V1 copy. So bring a V1 Horcrux, use it to overwrite the Voldemort body you create with the Stone, then possess that body on top of the Riddle already in there, then abandon ship right before the stunning hex.

"Harry, let me verify that your Time-Turner hasn't been used," said Professor McGonagall.

"LOOK OVER THERE!" Harry screamed, already sprinting for the door.

I think there is a very good chance that McGonagall is worried enough about Hermione, about Dumbledore, ... and won't check Harry's Time-Turner. She's not much into multilevel plots, she's smart, but too honest to live in constant suspicion.

Like she didn't think much about the consequences at the "war level" when she offered the fealty oath to Hermione back then in the Wizengamot.

She sees Harry in pain and traumatized, and she sees the immediate chaos, it wouldn't be very "in character" for her to suddenly suspect Harry and probe him like that.

It could happen because she learned to not follow her "role" anymore, but it still doesn't seem the most likely thing for her to do.

Moody or some aurors on the other hand...

3TobyBartels9y
I think that McGonagall has learnt enough to be suspicious of Harry, but she's still more circumspect than to call him on it in front of the whole school. Maybe she'll check up a bit later, and maybe in private Harry will be happy to tell her the truth anyway, with appropriate precautions. On the other hand, if he's decided not to tell her, then he'll arrange not to be found until it's too late. (When is it too late to check if a time turner has been used?)
3shminux9y
Re aurors: http://www.reddit.com/r/HPMOR/comments/2xxybs/chapter_116/cp4g7ao?context=3
9Duncan9y
A story for the masses is necessary and this doesn't appear to be a bad stab at one. Harry can always bring trusted others on board by telling them what actually happened. He might have actually done that already and this is their plan. How much time did Harry have to do stuff before needing to show up anyhow (40m? 50m?)? Also, Prof. McGonagall is terrible at faking anything so telling her the truth before this seems like a bad idea.
5cousin_it9y
Also, won't anyone go back with a time-turner to check Harry's version of events? Also, won't Snape know?

It seems that death eaters have "anti-time-looping wards" (chap 94), we don't know exactly how they work, nor if they were used in the graveyard, but it could very well be that no time-traveler can check the events that happened on the graveyard.

6MathiasZaman9y
They were used. Voldemort mentions not completely trusting them. Edit: Quote from chapter 113:
5Sheaman37739y
Would you risk going back to a live LV just to check it out? Take the risk that Harry didn't notice some annoying bystander get dispatched, or just didn't mention it? A lot of those revelations only came out when the subject came up, after all. Using a Pensieve would be much safer. You assume Snape isn't one of the headless minions on the ground...
4cousin_it9y
Just watch from a distance, using a telescope.
2Astazha9y
Snape isn't, because he can't apparate from Hogwarts. Amusingly, Snape may interpret his exclusion from the mass sacrifice as a deliberate "kindness" from the Dark Lord.
1DanArmak9y
I assume Harry will have to tell part, though maybe not all, of the truth to the remaining members of the Order of the Phoenix.
0Val9y
Didn't Snape die?
4matheist9y
Harry can just claim to have already used it that day for an innocuous purpose, like studying or something. Sure, McGonagall could accuse him of stupidity because that leaves him unprepared for an emergency, but pleading guilty to stupidity is easy. (Well, easier, anyway.)
3shminux9y
When does TT reset to unused? At midnight?
3TylerJay9y
Unclear. Either midnight or as soon as last 24 hours contain less than 6 hours of looped time. I've been wondering this as well. I think I remember something being said like "No combination of time-turners could let you fit more than 30 hours into a day" but I don't know if that really helps...
0TobyBartels9y
Where is that written? I well remember that no chain of time turners can send information (at least information comprehensible by humans) back more than 6 hours, but that still allows one to add those 6 hours more than once a day, especially with multiple time turners.
1TylerJay9y
Ch 17: Harry: Dumbledore:
1TobyBartels9y
Thanks, but that's not actually definitive. Somewhere on Reddit is a list of information about time turners, and while this was quoted there, nothing else suggested that you couldn't go back 6 hours, wait 12 hours, then go back 6 hours with a new time turner. But there was a clear statement by Eliezer that you couldn't go back 6 hours, wait only 6 hours, and then go back again. This imposes a hard limit of 48 hours per day.
0TylerJay9y
Nope, you're right. It's not definitive. In my original comment, I just said I thought I remembered reading somewhere that you couldn't fit >30 hrs into a day, and the passage I quoted is where I got that impression. If /r/hpmor thinks it's possible that TTs let you fit up to 48 hrs in a day, then I have high confidence there wasn't anything explicitly forbidding it in the story.
0TobyBartels9y
Just to be clear, the Reddit thread didn't say that you can fit 48 hours in a day, it just didn't say that you couldn't. And it probably had that Dumbledore quotation too, it's just me saying that we can't know for sure what that quote means.
0TylerJay9y
Haha, yup, I gotcha. Thanks for the info.

The stage seems to be set for a sequel adventure series, The Three Immortals. Three great heroes, each blessed with a fragment of immortality, work together to fend off the forces of destruction and bring true immortality to all of humanity.

Unicorn Girl, filled with the life-giving, regenerative powers of two noble magical creatures. Her mind captures everything that she sees, with amazing fidelity, while the purity of her heart pulls her to do what's right with similar fidelity. Some call her "mudblood", in honor of the ancient myths about the creation of man from earth, because the power to re-create herself flows continuously through her veins.

Mr. Physics, the culmination of the great Peverall line which has sought immortality for generations, is the heir to many great and powerful magical artifacts. But it is his deep and detailed knowledge of the laws of the universe which grants him his greatest power - the power to make anything out of anything, even reshaping his own body. He has made a solemn vow to protect humanity, with Unicorn Girl as his moral compass.

The mysterious Cloud has dark secrets which are hidden even from himself, but his mind still holds a wealth of ancient lore to share and an intellect so sharp it can cut through any facade or riddle... except perhaps his own past. This great mind is backed up, a hundred times over, in a vast network which allows him to be reborn in full force should his body ever fail him. The first to reach immortality, Cloud helped bring both his companions into their powers.

3MathMage9y
I would watch this.
0Transfuturist9y
What so-called forces of destruction would dare stand in their way?
9Velorien9y
Well, for a start there is the Phoenix Sage, that fallen champion of Light sworn to protect mankind from the "curse" of immortality at any cost. Once sealed away beyond time and space, he now returns to seek his vengeance, wielding both ancient lore and the misguided adoration of the masses as tools in his quest to end our heroes' ambition. With his revival, ally after ally is falling back under his spell, lured in by honeyed words of false wisdom and by memories of the days when he shone so bright. How will the Three Immortals expose his hypocrisy and defeat him, when he has managed to corrupt even the very symbol of Light and immortality, the Phoenix itself?
0TsviBT9y
Hermione the Hi-Fi Heiress of Hufflepuff and Harry the Humanist

Voldemort's greatest fear is death. Death's greatest fear is Harry Potter.

1WalterL9y
You know, we still don't know if Death thinks, and whether there are souls. You might be actually correct.
[-][anonymous]9y200

This story will collapse after a very few prior incantums on Quirrelmort's wand by the investigators.

Yeah, and not just that. The magical equivalents to forensic science would have to be terrible indeed if this works, with a lot of fail from intelligent people like Bones, Moody, or for that matter Snape.

I'm kinda hoping that what we're actually heading for in the next chapters will be some kind of payoff to this:

But there are a very few, seated on those wooden benches, who do not think like this.

There are a certain few of the Wizengamot who have read through half-disintegrated scrolls and listened to tales of things that happened to someone's brother's cousin, not for entertainment, but as part of a quest for power and truth. They have already marked the Night of Godric's Hollow, as reported by Albus Dumbledore, as an anomalous and potentially important event. They have wondered why it happened, if it did happen; or if not, why Dumbledore is lying.

And when an eleven-year-old boy rises up and says "Lucius Malfoy" in that cold adult voice, and goes on to speak words one simply would not expect to hear from a first-year in Hogwarts, they do not allow the fact to slip into the lawless blurs of legends and the premises of plays.

They mark it as a clue.

They add it to the list.

This list is beginning to look somewhat alarming.

PS. I wonder what an analytic charm cast on Harry's "bleeding" scar would show.

7TylerJay9y
Yup. Part of my justifications to Harry setting the stage in 115 were (from right before this):

They will have to find the wand first:

Voldemort's gun, and his wand, went into Harry's pouch. Harry placed the Stone of Permanency in an ordinary pocket, he wasn't sure what the Stone might do to his pouch.

