Well I'm just saying the story is shallow and irrelevant, it doesn't have the significance of love nor compassion that the characters and creators want to claim. Harry Potter didn't prevail, Rowling prevailed as the "god" of this universe manufactured circumstance for victory rather than Harry's apparent free will and conscience challenging the outcome. It's a tale of fools. Intent is an excuse. What is actually written is what they actually depict. Voldemort was undone by a series of mistakes, not the "power of love".SnakeoilSage said:*Chuckle* Whatever, dude. I'm giving you J.K. Rowlings' perspective and intent on how the Harry Potter story plays out. Is is convoluted and made up on the fly? Sure. But that's how it happens. You can come up with your own interpretations but don't impose your own ideas on how the story plays out. Harry and Neville never express a desire for revenge against Voldemort, Ron and Hermione don't stick with Harry out of some shared hatred for Voldemort, etc. etc.Treblaine said:This is weak sauce.
These views you have suggest to me that you haven't read the books, and if this is true then the debate is really just over.
Im sorry this has been corrected on several times within this thread. If you are not willing to listen to the clear explanations of other posters then im not sure what to do with you.Treblaine said:Yeah, a wand that only you can use, only if you have "the right blood", after years of training before you can do ANYTHING with it, and requires tongue-twisting incantations with all but very few being very weak in capability. That and it's not really clear how powerful and flexible it is.
Range? Spells have been shown to be cast from miles away. Miles! Most offensive spells probably travel indefinitely until they meet a target.Treblaine said:Pistol is much faster and much longer range and hell you can give them to everyone.
Wizards can teleport instantly to their destination. Much faster. Wizards could teleport to the moon and use a bubblehead charm (book 4) to breath.Treblaine said:And why would the wizarding world be so disinterested in muggle technology when they have no equivalent of these:
-Muggle aerospace technology can fly faster than the speed of sound at supreme altitudes and is capable of reaching the moon
Whilst wizards tend to use owls they have also been shown to create objects which allow instantaneous personal communication. Dumbledores enchanted mirror would be an example. Heck in school hermione created a basic coin communicator to send cryptic messages. In school with a limited time frame! This is not beyond wizards at all.Treblaine said:-instantaneous personal communication: smartphones
The wizards tend to be a fairly tight nit group. No doubt they find a lot of muggle entertainment foreign due to their lack of cultural reference points.Treblaine said:-deep research, news, and opinion sources with the internet as well as near endless stream of entertainment
Wizards have other interactive games than quidditch. The books are also set in an era slightly before internet gaming really became common in every household in britain.Treblaine said:-Computer and Video games, much more affordable and varied than quiddich
Id honestly like to have seen more in the line of wizarding medicine. Its never really answered why the superior wizarding techniques are not used sneakily in muggle hospitals.Treblaine said:-Indications that modern medical science is more advanced than what muggles can achieve
In the end it's a book for children-young adults, one that slowly matured as its readers matured. It reached out and caught the audience it was intended for and as for myself, I enjoyed it a bit too. I don't hold it to the same standards I do more "hard" fantasy books or video games like say, Dragon Age or Warhammer.Treblaine said:*Snip*
Yeah, but WHICH spells can you cast without saying incantations? If you can do this for all spells then why is it not done for all spells? I think that's because it can't be done for all spells. Throughout the series wizards and witches have NOT used insta-cast spells even when it could save their lives or the lives of others. Can you only pre load one spell at a time? Kinda impractical, what if you wait for them to cast a spell then shoot from a distance?Rylingo said:Im sorry this has been corrected on several times within this thread. If you are not willing to listen to the clear explanations of other posters then im not sure what to do with you.Treblaine said:Yeah, a wand that only you can use, only if you have "the right blood", after years of training before you can do ANYTHING with it, and requires tongue-twisting incantations with all but very few being very weak in capability. That and it's not really clear how powerful and flexible it is.
Many wizards use magic in the potter books without a incantations. Voldermourt is shown to be able to teleport with no incantations or complicated wand use. He can do spells on instantaneous thought.
Range? Spells have been shown to be cast from miles away. Miles! Most offensive spells probably travel indefinitely until they meet a target.Treblaine said:Pistol is much faster and much longer range and hell you can give them to everyone.
Wizards can teleport instantly to their destination. Much faster. Wizards could teleport to the moon and use a bubblehead charm (book 4) to breath.Treblaine said:And why would the wizarding world be so disinterested in muggle technology when they have no equivalent of these:
-Muggle aerospace technology can fly faster than the speed of sound at supreme altitudes and is capable of reaching the moon
Whilst wizards tend to use owls they have also been shown to create objects which allow instantaneous personal communication. Dumbledores enchanted mirror would be an example. Heck in school hermione created a basic coin communicator to send cryptic messages. In school with a limited time frame! This is not beyond wizards at all.Treblaine said:-instantaneous personal communication: smartphones
The wizards tend to be a fairly tight nit group. No doubt they find a lot of muggle entertainment foreign due to their lack of cultural reference points.Treblaine said:-deep research, news, and opinion sources with the internet as well as near endless stream of entertainment
Wizards have other interactive games than quidditch. The books are also set in an era slightly before internet gaming really became common in every household in britain.Treblaine said:-Computer and Video games, much more affordable and varied than quiddich
Id honestly like to have seen more in the line of wizarding medicine. Its never really answered why the superior wizarding techniques are not used sneakily in muggle hospitals.Treblaine said:-Indications that modern medical science is more advanced than what muggles can achieve
You are basing the entire knowledge of real life verses a very limited view to a fictional world, there have been hints to things outside of the book content (such as wizards having their own parallel to the internet) but there have not been a lot of specific things that you are obsessing over.Treblaine said:Snip
I've yet to hear anyone get back to me on that.Geo Da Sponge said:For all the people who say "Herf-a-derf, snipers..." and always will...
