You're looking at Less Wrong's discussion board. This includes all posts, including those that haven't been promoted to the front page yet. For more information, see About Less Wrong.

Acrinoe comments on Harry Potter and the Methods of Rationality discussion thread, part 7 - Less Wrong Discussion

7 Post author: Unnamed 14 January 2011 06:49AM

You are viewing a comment permalink. View the original post to see all comments and the full post content.

Comments (495)

You are viewing a single comment's thread.

Comment author: Acrinoe 26 January 2011 03:30:56AM 9 points [-]

ch68:

Hermione is very much correct. If she wants to play the hero, she needs to level up.

Hermione Skills- photographic memory, high intelligence, fast learner, high level of spell casting ability. No Patronus capability (although her minions might) Minions - several capable Sunshine luitenents, Ms. McGonigal (not very forthcoming with aid) Magic items - magic bag of holding

Harry Skills - high intelligence. Natural Occlumens. Patronus 2.0 capability. Partial Transfiguration capability. Rational thinking and scientific methods. Highly intuitive with lateral thinking. Knowledge of various Muggle technologies. Parseltongue language Minions/Allies - Chaos Lieutenant Longbottom, Lesath Lestrange, Bella Lestrange, Prof. Quirrell, Prof. Dumbeldor (not very forthcoming with aid), Prof. McGonagal (somewhat forthcoming with aid), Fawkes (?), Santa (?) Magic / Items - Deathly Hallow Cloak, Time Turner, Wealth (limited access), Chest of holding, Bag of holding, various Muggle tech artifacts (batteries, arc welder, ...)

Draco Skills – high intelligence. Patronus. Learning rational thinking and scientific methods. Trained manipulator.
Minions / Allies – Lucius Malfoy, Prof. Snape, Prof. Quirrell, Dragon Lieutenant Crab and Goyle (martial artist and skilled flyer), Slytherin network, Magic / Items – Wealth

Hermione should focus on improving her skill set. Researching into higher level spells and using her current spells in novel ways. Maybe she should read Harry's note to try and gain Patronus 2.0 capability.

She should acquire more allies and minions. Acquire a familiar (the bigger and badder the better...like a Fawkes or Naga equivalent). Get more effort out of her Luitenants and use thier resources. Maybe go the canon route and develop the House Elfs as allies. She should lobby for advanced classes and befriend higher year students as well.

She should actively seek to aquire or enchant some magic items to enhance her combat capabilities. Lieutenant Wesley should really be brought to task with acquiring some Zonko product from his brothers for the war effort.

Comment author: dclayh 26 January 2011 10:06:37PM *  7 points [-]

For Draco, you forgot Knowledge: wizard society and Status: Noble and Most Ancient House.

ETA: And Status: Boy-Who-Lived for Harry, of course.

Comment author: DanArmak 26 January 2011 11:52:00PM 6 points [-]

Hermoine right now doesn't have a goal. In a story, the strength of a protagonist is proportional to the importance of their goal or the power of their enemies.

Tsuikou Naritai won't work if all she wants is not to be weaker than Harry.

Comment author: wedrifid 26 January 2011 03:55:28AM *  8 points [-]

I like this strategizing. I'd actually like to see a Hermione and the Methods of Rationality spinoff. Like the HP one only with less of Harry confusing clever and arrogant with rational (unless Harry has changed his personality in the last 20 or so chapters since I tired of him).

Of course, with all Hermione's leveling up she still will not have a:

Chaos Lieutenant Longbottom,

Neville is badass.

Comment author: [deleted] 26 January 2011 04:26:58AM 6 points [-]

Neville is badass.

Very true. But hey, you know who Hermione does have, in her Allies column?

Harry Potter.

She should get Harry's help with her heroine project. He certainly wouldn't try to hold her back like Dumbledore and McGonagall. The only difficulty would be explaining her problem to him in a way that he could understand -- but once he did understand it, he'd want to help and he'd probably be good at it, too.

Comment author: endoself 26 January 2011 08:00:57AM *  2 points [-]

Harry doesn't exactly strike me as psychologically prepared for this particular revelation.

Comment author: derefr 27 January 2011 10:45:48PM *  7 points [-]

He's quite prepared in a Hero's Journey sense, though. In Harry's own mind, he has lost his mentor. Thus, he is now free to be a mentor. And what better way to grow, as a Hero and über-rationalist, than to teach others to do what you do?

Of course, Harry would say that he's already doing that with Draco—but in the same way that he usually holds back his near-mode instrumental-rationalist dark side, he's holding back the kind of insights that Draco would need to think the way Harry thinks; Harry is training Draco to be a scientist, but not an instrumental rationalist, and therefore, in the context of the story, not a Hero. (To put it another way: Draco will never one-box. He's a virtue-ethicist who is more concerned with "rationality" as just another virtue than with winning per se.)

Mentoring Hermione would be an entirely different matter: he would basically have to instill a dark side into her. Quirrel taught Harry how to lose—Harry would have to teach Hermione how to win.

If Eliezer has planned MoR as a five-act heroic fantasy, it will probably go like this; usually, in a five-act form, acts 4 and 5 mirror the character developments of the Hero in 2 and 3 in another character, for the purposes of re-examining the (developed, and now mostly stagnant) Hero's growth and revealing by juxtaposition what using that particular character as Hero brought to the journey.

It seems more likely to be a three-act form at this point, though, with Azkaban as the central, act 2 ordeal. That's not to say the story is more than half-over already, though; Harry has just found his motivation for acting instead of reacting (to change the magical world such that Azkaban is no longer a part of it.)