9avichapman9y
QuirrelMort's wand is in Quirrel's hand. Voldemorts wand is the one that Harry took.
9Benquo9y
Last spell cast with Quirrell's wand was the acid for the plant.
2[anonymous]9y
Was just about to ask where the switchover occurred. There was an AK before then, as well as infuriating (?) fluffy.
0TobyBartels9y
That won't look good.
0Transfuturist9y
The can only check the very last spell.
4Jost9y
Iff there is an investigation. Given what we know about the wizarding world, I’m not so sure that there will be one.
4Velorien9y
And let's not forget the kind of people who seem to be doing the investigating around here: "Burnt corpse? Roof of the house blown off? Baby with scar on forehead? Must have been the first ever Killing Curse backfire."
1DanArmak9y
Dumbledore was the one who investigated that...
0Velorien9y
But the facts I listed were publically available, and apparently that's the best conclusion anyone else could draw. (and we know Dumbledore didn't tell anyone his conclusion, because even Moody didn't know)
1DanArmak9y
Since Dumbledore didn't give anyone else access to an undisturbed scene, it's merely the best conclusion that anyone could draw who wasn't an actual professional investigator / smart person. Actual professional investigators would know not to come to any conclusion without actually investigating the scene. (Whether or not they trusted Dumbledore to investigate is a different matter.) Smart people would think:
0dxu9y
And he had very good reason to not release his true hypothesis to the public.

Shouldn't Harry have fallen to his knees twenty seconds earlier, if he originally heard/saw the explosion via Voldie-simulcast?

8TobyBartels9y
Now that may be just what Draco needs to realize that something's wrong with Harry's story. Maybe Harry didn't know the timing well enough to fall at the correct second and had to listen for the crack.
2Luke_A_Somers9y
He was claiming to be dipping into Voldemort's working memory, not experiencing it directly - that's why he knew what happened to Dumbledore. Anyway, that could plausibly provide a level of insulation.
2BrindIf9y
We do not know at what speed does information travel through the Riddle link.

Harry implicitly took it to be instantaneous when he mentioned the 20 second delay.

0MathMage9y
What do you mean? He narrated the whole sequence before the explosion, and fell to his knees at the moment Voldemort supposedly died, which is coincident with the explosion. I don't see a problem, let alone one that would be fixed by shifting the narrative back 20 seconds.
1GMHowe9y
Due to the finite speed of sound, the explosion would have had to occur approximately 20 seconds before they heard it. So if Voldemort's death was coincident with the explosion it would had to have happened about 20 seconds before Harry said it did.

Well, that's certainly one way to explain away all of the strange aspects. Establish them as fact, through the mysterious bond between LV and HP, and do so in front of a huge crowd so that the word can spread and mutate on its own. By the time anyone comes to investigate or question, they will already be influenced by the show or rumors they've heard, promoting that hypothesis to their attention rather than coming to it naturally.

It's pointing the police at Mortimer Snodgrass, from chapter 17, as it were.

3lerjj9y
It's actually the same tactic as the Weasley twins used to cover the "engaged to Ginever Weasley" story- plant so many make newspaper reports that everyone gets confused. And it kinda happens again after the Hermione/Draco incident. Guess Eliezer like the theme of people not being able to discern the truth from wild rumours if the truth's weird enough.

Oh, trust me, they can't discern the truth from wild rumors even if it's normal. (I am speaking of real life, here.)

To be fair, it's really hard to figure out WTF is going on when humans are involved. Their reasoning is the result of multiple motivations and a vast array of potential reasoning errors. If you don't believe me try the following board games with your friends: Avalon, Coup, Sheriff of Nottingham, Battlestar Galactica, or any that involve secrets and lying.

0Transfuturist9y
There's a Battlestar Galactica board game? :D
2Duncan9y
Yes, yes there is :). http://boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/37111/battlestar-galactica
0Dorikka9y
Mmhmm. I find it quite fun, despite having no familiarity with the show.

Prediction 1: Hermione will soon harrow Azkaban. Why wouldn't she? She's all but immortal, now.

Prediction 2: Time-travel and memory-charm shenanigans incoming. Evidence:

  • Harry weirdly ignored the missing recognition code on LV's forged message.

  • Cedric considered in Harry's plans, and his Time-Turner mentioned, then seemingly forgotten.

  • Death-Eaters all dead, but no faces observed.

  • Flamel asserted dead, but we didn't see it, and LV explicitly didn't kill him personally.

  • Dumbledore thinks in stories, yet we're supposed to believe he's surprised when the villain reveals he's captured the hero and his equipment (Harry and the Cloak), just like villains always catch heroes and take their stuff near the end (see: Frodo Baggins, Luke Skywalker).

  • Hermione has been asleep the whole time, neither giving nor receiving information.

Questions:

  • did Harry tell Cedric to do certain things before Harry left? Did Harry tell Cedric to Obliviate Harry afterward so Harry could play his part convincingly? What did Harry most likely tell Cedric to do?

  • who will do the Time-Turning, Hermione, Cedric, or Harry?

  • who will be saved? Obvious candidates include Flamel, Dumbledore, Lucius Malfoy, maybe

... (read more)
6Nornagest9y
The Cedric situation hints strongly at information control, maybe to deal with the six-hour limit on Time-Turners. Being Hermione makes this harder. There's a way to do it: find a morgue, transfigure the bodies into simulacra of the Death Eaters, give permanency with the Stone, raise them as Inferi, then use Horcrux 1.0 castings with a respawning Hermione as fuel to copy the original Death Eaters' mind-states. But Hermione doesn't have the power, doesn't know that kind of Dark magic, and has way too many ethical scruples; and we don't know the Horcrux enchantment in enough detail to know that it's exploitable in that way. (You don't need the Horcruces to fool physical examination, but I assume Voldemort has some way of sensing people's minds or magic.) It also might not account for everything it needs to, given that Harry feels what I assume to be their deaths on-page. That could be the Horcrux enchantment dissipating, though. Or, a simpler solution: travel back six hours, Obliviate Voldemort while he's on the toilet (he could probably resist Imperius at full power), Imperius him to do everything Harry remembers that involves personal agency except summon his mooks, then false-memory-charm Harry into thinking thirty-six Death Eaters were present when they weren't. Take office as Hogwarts' first Professor of Retconjuration.
5tim9y
This is not how (Harry's) recognition code works. It is used to identify exact(ish) copies of himself because he is the only one - barring magical mental shenanigans - that can immediately recognize it. Writing it down on a piece of paper and then giving that piece of paper to someone else would defeat the purpose entirely.
2kilobug9y
The "potato" code, yes. But knowing that Harry is "be prepared" so much that he prepared a recognition code when he didn't think he would ever use it, and then had been nearly a year with a time-turner, and knowning about Oblivatiate, it's quite surprising that he didn't device a recognition code to recognize a message sent either by a future self to his past self (time-turner) or from his past self to his future self (Obliviate).
0Nornagest9y
The cryptographic solution to this problem is to publicize related codes derived in such a way that the possessor of the secret code can recognize the derivation, but bystanders can't use them to rederive the secret code. It's probably a bit much to expect Harry to use that in its strong form -- most of the relevant math was known in 1991, but it only rose to prominence with the Internet, and it's quite laborious by hand -- but there's probably a similar ad-hoc scheme he can use that'd provide reasonably strong authentication against a bunch of cryptographically naive wizards.
1Donald Hobson4y
The niave protocol, any time you get a note, you come up with a random password. That password has to be on the bottom of the note. If the password has even a few bits of entropy, relative to outsiders, this will work. (Memory charms or time turners can get around this, but its still a good precaution)
0kilobug9y
The fact that he uses prime factorization as his test for "can use you time turner to solve computationally hard problems" is evidence that he did know about prime number based cryptography, not strong evidence, but evidence still, since the prime-based crypto is the most common reason people are interested in having fast ways to factor primes.
0gwern9y
How much security could one expect from a mental PRNG? Simple, RNGs go back many decades so Harry could use it easily if he knew of them and thought of the application, mathematically breakable but only with knowledge of the algorithms & more samples than Harry realistically ever needs...
0kilobug9y
Does it need to be pure mental ? In some cases yes, but if he has time to carefully write himself a note, he probably has time to roll dices or write number on pieces of paper, fold them, mix them, and draw one at random. Or take a random book and look at a random letter of a random page (using some correction algorithm to deal with the difference of letter frequency).
4Gunnar_Zarncke9y
For all practical uses x'=(x*8+1) mod 49 is a simple PRNG that can be executed mentally easily. If you seed it with the next best number you see it gives suitably random numbers for every-day purposes (and when no dice are available). Note that this is taken from TAoCP by Knuth. I use it for fair choices and mental story telling.
2Jiro9y
It's not hard to generate random numbers in your head in real life. Generate 5 or 6 "random" numbers from 0 to X-1, add them, and take the result mod X.
0gwern9y
I don't like things which use apparatuses because they introduce a dependency (and since this scheme is for use in extreme/unusual circumstances, it's especially likely that Harry would not have leisure time or access to his pouch) and they make part of the process observable, hence, easier to realize the existence of & reverse-engineer. A fully mental PRNG is doable under all circumstances in under a second and is unobservable except via Legilimency (which if it isn't blocked, means one is screwed anyway since one can just be False-memory-charmed into remembering having done the verification*). * Kripkenstein would approve!
5WalterL9y
Prediction 1: Huh? Hermione is a rule follower. She wouldn't destroy Azkaban if she had a button she could press that would do so. Also she can't kill even one Dementor, or even cast a patronus to prevent one from killing her. Prediction 2: Don't think so, remaining story too short for such shenanigans.
8MarkusRamikin9y
She started as a rules follower. Then Self-Actualisation happened.
7Velorien9y
She also knows exactly what it's like to be an innocent sentenced to Azkaban for a crime they didn't commit, and how easy it is for such a thing to happen. You can't go through an experience like that without re-evaluating some things about how you see the world. The point of the above post, I believe, is that there is nothing stopping her from learning to cast Patronus 2.0, at which point it's plausible that the infinite unicorn blood would replenish her life-force so killing Dementors wouldn't end up draining it all.
0MathMage9y
It's not entirely clear how Hermione's troll/unicorn stuff interacts with the depletion of life-force necessary to fuel the Patronus. That said, she has a Horcrux, so at the end of the day it doesn't really matter. And if Harry can eventually destroy Azkaban, Hermione certainly can.
4Astazha9y
I'm skeptical. If dementors really do destroy your soul then having a horcrux may not be helpful against them. I'm a fan of taking V's wand down to the pit, in fact.
0Velorien9y
If Dementors really do destroy your soul, how would anyone know?
2Astazha9y
No magic burst at death would be one prediction to check, though not conclusive. You could test it with Horcrux 2.0, though no one has had the opportunity to do that before now. The fact that Voldemort has expressed uncertainty about whether he is capable of surviving dementors, and that he is relying upon escaping from Quirrel's body in time to survive dementors points in the direction of him believing that a dementor might be capable of taking out him and his whole horcrux network in one shot. None of that is conclusive, but it's all suggestive and supports the popular version of what dementors do.
3Velorien9y
The thing about magic burst is that Dementors drain the target's magic anyway. It's entirely plausible that if a Dementor kills you, it sucks away your magic in the process, or at least enough of it to prevent a magic burst.