It's shown that a joke shop can enchant and mass produce items of clothing with deflection charms on them. Voldemort probably has magical protection up the wazoo, and even if he doesn't, it's not like his location is ever clear or particularly permanent. I mean fuck it, us muggles could barely find Bin Laden, what chances do we have against someone who can fly and teleport?
Suitable for Children? How young? Four, five years old? Their contempt for scientific thought and selling of "magic solves everything" is a poor mode of thinking to sell to young adults or even older children even if it is completely a word of fiction. It conditions them to accept magical explanations and to hell with science, understanding or knowledge of the actual natural world. To spite the bible basher's fear of Harry Potter as a Warlock; Rowling's books serve Creationists when they try to sell the story to people that God simply magic'd the world, and all the species into existence, no question of how that conflicts with physics. Magic can just do EVERYTHING.SnakeoilSage said:In the end it's a book for children-young adults, one that slowly matured as its readers matured. It reached out and caught the audience it was intended for and as for myself, I enjoyed it a bit too. I don't hold it to the same standards I do more "hard" fantasy books or video games like say, Dragon Age or Warhammer.Treblaine said:*Snip*
And what does it matter if Dumbledore was gay? Neither he nor Rowling have the responsibility to carry some kind of banner about it; not every tale written these days has to be a biting satire of current events.
Love it or hate it, it is what it is. I'd rather kids read this than Twilight.
How the hell could Harry have not certainly encountered a Wizzarding equivalent of the internet when that would be so useful to his studies? These are fundamental technologies and physical processes.siddif said:You are basing the entire knowledge of real life verses a very limited view to a fictional world, there have been hints to things outside of the book content (such as wizards having their own parallel to the internet) but there have not been a lot of specific things that you are obsessing over.Treblaine said:Snip
Maybe when the encyclopaedia JKR is writing comes out we may have better answers but 90% of what we know from the HP series is things that Harry has come into direct contact with and therefore isnt specific enough for you.
Also it seems from some of your responses you are not 100% clued into the books or other media beyond the films which may also limit your own view of the series.
You do realize that that applies to nearly all fiction? That's why its fiction... it punches gritty reality and extreme logic in the balls and makes entertaining shit up. If you don't like it, avoid any kind of fantasy like the plague, for your sake.SaneAmongInsane said:4. NO! I freaking hate this response, because all it is trying to cover up how poor the story really is. Hey, I get a kick out the series, but this is a glaring serious plot hole. The whole reason the stakes are high is because the magic world assumes that unless Harry stops volde the muggles wouldn't stand a chance... Truth of the matter is, and JK Rowling said so herself, that in a straight up war with the magical realm the muggles would win. We have vastly superior technology and armor, not to mention numbers.
If you want the wiki version there is Pottermore the official interactive site run by JKR and Sony which is soon to open to the public. Its not just a lexicon of things in the books its also behind the scenes look at how the books were made and the creative process behind that including scrapped chapters, interactive games, etc?. Though when the books themselves arent due to change in content and all of the films are out a hard copy book can also be good. I dont see it as a cop out though as behind the scenes documentaries or biographies are seen as full products so why cant this book?Treblaine said:How the hell could Harry have not certainly encountered a Wizzarding equivalent of the internet when that would be so useful to his studies? These are fundamental technologies and physical processes.siddif said:You are basing the entire knowledge of real life verses a very limited view to a fictional world, there have been hints to things outside of the book content (such as wizards having their own parallel to the internet) but there have not been a lot of specific things that you are obsessing over.Treblaine said:Snip
Maybe when the encyclopaedia JKR is writing comes out we may have better answers but 90% of what we know from the HP series is things that Harry has come into direct contact with and therefore isnt specific enough for you.
Also it seems from some of your responses you are not 100% clued into the books or other media beyond the films which may also limit your own view of the series.
An Encyclopedia can only be a poor retcon for a series that Rowling didn't put much thought into from a technological or scientific aspect. It's also incredibly old fashioned and somewhat shillish in this day and age of fan-wikis that can be officially moderated and there is no need to have a big heavy hard-copy book that must sell for a price and cannot be edited nor added to after the fact.
Encyclopedias are more than obsolete they are an anachronism of 2012, the Wiki-model is far superior and more accessible and more relevant as it is based on what is actually declared in the books, not the way Rowling may want to have it with hindsight. It's like the digital revolution has completely flown over Rowling's head. Science now totally depends on online journals for how frequently things are updated and amended.
If you don't care about science, take for example game guides. How they are worthless if not only for their simple mistakes but mainly the patches, many of which fundamentally change gameplay to the point where the only reliable source of information is the free wiki rather than the fixed and premium-priced game-guide. And of course the users can discover things the publishers either didn't want you to know or didn't even know themselves! And the patches equivalent of Harry Potter would be further books in the series.
Rowling should make money of telling stories and shouldn't try to make money off what the Wiki-moderators are providing for free. All this encyclopaedia can do is waste her time writing either redundant or irrelevant information (defined by how if it is in or not in the boos) that may not even be canon anyway!
I love that Harry looks like he is saying "BANG!"Davatehi said:Well, the main reason is probably becasue the book would be over in like five minutes.
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In the first book, I'm pretty sure the uncle of harry has a long shaped package that turns out to be a hunting rifle, pretty sure it's featured in the movie aswell.UsefulPlayer 1 said:Its a fantasy world. Guns don't exist in that world.
Find me one reference in the books to the existence of guns and I'll take back what I said.
"But its based on our world!"
Ok, let me know where the flying dragons are in our world.
Btw his snake had a constant protective shell around it. I can't imagine why he can't do the same for himself.