Comment author: gjm 28 January 2011 11:09:20PM 5 points [-]

That must be the first time anyone has ever called Draco Malfoy a virtue ethicist. Probably the last, too.

Comment author: TobyBartels 29 January 2011 02:14:30AM *  5 points [-]

Just because his values don't match yours doesn't mean that he's not ethical.

Whether for good or evil, evarybody in canon is a virtue ethicist. (Presumably because Rowling knows no other ethics.)

Comment author: gjm 29 January 2011 09:38:06AM 4 points [-]

For the avoidance of doubt, I wasn't disagreeing that one could categorize Draco that way. I just thought the incongruity of it was striking.

(To me, canon!Voldemort doesn't seem like much of a virtue ethicist even in the relevantly expanded sense. More of a consequentialist.)

Comment author: wedrifid 31 January 2011 07:30:26AM *  3 points [-]

To me, canon!Voldemort doesn't seem like much of a virtue ethicist even in the relevantly expanded sense. More of a consequentialist.

I had the same impression. I think it was Eliezer's-characaturization-of-canon!Voldemort that was the virtue ethicist. Voldemort harnessed, encouraged and exploited a form of virtue ethics in others to reinforce his own power. Tom Riddle was perhaps more of a virtue ethicist. As they say, power corrupts - it even corrupts away virtue systems that were fairly abominable to begin with.

I did upvote the grandparent despite this possible exception.

Comment author: Desrtopa 31 January 2011 02:48:37AM 3 points [-]

(To me, canon!Voldemort doesn't seem like much of a virtue ethicist even in the relevantly expanded sense. More of a consequentialist.)

How so?

Comment author: Desrtopa 29 January 2011 02:16:53AM 3 points [-]

Mentoring Hermione would be an entirely different matter: he would basically have to instill a dark side into her. Quirrel taught Harry how to lose—Harry would have to teach Hermione how to win.

Hermione knows how to win. She won the first mock battle quite resoundingly. She doesn't necessarily know how to hurt people for the greater good though.

Comment author: Normal_Anomaly 29 January 2011 01:17:24AM 3 points [-]

He's quite prepared in a Hero's Journey sense, though. In Harry's own mind, he has lost his mentor. Thus, he is now free to be a mentor. And what better way to grow, as a Hero and über-rationalist, than to teach others to do what you do?

I hope it plays out like this, at least in part. The bits early in the book with Harry teaching Draco were fun.

Harry would say that he's already doing that with Draco—but in the same way that he usually holds back his near-mode instrumental-rationalist dark side, he's holding back the kind of insights that Draco would need to think the way Harry thinks; Harry is training Draco to be a scientist, but not an instrumental rationalist, and therefore, in the context of the story, not a Hero. (To put it another way: Draco will never two-box. He's a virtue-ethicist who is more concerned with "rationality" as just another virtue than with winning per se.)

Draco may have already had the instrumental rationality part; certainly he was on a higher level instrumentally than epistemically. He had already had tutors in influencing people, he didn't have an akrasia problem, and he grew up in a culture of "find out what you want and go get it". Also, did you mean "Draco will never one-box?"

Comment author: derefr 29 January 2011 07:19:21AM 1 point [-]

Er, yes, edited.

Comment author: TobyBartels 29 January 2011 02:17:25AM 1 point [-]

less of Harry confusing clever and arrogant with rational (unless Harry has changed his personality in the last 20 or so chapters since I tired of him)

Well, he's had some lessons to clarify the difference between clever arrogance and rationality within some of those chapters.

Comment author: CronoDAS 26 January 2011 08:06:34AM *  2 points [-]

Lieutenant Wesley

Freudian slip? ;)

Comment author: cousin_it 26 January 2011 05:15:12AM 3 points [-]

Why would she do all this? Just to compete with Harry? She has no sacred quest, remember.

Comment author: Sheaman3773 26 January 2011 05:44:57AM 4 points [-]

To be herself in the only way she can?

To get out from under Harry's shadow?

To not belong to him?

She has expressed a desire for all of these.

Comment author: Acrinoe 27 January 2011 02:50:30AM 2 points [-]

I just thought of a potential tactical trick for any of the three acting Generals.
- bringing some bludgers jinxed to target enemy Generals/Officers/fodder

Also, too bad neither of the Weasley twins could have been recruited. (I'm not sure if the existence of the map is known to anyone besides the twins) The Marauder's Map would have been an ideal tool for any Army to outflank, deny ambush, and execute precisely timed manuevers.

Comment author: Desrtopa 27 January 2011 03:09:12AM 0 points [-]

She should actively seek to aquire or enchant some magic items to enhance her combat capabilities.

Acquire, perhaps, but she has fewer funds available to her than Draco or Harry, and anything she's capable of enchanting as a first year wouldn't be especially worthwhile on the scale of magical items.

Comment author: Sheaman3773 27 January 2011 04:08:10AM 0 points [-]

She should actively seek to aquire or enchant some magic items to enhance her combat capabilities. Lieutenant Wesley should really be brought to task with acquiring some Zonko product from his brothers for the war effort.

If you are speaking strictly of the Battle Magic armies, have you forgotten:

"no magical items except the ones I give you"

from chapter thirty-one?

Comment author: Acrinoe 29 January 2011 02:45:14AM 0 points [-]

Hmmm, I did forget about that.

Still, magic items would be useful for any other hero quests that might come her way. Harry has certainly made full use of all the tools at his disposal outside of the battlegrounds.