I just noticed something:

Chapter 79:

When he was alone in the room, the old wizard looked down at the map, which had now written upon itself a fine line drawing of the Gryffindor dorms in which they stood, the small handwritten Albus P.W.B. Dumbledore the only name left therein.

The old wizard smoothed the map, bent over it, and whispered, "Find Tom Riddle."

Chapter 108:

"Yes," Harry said in an even voice. "What did you do to the Weasley twins? Dumbledore thought - I mean, the school saw the Headmaster go to the Weasley twins after Hermione was arrested. Dumbledore thought you, as Voldemort, had wondered why Dumbledore had done so, and that you'd checked on the Weasley twins, found and took their map, and Obliviated them afterward?"

"Dumbledore was quite correct," Professor Quirrell said, shaking his head as though in wonderment. "He was also an utter fool to leave the Hogwarts Map in the possession of those two idiots. I had an unpleasant shock after I recovered the Map; it showed my name and yours correctly! The Weasley idiots had thought it a mere malfunction, especially after you received your Cloak and your Time-Turner. If Dumbledo

... (read more)

It seems like Dumbledore knows quite a bit more than Voldemort thought. Did he know Q=V and HJPEV=TMR?

At least of the latter, see the "I laughed and I laughed when I realized you [Voldemort] had made a Good Voldemort to oppose the Evil."

Of the former, yes, I think he knew. See his over the top protestations of how he was oh so ever so completely fooled by Quirrell, had absolutely no idea whatesoever that he was Voldemort, and felt like a fool and a moron for missing it.

7ourimaler9y
It does cast a different light on that time he asks Harry why Voldemort does the things he does.
3Nornagest9y
Dumbledore's an over-the-top kind of guy. I got the impression that he was being genuine in his comments re: Quirrell; see for example his initial confusion when he sees him in the mirror. On the other hand, I'm now pretty sure that he knew Harry was a Riddle instance, or at least something similar, all along.
4TylerJay9y
I've been wondering about this for a while, but never had a chance to do the required detective work. Were Harry and the Defense Professor in the castle at the time? If so, when Dumbles said "Find Tom Riddle..." he most definitely learned that HP and QQ were both Tom Riddles. So... were they in the castle at the time? Or was QQ at St. Mungo's or the DMLE?

At the time when Dumbledore uses the map, Harry is in Hogwarts, investigating, while QQ is at the DMLE, being investigated.

0TylerJay9y
Thought so. Seems like a pretty close call to me. Thanks. Although, really, it seems a bit contrived. If QQ was identified to the wards as the defense professor, wouldn't that be what the Hogwarts security system sees?
0Astazha9y
I'd read it as "Defense Professor" being a role with a package of permissions being assigned to a user. The map shows usernames, so to speak, not what roles or permissions they've been assigned in some other portion of the security system.
5kilobug9y
I don't think it goes : username (Tom Riddle) => permissions (Defense Professor) or Harry (recognized as Tom Riddle too) would have the Defense Professor permissions. I mostly assumed that the map and the wards are two different systems, maybe not crafted by the same person (not the same founder if they were made by the 4 founders, or by different headmasters if they were added afterwards).
2avichapman9y
In canon, the map was made by Harry's dad and his three friends.
6Velorien9y
HPMOR seems to have changed this.
3Gunnar_Zarncke9y
That is not literally a contradiction.
6Velorien9y
Not literally. It's possinle that the Marauders stole some other thing, and repurposed it into the Map. But honestly, James Potter, Remus Lupin, Sirius Black and Peter Pettigrew were none of them great wizards, especially in their teens, so the less their involvement in the Map's creation, the more plausible I find the theory.
0Astazha9y
Yeah, I'm thinking separate systems but there's a lot we don't know about how this works and why the discrepancies are there. Actually, we aren't sure that Harry doesn't have Defense Professor permissions, are we?
3Velorien9y
Indeed. I don't think Harry's ever tried to do something that only a professor can do, or that would have markedly different results if a professor tried to do it. Edit: "markedly visible" was meant to be "markedly different". I need more sleep.
0DanArmak9y
Like, say, brainwash or torture a student.
2kilobug9y
Hum, good question. I assumed that with all his experimenting he did in a year, he must have triggered a ward at a point. He doesn't all the wards, and since we expect them to be quite extensive, it's very unlikely he never triggered one. So what are our hypothesis ? 1. Harry is not recognized as Defense Professor by the wards. 2. Harry is recognized as DP by the wards, never triggered a ward, but that didn't seem suspicious to Dumbledore because there are fewer wards I imagined there to be, so even with lots of experimenting, it's quite normal he didn't trigger one. 3. Harry is recognized as DP by the wards, never triggered a ward, and Dumbledore failed to realize it, due to a variation of the "availability bias", we don't tend to notice events that fail to occur (while they should) as much as events that occur (while they shouldn't). 4. Harry is recognized as DP by the wards, and Dumbledore did suspect it. Then, Dumbledore knowing that Harry is likely a Tom Riddle, must have suspected Quirrel to be a Tom Riddle. He knew much more that he claimed, and he lied when he said to Quirrelmort that he didn't suspect anything. I would put most probability on 1, but none of 2, 3, 4 can be excluded at this point, yes.
3Astazha9y
I do not expect this. Time-tuners are fine. Invisibility cloaks are fine. Draco's torture hex was fine. The only thing I can think of that Harry did that might have triggered a ward without permissions was bring in the transfigured unicorn. And that isn't conclusive at all. It was transfigured, and as far as I know the Defense Professor can't just bring magical creatures in to Hogwarts either. I don't think it's been tested.
0Izeinwinter9y
We have some evidence Harry has defense professor permissions and didn't trip any wards because of that. He practiced memory charms. In Hogwarts. If the castle thought of him as a student, that would have set alarms ringing, with professor permissions, no alarms. Not strong evidence, because Harry was Dumbledores pet disaster, and it is entirely possible he'd hear an alarm like that, check up on what Harry was doing, and ignore it as long as he wasn't casting it on students. But it's an implication.
0Astazha9y
Would you quote me where Harry used obliviate in Hogwarts on someone that would have tripped wards? I don't recall that.
[-][anonymous]9y140

And thus, Eliezer's mild obsession with conspiracy-for-the-greater-good-in-fiction-and-science rears its head again...

