No, I was serious, sorry. But, seeing as I believe that Eliezer is human like the rest of us, I think it’s entirely plausible that he ran out of ideas (or, at least, out of good ideas) -- kind of analogous to writing a program so clever that the author cannot debug it...
True, but seeing as he has stated that he had the entire plot planned out from the beginning, for him to have run out of ideas would require him to have been actively lying to us.
I’m not sure what “having the entire plot planned out from the beginning” really means, though. Eliezer ends up retconning things relatively frequently, so I wouldn’t be surprised if he had a plot point like “Voldemort captures Harry” followed by “Harry escapes”, but with too few details in between to make the logic ironclad.
If HPMoR was a conventional book, then Eliezer would have a lot of time to edit it and make all the retcons behind the scenes—even fairly major ones—but it isn’t, so he can’t.
No, I was serious, sorry. But, seeing as I believe that Eliezer is human like the rest of us, I think it’s entirely plausible that he ran out of ideas (or, at least, out of good ideas) -- kind of analogous to writing a program so clever that the author cannot debug it...
True, but seeing as he has stated that he had the entire plot planned out from the beginning, for him to have run out of ideas would require him to have been actively lying to us.
I’m not sure what “having the entire plot planned out from the beginning” really means, though. Eliezer ends up retconning things relatively frequently, so I wouldn’t be surprised if he had a plot point like “Voldemort captures Harry” followed by “Harry escapes”, but with too few details in between to make the logic ironclad.
If HPMoR was a conventional book, then Eliezer would have a lot of time to edit it and make all the retcons behind the scenes—even fairly major ones—but it isn’t, so he can’t.