2Risto_Saarelma9y
I've been re-reading the fic, and the science conspiracy idea shows up early on. Quirrel in chapter 20: Harry gets on board with the idea in chapter 23:
7Luke_A_Somers9y
In 23 I took it to mean he was using conspiracy-ish-ness to get Draco on board.
3Risto_Saarelma9y
In-universe play-acting or not, it's still strengthening the motif by having it keep turning up.
0Luke_A_Somers9y
Right. I was just pointing out that it's not being presented as something EY is actually suggesting. Here we have it as advice from Voldemort and a lure to someone who's actively attracted by conspiracy.
0Duncan9y
I don't see how this is a problem. Do you think it is a problem ? If so, then why specifically and do you have any ideas for a solution?

Didn't Harry JUST learn a lesson about not keeping secrets and assuming he's smarter than the rest of the world put together?

Well, he also learned a lesson about not keeping secrets, in the way he told to Voldemort about the Deathly Hallows.

I was thinking the same thing. If I were Harry I would call Moody and McGonagall to the headmistress' office and spill everything. As a side-note, I think Moody would rather appreciate Voldemort being taken down by stuporfy.

3ShardPhoenix9y
Problem is parts of his agenda (eg keeping Voldemort alive in transfigured form) don't line up with the likely agenda of the others.
0Luke_A_Somers9y
Nah, with horcruxes around, that's by far the best solution.
3Sheaman37739y
I can see him believing that it would be very difficult to get them to agree regardless. Though, given the Drought of Living Death... Naw, they still wouldn't want to leave him in Harry's care. Plus, then they might get all of his magical secrets (including Harry's (soul/mind's) magical heritage, rather than leaving them for Harry to use. Or they might Obliviate everything, depending on whether their paranoia wins over their greed.
0Luke_A_Somers9y
Yes, that's a more direct objection.
3DanielLC9y
I assumed he was just trying to keep it a secret from the masses. I don't know if he planned on telling the people who'd realize that what actually happens wouldn't be such a big spectacle, but I figured he at least accounted for the fact that they'd realize it.

Questions I still have:

  • What will Snape do now that he's no longer in love with Lilly?
  • How did Dumbledore hide in the mirror?
  • Why did all the different groups of people on the third floor corridor at the same time?
  • What's up with Cedric?
  • How was magical Italy ruined 323 years ago, or does it matter?
  • How will the Hallows come together?
  • How will the "rip apart the very stars from the heaven" prophecy play out?
  • Did Harry time-turn the day Hermione died, and, if so, what did he do?
  • Why did Harry say that he wouldn't let anyone obilivate everything he knew about calculus?
  • Quirrell teaching students the Killing curse...will it matter?
  • What happened to Narcissa Malfoy?
  • Why did the rememberal go off?
5Velorien9y
Nothing. They are no longer counting on him to protect Harry from a returned Voldemort. Unless you mean whether he is going to evolve as a person and maybe develop a love life. I suspect it was only an example of how yes, Potterverse magic can be that destructive (something we would not guess based on canon). Unlikely. Knowing the Killing Curse is perfectly legal, and a lot of people have managed to learn it even though it is not taught in school. Come to that, the information we have suggests that it is also perfectly legal to use, just not against humans (unless they are Death Eaters, assuming the Monroe Act hasn't been repealed). Because Harry has a lifetime's worth of lost/repressed Tom Riddle memories. We know that they're still in there somewhere, because he recovers the memory of his imprinting and of the locations of Voldemort's five "elemental" horcruxes.
3avichapman9y
Yes. When he went into the room with Hermione's body, he turned the time turner and transfigured her body into a ring while also transfiguring something else (presumably something very small) into a copy of Hermione's body. He then hid from his past self and left the room just after his past self entered. After the transfiguration wore off, the 'body' dissapeared.
1solipsist9y
Yes, but he could do all of that with a single twist.
2SilentCal9y
* Why did Tom Riddle allow his true identity to be tied to his throwaway villain persona?
3MathMage9y
Because it wasn't a throwaway anymore. His plan was to take over magical Britain as Voldemort, and have both the 'true' respect that comes from fear of what he can do to people and the pleasure of killing idiots whenever he wants. (And possibly to exterminate the Muggle world, but first things first.)

After rereading, I beleive that Mr White is Lucius Malfoy. Not only is the name an allusion to his hair, he is said to be less useful than he was in the past due to the fact that V will soon rule openly. In the past Lucius was V's puppet in the Wizengamot.

Mr Write then proceeds to sacrifice most of his magic to bind Harry Potter. I suppose with him dead, this doesn't matter.

If Harry's right about the effect that transfiguring the stunned Voldemort will have, won't the wards identify "the Defense Professor" as still alive?

6kilobug9y
Interesting hypothesis... but if the wards didn't identify Harry as the "Defense Professor", and identified the troll as "Defense Professor". So I guess the wards identify the bodies more than the "spirit" inhabiting them, which means they won't recognize Voldemort now that he left Quirrel's body to his original snake-like body.
1UnclGhost9y
I guess the only other evidence we have is that the Map, using the wards, would (implicitly) alternate between showing him as QQ and TR depending on whether QQ was being actively possessed, but as far as we know reported relatively consistently on the presence of the Defense Professor, such that it was a surprise to Dumbledore that the wards reported him being the troll. We do know that the wards are able to remain aware of identity even through transfiguration, as shown with both the troll and the unicorn. It seems like that's about as consistent with the hypothesis "the wards counted QQ's body, QQ's suppressed consciousness, TR's consciousness, and the troll as the Defense Professor" as it is with "the wards just counted QQ's body and the troll as the Defense Professor". It comes down to whether it's more likely that the wards use the simpler strategy of tracking bodies (as Velorien said) since there would be little reason to track spirits/consciousnesses, or that they target your magical "self" as well as the Map seems to do, possibly based on some fundamental aspect of magical self-ness. Of course, all this is even assuming the wards track the deaths of professors. It seems like the sort of thing you'd want wards to do, but I can't think of anywhere that that's been confirmed. We do know that the wards didn't report that the Defense Professor died after the troll died, so if it does keep track of the deaths of professors, it doesn't count as death when some living portion of "the Defense Professor" is still alive.
3Velorien9y
Given that Voldemort is the first known wizard to successfully move between bodies, it's unlikely that the wards would have been calibrated to track that sort of thing.

It's a nice story. But it won't work.

Harry wants folks to think LV killed the death eaters and not him. But he has trained Draco too well. Given priors on someone defeating Voldemort you would assume it's Harry, DD, or QQ in that order. Draco knows Harry and QQ were up to something because he and several other kids bumped into them and had a scuffle at the third floor corridor. If that wasn't entirly obliviated away, Draco will figure out that Harry was involved.

I was wondering if one of the things Harry would do with his extra hour was a Patronused message to Lucius to "Stay where you are, remain silent, do not respond to the Dark Mark, for one hour, if you want to live." Or even better, a message to Draco to send that message to Lucius, except Draco is probably still sleeping off Harry's stunner.

In any case, under the circumstances, Harry might be able to trade the whole sad story, including confirmation of Dumbledore's ordered killing of Narcissa (now that Dumbledore is gone) for Draco's forgiveness.

8Astazha9y
Warning Lucius would risk paradox, particularly since Mr. Counsel was probably Lucius.

Since time loops are stable, no reason not to try. Even if Mr. Counsel is Lucius, the most stable time loop is that Lucius doesn't believe the Patronus and gets killed anyway, and then Harry can at least truthfully tell Draco he tried.

4TobyBartels9y
A fair point (and upvoted), but since Harry will still have killed Lucius if he fails, it'd still be best to try to hide the whole thing from Draco. But yes, try (since he doesn't know for sure who Counsel is), and tell Draco that he tried if Draco figures it out, but don't tell him otherwise.
2Astazha9y
So, I don't know how these stable time loops are supposed to work. My working model is that they function by trial and error, that time iterates through a universe until it encounters paradox, at which point it returns to pre-paradox, inserts some change into the world through prophecy or whatever, and tries again. This continues until a stable timeline is found, with an unknown number of them being discarded/destroyed. It appears from within that things worked on the first pass, but they did not. Our viewpoint never follows into one of those dead ends, but they exist(ed). If the world really works that way, Harry would be potentially throwing his victory away by forcing a paradox. Time would have to reset to before the paradox and insert a change into the world to ensure a different outcome. He may or not be victorious in that new timeline. Harry dying was already a high probability and it would certainly resolve things to Time's satisfaction. His best chance of securing his immediate past as part of the real and continuing world would be to make sure this timeline remains self-consistent. (Plus, he's prophesied to destroy the stars and creating a time-paradox seems like a really obvious possible way to do that.) The only other possibility I can think of for these apparently stable timelines is that the whole universe is pre-determined and no one has any free will at all. I read something from EY about universes with time travel and he seemed to be in support of this second possibility. Any other possibilities for how this would work?
5Alejandro19y
I think that the trial and error model is implausible; in which "time" are these trials and iterations occurring? The global determination of the whole universe seems much simpler. I don't think it necessarily conflicts with free will, when free will is understood in a compatibilist way (which is how EY and most LWers understand it). If we agree that one can have free will in a completely deterministic universe with ordinary past-to-future causal chains, then why can't one have it in a universe where some of the chains run future-to-past?
0Astazha9y
That's a good link, thanks. I'm warm to compatibilism. I think I've confused the conversation by using the wrong terms, though. Instead of pointing at a lack of free will I should have pointed at the complete lack of causality, which is more constraining. You can read EY on it here. My interpretation of this would be that space-time would be a fixed object that exists in it's entirety. In the same sense that you could take a cross sectional scan of a sneaker and play it from rear to front, there would be a logical consistency to how the slides transformed as you progressed through the shoe, but it would not make any sense to say that one part caused another. In this analogy, 4-dimensional space-time is the shoe, and the cross section is 3-dimensional space. We play it from back to front, watching a movie of the universe, but the entire universe from beginning to end already existed; we're just looking at a slide of it at a time. Everything is consistent as the cross section passes through, but there's no causality in play, it's just an object being viewed in sequential slices. Much like EY's modified game of Life with time-travel. This actually seems pretty unsatisfying because there is a strong impression that the world is being run mostly on causality in the normal direction, with reverse causality coming in occasionally. This seems to me to work better with the iterating model. Regarding the time for trials and iterations, I would refer to simulation as an analogy. "World time" is happening in the simulation, and this is what the characters are aware of. From within the simulated world, how much "Meta time" has elapsed outside of the simulation (i.e. the time stream that the computer is in), or how many failed attempts have been dumped from RAM is not very relevant in the sense that these facts don't have any impact on "the world" (the simulated one) and are in fact probably unknowable to its inhabitants unless access to that meta-information has been somehow
4TobyBartels9y
The nature of causality is controversial, but in my opinion it should be understood as a feature of the second law of thermodynamics. That causes precede their effects is an empirical law, not a logical necessity. Time turners can violate this in certain ways, but they don't throw it out entirely. As you look through the block universe, you can observe various features corresponding to causality: the increase in macroscopic entropy, the expansion of radiation, the human creatures inside that remember the past and plan for the future. The block universe model doesn't eliminate causality; it is a physical feature within that universe.
5tim9y
All that has to happen is that there is some entity that behaves and responds in the same way that Mr. Counsel does. While it might be likely that the Mr. Counsel character is Lucius, there is nothing in the laws of time that prevent the person under that hood from being someone else - particularly because Harry took care not to look closely at the remains of the decapitated death eaters.

Harry, DD, or QQ

DumbleDore?

6William_Quixote9y
Yeah. I meant Albus Dumbledore. For some reason my brain saw DumbleDore and abbreviated that as DD. Probably symmetry with QQ.
2TylerJay9y
I see lots of people doing that on /r/hpmor and I've never been confused by it, strangely enough. It's not just you. You probably absorbed it unconsciously.
7Oshi9y
For some reason I was thinking Harry was under his invisibility cloak until pretty much everyone involved in that charade was unconscious. Am I misremembering?
0Transfuturist9y
Snape Disillusioned him.
5kilobug9y
Draco will probably figure something is strange, but he may not guess/learn that Harry killed his father. I think that's one of the main purpose of Harry in crafting a fake version of events.

Hello. My name is Draco Malfoy. You killed my father. Prepare to die!

6WalterL9y
Draco has been well trained enough (by his father and by General Chaos) to know that you don't say stuff to people you are murdering.
2Decius9y
Of course you say stuff to people that you are murdering. Like "Come over here and look at this." or "Avedra Kevadra".
0Unknowns9y
This couldn't have been the purpose since it is only in this chapter that it even occurs to Harry that Draco's father was among the Death Eaters.
0solipsist9y
Well, if Harry, say, rescues Narcissa from the mirror, Draco might call it even.

Come to think of it, what Harry said was mostly true. It's just that he omitted the part that the Tom Riddle who killed Death Eaters was known to magical world as Harry James Potter-Evans-Verres, that Hermione followed him by means of being attached to his toe and that only the weapon which "destroyed" LV was first transfigured by Hermione.

I'm curious a bit about how he achieved the trick with the scar. Was it just by prodding? By taking/applying anticoagulant? DId he ask Moody to help him with it (apart from other things to cover the real story)?

1banx9y
I thought it was bleeding because of the magical resonance that was actually happening at that time when other Harry hit LV with the stuporfy.
1Decius9y
That magical resonance didn't make the scar bleed the first time the scar encountered it, did it? If so, what happened to the blood?
1Jost9y
My first thought was about the centuries-old theatre trick: Harry hides a few drops of red paint in one hand, presses that hand on his forehead because “the scar hurts” … and voila, a bleeding scar. Your thought seems simpler, though, as well as plausible: (chapter 114; although I’m not quite sure whether that really refers to blood from his scar, or just garbled sensory input caused by the resonance)
5TsviBT9y
I'd say your first thought was right.
0SilentCal9y
I assumed with a blade, his fingernails, or minor magic... Everyone's eyes were on the game.

A couple guesses about scenes that might be coming:

Harry has a (mostly) honest conversation with Moody about what happened to Voldemort, with an eye to adding more safeguards. They consult with the world's foremost expert on memory-charming powerful wizards into insignificance, Gilderoy Lockhart.

Hermione is determined to rescue Dumbledore from the Mirror, and a phoenix comes to her because of it.

I cannot for a second imagine Moody allowing Harry to hold on to Tom Riddle. There are too many ways in which keeping a superpowered, immortal amnesiac former villain on your person could go wrong. Harry must anticipate this, so can't consult Moody.

5Unnamed9y
Perhaps. But Moody did defer to Dumbledore, keeping Moody totally in the dark doesn't seem like a plausible option, and Harry explained to McGonagall in chapter 14 that he had enough common sense to seek out the appropriate experts in situations like this (or discovering Salazar's Chamber).

The actual order of the stories is probably better, but it would have been interesting to read 116 first and then find out what really happened.

0shminux9y
I agree, but that would have precluded the potential sad ending after a failed Final Exam.
5TobyBartels9y
He could always have said, ‘Great, you passed! You'll find out how in a few days. In the meantime ….’.
1Sheaman37739y
But then there wouldn't be continued speculation that this is still the bad end.
0TobyBartels9y
Ah, is that what shminux meant!

So, the revival of Hermione would be explained by Voldemort trying to resurrect himself, making a mistake, and resurrecting Hermione with superpowers instead (or alongside) him, as a side-effect of his own resurrection process? (St. Mungo will surely detect at least some of the "upgrades" Hermione got)

By the way, I think Harry is likely to make those upgrades to himself, and maybe even use the idea of these upgrades to elevate some (or, as a long term goal, ALL) of mankind to posthuman level, using the Stone.

6DanielLC9y
Elevating all of mankind to a posthuman level will be difficult. He'll have to use the Stone around twice per second. Perhaps he could use some kind of portkey system, where portkeys are set to take people to the Stone and then immediately away, and you need to use transfiguration right before that.
1Val9y
Indeed, one of the stories at qntm features discovering something like the Fountain of Youth, and describes the organizational nightmare of letting a large enough proportion of mankind use it. Harry Potter, however, if he makes himself immortal, will have a lot of time. Even if a lot of people die of old age or illness before he can reach them, he can still reach a lot of people given enough time. He would also need to figure out some efficient way of space travel and terraforming, otherwise he could cause overpopulation.
0Val9y
Also, Nicholas Flamel would like to have a word with Harry, as he (she?) kept the Stone for herself specifically to stop a cheap proliferation of its powers.
1imuli9y
Nicholas Flamel is dead, at least according to Dumbledore. (Or tucked away for later secret extraction?)
3Izeinwinter9y
Yhea, two problems with that: 1: I really don't put it past Dumbledore to just lie about everything to Voldemort, and 2:. Flamel had access to the stunt Voldemort pulled on Hermione for a minimum of 500 years, and potentially more like a thousand. I figure good odds killing Flamel just gets you a rebirth in fire phoenix-style and an annoyed arch-wizard.
3Vaniver9y
Doesn't this also apply to Baba Yaga?

It does. I mean, it's possible "Goblet curse" trumphs Rebirth Magic,

But my preferred theory is that Flamel is Baba Yaga, and Voldemort read that story all wrong because he managed to err on the side of excessive cynicism, which is a lot simpler. No murdering took place at all, just an elopement.

This also explains why Flamel only interferes in politics by teaching chosen champions - She is still bound by the goblet rite on the Battle Magic position, so that is the only way she can oppose dark lords that don't show up at her door and try to kill her. Well, unless they graduated elsewhere, but selectively showing up and vanquishing only those fell practitioners that studied in other schools would make things just a tad obvious.

0Vaniver9y
Sure. But we have Word of God that suggested that Baba Yaga would not appear in the story again before the bit where Dumbledore said Flamel was dead. Was that "Baba Yaga won't show up again because 'Flamel', who is actually BY, is about to die offscreen" or "Baba Yaga died six hundred years ago, get over it?" Unclear. But I would suggest that, narratively, the defeat of Baba Yaga by sixth-year Perenelle exists as a clue for the plausibility of the defeat of Voldemort by first-year Harry Potter.
4MathMage9y
BABA YAGA FAKED HER DEATH AND POSSESSED PERENELLE, TRUE STORY Sorry, I think I've read too much Reddit today.
0Val9y
Does Dumbledore know about Perenelle? Maybe I just don't remember.

"No, what you remembered was how you considered lining up all the blood purists and guillotining them. And now you are telling yourself you were not serious, but you were. If you could do it this very moment and no one would ever know, you would. "

The Sorting Hat sees the future! Tom lined up the blood purists and guillotined them, and no one will ever know.

4gjm9y
In fairness, Tom#1 lined them up and Tom#2 guillotined them. I'm sure that makes all the difference.
3Decius9y
Not all blood purists are death eaters. And quite possibly not all the death eaters were blood purists.
0[anonymous]9y
Grrr you beat me to it.

Would be amusing if Voldy has been playing as the Cthaeh for the last few chapters, in strategy if not in power.

Am I missing something? Why is Harry inventing this silly story?

I bet Hermione is just going to love being the center of all the attention and scrutiny this will bring on her.

Why I think he's doing this :

  • so Draco doesn't know that Harry probably killed his father ; Harry values his friendship with Draco and doesn't want to lose it ;

  • so Harry doesn't have to tell everyone about his secrets (like partial transfiguration) ;

  • so they don't search for Harry for the transfigured Voldemort ;

  • so Harry doesn't have too many legal/political problems for actually killing dozens of people, including some very powerful ones ;

  • to give some credit and status to Hermione, which at this point Harry trusts more than himself to take the ethical decision (and not destroy the world) ;

  • to save the image of Quirrel, I think Harry still has emotional commitment to the character of Quirrel, even if it was just a mask, and doesn't want that image to be destroyed.

Preserving the image of Quirrell also helps in continuing to restore Slytherin, whereas outing him could damn the house to be forever ignoble or be removed completely

2Velorien9y
Howso? It is no revelation to anyone that Voldemort was a Slytherin.
7Subbak9y
Well, people are less likely to believe in an idea if an argument used in favor of it later turns out to be entirely false. For example, if I say "green jelly beans are slightly carcinogenic" and someone says "yes, also each one you eat has a 1/100 chance of killing you immediately", makes a lot of publicity about this, and months later it turns out that that statement was completely unfounded, then people will be less likely to believe me now. Even though they have very little new information compared to just me saying "green jelly beans are slightly carcinogenic". So in this case we have people saying "Look, some Slytherins are good, see QQ!", and gaining some amount of support with that. QQ turning out to be Voldemort would not only defeat everything the argument did (which is not bad in and of itself, the argument was after all flawed), but also cause a backlash which would make Slytherin appear worse in comparison to before QQ was the Defense Professor.
4Velorien9y
Hm. While QQ was widely praised as being a great teacher, I don't think anyone missed the fact that he was radiating a constant aura of evil (before the fact that as the Defense Professor he was guaranteed to be evil by definition). I think his contribution to public perception would have been "some Slytherins are incredibly badass" rather than "some Slytherins are good".
2SilentCal9y
I'm not sure if there was a general "antihero or villain?" buzz about QQ or if Harry was the only person who thought the former. Luckily, affirmatively making him a hero works either way. Though, what was David Monroe's House?
3MathMage9y
Ch. 84:
0Astazha9y
Also: Though we don't know for sure what McGonagal and the rest of the "confederacy" really believes.
0TobyBartels9y
One of this comment's third cousins says that Monroe was a Slytherin.
2Velorien9y
108:
3Baughn9y
And Quirrel was Ravenclaw.
6Velorien9y
Not in HPMOR. Chapter 16:
8Benquo9y
Voldemort was in Slytherin and claimed to be Slytherin while impersonating QQ. The actual QQ was known to be Ravenclaw:
7TylerJay9y
And Monroe was in Slytherin. That was a piece of intentionally leaked information so that the "smart" people could deduce that he was Monroe.
7Sheaman37739y
Yes in HPMOR Chapter 79: The disparity is one of the reasons that the Aurors are sure he's not actually Quirinus Quirrell.

But why is any of original!Quirrell's biographical information relevant to this discussion? Everyone who knew Quirrell the Defense Professor will remember him as a Slytherin.

7asr9y
She came back from the dead. Gonna be a lot of attention and scrutiny regardless.
6Velorien9y
It's a good question. As a perfect or near-perfect Occlumens, Harry could have come up with any story he wanted, if all he was trying to do was conceal certain facts (like partial transfiguration, what he really did to Voldemort, and the fact that he probably killed Lucius).
5TobyBartels9y
If Hermione manages to fall for Harry's story, then she's going to love it much much better than she ever would have loved the truth about her resurrection. It's worth it.
0MarkusRamikin9y
Eh, she's going to be living a lie. If she finds out one day - I can easily see the Vow causing that, if nothing else - that'll be horrible. And if she doesn't, that'll be another kind of horrible. Especially when Harry started as a "truth is sacred" guy, and I don't think that, for all his experience since then, he's done a complete reversal on that.
0TobyBartels9y
I imagine that Harry can tell her the truth in a few years, after they've saved the world, and she's learnt more, and there's just more distance from the event. But I don't know if she'll be fooled that long, or conversely if Harry will ever be willing to tell her. I'm more inclined to think that the Vow might prevent him from telling her, if he's worried that she won't be able to offer him good advice afterwards.
4MarkusRamikin9y
Hm... I'm going to go out on a bit of a limb here and predict that Harry will tell her quickly OR will want her to learn Occumency and expect to tell her quickly after she has. Confidence 70%. edit: yay

I begin to wonder exactly how the story will be wrapped up. I had thought the source of magic would be unlocked or the Deathly Hallows riddle would be tied up. However, I wonder if there are enough chapters to do these things justice. I also wonder whether Eliezer will do anything like was done for Worm where the author invited suggestions for epilogs for specific characters.

1skeptical_lurker9y
There aren't enough chapters, and didn't Harry say that it might take decades of work? In rationalist fiction there's no reason for all plot threads to come together at once. We've got four chapters. Maybe one chapter dealing with what happens when Hermione wakes up, one for Draco dealing with the death of his father, one for McGonnigal giving a speech as the new Headmistress, and one for Harry considering his plans for the future.
0TobyBartels9y
If they work out just like this, what prize should you win?
0skeptical_lurker9y
Well, one down, three to go... what prize are you offering?
0TobyBartels9y
An upvote!

Ch. 116:

But the International Conferation of Wizards

Should be "Confederation".

Madam Hooch brew a shrill whistle

Should be "blew".

[-][anonymous]9y120

I'm sure there's some small simple potion that makes a whistling noise as its only effect...

3Gondolinian9y
Also: Isn't the singular "Inferius"?
2Normal_Anomaly9y
I think that might have been Harry making a mistake on purpose. At least that's how I interpreted it when I read it.

Okay, Harry is really overdoing it here. It would have been much safer to pretend utter ignorance of everything, or at least to limit his reaction to falling over. The scene as set will cause sufficient theorizing without trying to force a particular narrative.

On a meta level: Getting this scene from a bystander means they are not in the mirror. So that's that.

I.. also just realized that "Flamel" can't possibly be dead. The rite Voldemort used on Hermione was not one of his own devising, but a piece of lore well known enough to have a usual res... (read more)

1Vaniver9y
Had more lore than Voldemort. Legilimency is fun.
1Izeinwinter9y
Yhea, that's not a workable approach. Seriously, Flamel is centuries old and has had the key to eternal life for all of that. and the largest hoard of lore on the planet for most of it. Trying to legilimency that mind has the most likely result of you becoming a drooling vegetable. Certainly, its not going to actually work. If it did, it would be point 1 on every single aspiring dark lords to-do list. That's actually my main reason for thinking "Not dead". A lot. Really, just a an absurd number, of people must have already tried this. It doesn't even matter what "It" is. Someone tried that one already. And failed. If Voldemort had attempted it in person? Maaaaybee. A hired hit? Nope.
4SilentCal9y
I agree with your assessment of how powerful Perenelle/Flamel (side note: need a good portmanteau a la Quirrellmort) should be, having been able to outwit Baba Yaga in her sixth year and then having six hundred years of excellent leverage to accumulate lore and also maybe play with what the stone can do. That objection notwithstanding, the most plausible non-Voldemort killer would be Bellatrix, using her superpower of very strict obedience to orders like "Just use AK and do not hesitate for any reason".
7gjm9y
Flamelle.
0SilentCal9y
I'm going with this.
0Decius9y
It's not Perenelle, it's still Baba Yaga, who killed a sixth-year dark witch, stole her identity, and faked her own death.
0Velorien9y
The odds of that being true are steadily falling, if only because there aren't many chapters left in which to have that revelation, and it's hard to see how it would improve the plot at this point.
1TobyBartels9y
On the contrary, tthe odds are increasing, since we're running out of opportunity for this deduction from the text to be contradicted. (^_^)
0TobyBartels9y
Perenelle's surname is also Flamel. (You could use a portmanteau for Perenelle/Nicolas.)
0MathMage9y
Nicolelle?
2Vaniver9y
The relevant section (Ch 108): Perenelle's safety relied on the Stone's uniqueness and hiddenness, which is no longer a factor as far as Quirrell is concerned.
0Velorien9y
2Vaniver9y
1. Voldemort is unlikely to destroy what he could instead steal. 2. Voldemort is unlikely to leave power around where others can find it (and then use it against him). 3. There are potentially many vengeance spells that Flamel has set up in order to dissuade anyone from killing them. The obvious plan is to steal Flamel's lore and then induce Flamel to commit suicide. Legilimency serves for both purposes. This may be blocked by Occlumency or Dumbledore's intervention, but using a controlled minion to simply kill Flamel seems to go against point 1.
0Velorien9y
So what mechanism do you suggest Voldemort used, in light of the above quote?
0Vaniver9y
I read "another" as someone besides Quirrell. I don't see how that disagrees with, say, V reading Flamel's mind and then Bellatrix AKing F, or V reading F's mind and then commanding F to kill themself, or so on. The most obvious interpretation is that V just sent B to kill F, or Owled F a hand grenade, or so on. But I don't see why V would prefer that option, especially given that even in the world where V has F's lore, V would want Dumbledore (at least) to believe that F's lore is gone.
2Izeinwinter9y
Shorter point: Your argument supposes that Harry - at age 11 - has mental defenses better than Flamel at age >600. Seriously, no. Yes, the resonance, but if Legitimancy was that powerful, he would just have someone else dig through Harry's skull.
2Vaniver9y
It's almost as if Harry is a mental clone of the most powerful Legilimens in recorded history. ಠ_ಠ
-3Izeinwinter9y
Eh.. Voldemort is a legimens. But he isn't an unusually good one at all. He actively dislikes actually reading peoples minds. He simply had a very impressive talent for entirely non-magical cold reading and inference. The wizarding public heard tales of that, and in the same way they failed to consider "hidden broomstick enchantments!" credited him with scary superpowers he didn't actually have. This is an inference from the text, but a high probability one. - However, it is also stated outright in the text that Harry's mental defenses are nothing special. He's an occlumens, but according to his teacher in that art, who bloody well should know, not a perfect one.
6Velorien9y
The latter statement isn't evidence for the former. Harry dislikes broomstick riding as an activity, but is still naturally gifted at it, and successful on the occasions when he needs to do it. Here is our best example of Voldemort talking about his abilities: That sounds pretty advanced to me, and the way he speaks of it ("with my command of Legilimency") suggests pride in his abilities as well. Here is Moody talking about Voldemort's abilities, with Dumbledore listening and not disagreeing: We are never told what the wizarding public at large thinks of Voldemort's Legilimency powers, so I don't know where you're getting that argument. And for the record, this is Mr Bester's assessment of Harry: It's also worth noting that while Moody doesn't seem especially impressed at the power of Harry's Occlumency barriers, his only comment is that they are rusty, not that they provide insufficient protection for practical purposes.
0falenas1089y
That would require getting a hold of and killing a Phoenix, which would be difficult even for Quirrel.
2TobyBartels9y
Not Quirrell, but Flamel, over 600 years.

I've argued before that HPMOR probably includes some kind of mind/body dualism. It occurs to me that an interesting experiment is about to be performed.

The body of Hermione Granger has been infused with the life and magic of Harry Potter. I assume for narrative reasons that Hermione will wake up as Hermione. But a copy of Harry could wake up in Hermione's body instead.

The mechanisms behind a person' life force, magic force, and mind are unknown to us. We don't also don't know whether or to what extent these aspects of a person are separate or connected... (read more)

5Astazha9y
Also if Hermione wakes up as a copy of Harry: 4 - Harry and most of the HPMOR readers will be extremely dismayed at this development.

Hey what ever happened with Snape's complicated potion in the Chamber of Secrets? Was that just a red herring?

Edit: I mean the other chamber.

It was an excuse to have two characters talk about the plot - doesn't seem like there was anything more to it.

4Sheaman37739y
Above is the Doyalist reason, and almost certainly the root reason. The Watsonian reason was that it would force Voldemort to waste an hour in the preparation, making any attempt to steal the Stone take an hour longer. As traps go, it's reasonably clever. The potion did serve its in-story purpose of banishing the flames blocking the doorway, after all, so it's not like Voldemort spent that time on the potion and then used his wand to take care of the flames.
5TobyBartels9y
Nitpick: That's not the Chamber of Secrets.
1Liron9y
Oh yeah, forgot the first book of canon ends in this Chamber of Secrets Jr.

The Ravenclaw team put up a valiant fight.

But there was no Quidditch team anywhere that could've defeated the Slytherins that day.

Dawn was tinging the sky when the Slytherins won their final game, the Quidditch Cup, and the House Cup.

I read this as metaphorical, with Harry the Slytherin-just-kidding-Ravenclaw going Slytherin, but I don't see exactly how that fits.

9MathMage9y
The interpretation where the Slytherins are playing to honor their fallen professor is much more straightforward.

We know that many other Hogwarts students will invent and/or believe the weirdest theories. I’m definitely looking forward to the theories about why Hermione’s body was there for Voldemort’s rebirth, and about how she defeated him …

Any suggestions? (Aside from the obvious one: “Harry must have taught her some of his tricks!”)

"Well, obviously, if I'd been at the scene and defeated You-Know-Who and the Death Eaters and brought Hermione back from the dead by channelling General Chaos's unspeakable dark powers, I wouldn't just tell you that," Tracey Davis told the reporters.

Edit: "And that's Darke, with an e."

"What explosion? You mean you didn't realise that was Harry Potter snapping his fingers extra hard?"

"Of course she came back. Having two lives is why they call someone a double witch!"

"And then You-Know-Who cast the Killing Curse on her, but it rebounded because she was protected by the power of Harry Potter's love. Huh? Of course she's his true love. How else would he have been able to pull her out of the Mirror in the first place?"

"So Harry Potter spent all his Quirrell points to get Professor Quirrell to let Hermione take a make-up exam. And everyone knows those are meant to be harder than the original..."

Just wait for the next issue of the Quibbler.

8[anonymous]9y
The couple who lived.

The Boy Who Lived impregnates the Deathly Hallow Girl with Tom Riddle's child!

[-][anonymous]9y230

The Boy who Lived kills 30 high ranking witches and wizards, resurrects his first kiss, fakes the death of Voldemort and wears him as a ring!

8anotherblackhat9y
I think it's pretty obvious. Voldemort has always been attracted to power, and it's well known that Hermione is the most powerful witch of her generation. He made several overtures to her, but was unable to turn her from her path, and so he killed her. Upon her death he felt great remorse (such was his passion) and decided to bring her back from the dead (such was his power). Dumbledore tried to stop him, and so was eliminated. In fact, Voldemort was so enamored of Hermione, that after she was brought back, he use dark magics to give her even greater power. Quirrell (who has been hiding his identity of David Monroe) was secretly on hand for the ceremony, but by the time he realized what was happening, it was too late to stop it. Cutting charms were used on Voldemort's hands, and other terrible damage, but despite all this, Quirrell was defeated. Ironically, having given her the power of friendship, it was the power of friendship which ultimately was his downfall.

I'm not sure how Quirrell's last plot could still come to fruition. Slytherin have won the house cup and one of the professors awarding house points to Ravenclaw at this stage would feel like Quirrell's plotting had failed.

Unless they award the points in response to Voldy being killed by Hermione. Which means even in dying, Quirrel wins.

2yaeiou9y
The annihilation of Quirrell!Mort (assuming that is what's happened) isn't something I can envisage as being part of Quirrell's plot. So, although the outcome Quirrell was aiming for coming to pass would make it look like he was successful in fact his plot failed and Harry's plot on his behalf succeeded. It can be argued that Quirrell manipulation of Harry to ensure Quirrell was seen to win was a strand in Quirrell's plot. But, his fear of death / destruction of his horcrux was so profound my model of Quirrell wouldn't perceive himself to have won under these circumstances.

"For defeating the Dark Lord, we award Hermione...wait, what was the difference in score again?...four hundred and twenty points."

It's a fitting honour for the brave Professor Quirrell; no fair Slytherin would deny him this.

2Luke_A_Somers9y
Especially since they'd still have the cup.
0TobyBartels9y
The Quidditch Cup, but not the House Cup.
0Luke_A_Somers9y
Slytherin pulled ahead in both by scoring in Quidditch. These bonus points would equalize them in the House cup. Both houses would have it.
0TobyBartels9y
I see what you mean. They get the Quidditch Cup outright (which is what I meant), but they share the House Cup, which is still having it (and that's what you meant).
3Strilanc9y
Hm, my take-away from the end of the chapter was a sad feeling that Quirrel simply failed at or lied about getting both houses to win.

Failed, I think. As of 104, it looked like his Christmas plots were all going to succeed - the Ravenclaws and Slytherins were in the process of tying for the Cup, and raising the popularity of Harry's anti-snitch proposal in doing so.

It is only the revelation that "Professor Quirrell had gone out to face the Dark Lord and died for it, You-Know-Who had returned and died again, Professor Quirrell was dead, he was dead", which Quirrell would not have planned around, that threw a spanner in the works by motivating the Slytherins to seek outright victory.

4yaeiou9y
Quirrell was adverse to outright lies, so at this point I think he failed.

Interesting, I was expecting Harry to ascribe the destruction of the Death Eaters + Voldemort to Dumbledore.

I was expecting him to ascribe it to Quirrel.

0azuredarkness9y
Same here
2MathiasZaman9y
There's nothing to be gained by doing it, and it messes up the timeline of the (fabricated) story. Keep in mind that Harry probably has some hope of getting Dumbledore out of the mirror some day and explaining how Dumbledore got into the mirror after defeating Voldemort has some complications.

Adding to my previous prediction comment:

Predictions:

Harry did at least one plot-relevant thing in the time we haven’t seen (between him time-turning back at the graveyard in Chapter 115 and returning to the Quidditch match for Chapter 116). 80%

Harry intentionally made his scar bleed in Chapter 116. 95% (Perhaps using Muggle special effects?)

Someone will see through Harry’s acting (in Chapter 116 at the Quidditch match), whether by deducing things themselves or being told some part of what really happened, by the end of the story. 90%

Draco will figure out ... (read more)

The following seems like a very obvious observation, but I don't recall seeing it made so far.

Tom Riddle Jr #1 (aka Lord Voldemort, aka Quirinus Quirrell) attempted to create an intelligent being in his own image, with the intention that it would share his values and cooperate with him in bringing about the sort of future he wanted.

This didn't go well, for reasons including (1) that Tom Riddle Jr #2 turned out not to share TR#1's values after all, and (2) that TR#2 developed new abilities TR#1 never suspected and that TR#2 was able to use against TR#1 when... (read more)

[-][anonymous]9y00

I'm not actually sure any more. Was Voldemort really unaware that Harry could Partially Transfigure Things?

I will note that Quirrel watched over Harry as he felled a bunch of trees in Precautionary Measures pt.2. And that involved partial Transfiguration.

[This comment is no longer endorsed by its author]Reply
[-][anonymous]9y00

ch12

"Silence!" shouted Professor McGonagall at the podium of the Head Table. "No talking until the Sorting Ceremony finishes!"

There was a brief dip in the volume, as everyone waited to see if she was going to make any specific and credible threats, and then the whispers started up again.

Then the silver-bearded ancient stood up from his great golden chair, smiling cheerfully.

Instant silence. Someone frantically elbowed Harry as he tried to continue a whisper, and Harry cut himself off in mid-sentence.

The cheerful-looking old man sat do

... (read more)
[This comment is no longer endorsed by its author]Reply

So I guess no effort is going to be made to rescue Lucius or Dumbledore directly.

6Duncan9y
Lucius is both dead and warm. I think he's dead dead unless Eliezer has someone like Harry does something in a very narrow time window. Dumbledore is a much easier problem to solve (story wise) and can be solved at the same time as the Atlantis story thread if that is what the author plans.
6Nornagest9y
I doubt we can do justice to Atlantis in five chapters of plot; the last few chapters only resolved as much as they did because Eliezer fired almost all of the available Chekhov's guns. We might get some hints, a sketch of a solution, but we're not going to see it in detail.
0linkhyrule59y
All he really has to do is convince Lucius to be a rock for about five minutes while he would have been summoned. Heal anything with transfigurative healing + the Stone.
0Transfuturist9y
That would require physical availability.
0linkhyrule59y
He could have spent that hour sending a Patronus to Lucius, though. Didn't think of it, though.
4kilobug9y
For Lucius, I guess it's too late. For Dumbledore, there is no hurry, if he's frozen out of time, he can be rescued in a few days, weeks or even years, so definitely not the day to try to do it.
1Gondolinian9y
Well, Harry has the Stone now, so he could still try to repeat Hermione's resurrection process for Lucius and possibly other Death Eaters, though without all the rituals afterward.
0Random9y
Why would Harry resurrect Death Eaters and not common people, who are dying in millions all over the world?
0seer9y
Why is he spending effort on saving Tom Riddle and not common people, who are dying in millions all over the world?

Remember that if Tom Riddle dies, a potentially vengeful demon with significant magical power is unleashed. Preventing that from happening is worth doing for the sake of those common people, regardless of its impact on Tom Riddle.

1Astazha9y
Yeah, and that make sense. There's also that he may be one of the last remaining repositories for lost knowledge. But we've seen internal monologue from Harry where he thinks about the intrinsic value of Voldemort's life and the values of the children's children's children and so on. It's incredibly naive. Voldemort is an immortal psychopath who is ridiculously overpowered and very difficult to contain. Taking that guy out is entirely in sync with valuing life in general. I'm not a fan of the death penalty, but his mere existence is threatening enough that I would make an exception with no hesitation and not feel bad about it ever.
5Vaniver9y
I didn't like it either, but: Harry has taken him out, in the most effective way possible. The existence of the Horcrux network means that the death penalty is not an effective punishment or removal method.
2Izeinwinter9y
No, but moderating the memory charm is foolishness. He isn't even remotely proficient with that charm. He should either have gotten expert help, or gone for a total wipe.
5Vaniver9y
I think I would have just transfigured him into the jewel without doing the memory charm until much later, but on reflection I think that given Harry's uncertainty about how V's mind transfer system works, doing a substandard memory charm now is better than not doing one at all.
9Random9y
He is not saving Tom Riddle. He is saving millions by keeping Tom Riddle alive.
0Luke_A_Somers9y
The point was that it's possible. Why might it actually occur? First, he might figure 'I did this, so I'm going to fix it'. Also, they are fairly powerful, comparatively speaking, to common people - he might have some plot to raise them and bind them to help him or put them in a position that he expects a net positive in his future effectiveness?
0JoshuaZ9y
I don't know how well that is going to work after the bodies beings warm for a while and with a fairly big boom.
0TobyBartels9y
I wonder if you can Obliviate physical decay and return the brain to the state that it was in immediately after (or better, before) death. It seems unlikely, but then so is thinking with the brain of a cat, so who knows? If Obliviate works by altering brain states, and Magic recognizes a dead brain (so long as not too far decayed) as still a brain with all of its prior states from when it was alive, then it just might work. Obliviate 2.0 if necessary.
2Luke_A_Somers9y
Remembering isn't the same as decaying. Forgetting isn't the same as regenerating.
1TobyBartels9y
Certainly not, but they're both changes in the brain, and who knows how magic thinks of these things? Magic has very strange opinions about the nature of reality. It's definitely a long shot, but somebody should try it.