As Dumbledore demonstrates in Order of the Phoenix, any spell, even Avada Kadavra, can be blocked by a temporarily animate statue (the spell “kills” the statue instead). Which actually annoyed me when I read it, since that implies wizards could imbue each layer of their clothing with intelligence before a battle, and gain a bunch of extra lives.
(Having your breastplate shout taunts at your enemy also frees you up to focus on fighting.)
It wasn’t the animatedness of the statue that made it block Avada Kedavra, it was that it was a huge block of solid stuff. Voldemort in the same sequence crafted a physical shield for himself, though he didn’t need to block any Avada Kedavras (as Dumbledore didn’t cast any).
Does Avada Kedavra require that its victim be intelligent, or just alive? If it’s the latter, then a wizard could presumably turn a leather jacket into a flesh golem or something. It’s gruesome enough that there would probably be an old book giving detailed instructions, with horrible illustrations.
I believe Bartemius Crouch Jr. demonstrates the curse by casting it on a spider so intelligence is not required in the books, but this seems like something that might be changed in the fanfic.
Comparing sleep to death for intelligence is like comparing a screensaver to dismantling for a computer. The brain is still very active during sleep, external stimuli can still be recognized, and sleep isn’t a permanent condition. I don’t see how such a comparison is meaningful for discussing intelligence.
All those things except permanence are true of animals, or for that matter, a computer.
Permanence causes a lot of paradoxes. For example, if you “kill” someone in their sleep, they never wake up, so it was permanent. That is, unless you start using counterfactuals, and talk about if they could have been woken up. In that case, they still can. It’s not completely impossible, just really unlikely. But if you were dead set on killing them once they went to sleep, it would be really unlikely for them to wake up from that.
Also, if they stop being intelligent, it becomes impossible to follow what “them” is. Intelligence stops. Intelligence starts. Who’s to say it’s the same one?
That’s a weak use of permanence. Nothing about the process of sleep requires that it be permanent, so sleep does not have the inherent property of permanence. Sometimes, people incidentally never wake from sleep, but that’s not permanence in the way that death is inherently permanent.
I don’t agree that we stop being intelligent when we sleep. You continue to assert this, but without supporting it. Again:
The brain is still very active during sleep, external stimuli can still be recognized
Also, if intelligence “stops” and “starts” from the same physical generator, i.e. the brain, (which isn’t what happens with sleep) then it is the same one.
Nothing about the process of sleep requires that it be permanent, so sleep does not have the inherent property of permanence.
What makes it inherently permanent? The only difference between sleep, cryostasis, and being shot in the head is how likely you are to be revived. It’s never certain, and it’s never impossible. Death is permanent by definition, but that just means we’re never quite certain anybody is dead.
Also, if intelligence “stops” and “starts” from the same physical generator, i.e. the brain, (which isn’t what happens with sleep) then it is the same one.
Pretty much everyone’s brain is made of the same quarks and leptons, so the same physical generator doesn’t exactly narrow it down any. I would explain what I mean by that, but the link you have already does it.
You will even be able to see, I hope, that if your brain were non-destructively frozen (e.g. by vitrification in liquid nitrogen); and a computer model of the synapses, neural states, and other brain behaviors were constructed a hundred years later; then it would preserve exactly everything about you that was preserved by going to sleep one night and waking up the next morning.
The physical generator includes the configuration of those quarks and leptons, which is what gives rise to the specific intelligence.
The configuration isn’t the same when you wake up. It’s similar, but how do you know how similar it has to be?
Again, there’s nothing prevent a given configuration from ever occuring again, so you can’t tell if someone dies. Also, the configuration I had when I was little no longer exists. Wouldn’t that mean that as I live, each earlier instance of me is slowly dying?
When the butterfly emerges, is the caterpillar dead? I don’t think so. Life still exists, and though its form changes, there is continuity from one moment to the next. The same is true for intelligence. To say otherwise is to stretch the meaning of “death” beyond relevance.
But then you’re not the same person “you” were a year ago, and it’s possible for you to be two people at once.
Also, that means that it’s impossible to ever tell if you’re dead. Even without some way of working out who you were, another you could start by complete coincidence.
The Sorting Hat disagreed. It seemed pretty pissed at Harry for accidentally making it sentient, which then meant Harry would be forced to kill it by removing the source if the hat’s sentience.
You could imbue an item with intelligence and the desire to die gloriously in battle.
In response, DanielLC seems to take it for granted that the rule of morality is “Do to others what you would have them do to you.”, which is not bad as a rule of thumb, but leads to irreconcilable conflict when applied by people with different preferences (such as intelligence, even for a brief period, vs continuing to survive, once intelligence exists). The real rule should be “Do to others what they would have you do to them.”.
Since your clothing has no preferences before imbuing it with intelligence, anything that you do to it is (directly) morally neutral. As for the indirect effect that it’s liable to be horribly killed, the morality of that depends entirely on what its preferences are after it is imbued with intelligence.
All that said, I didn’t read the statues in OotP as having intelligence at all.
Edit: I forgot to state the correction to the Golden Rule above! Fixed. (Also minor grammar fix and removing the false reference to Dreaded Anomaly.)
It would be immoral to genetically engineer suicidal depression, and it would be immoral to engineer the desire to die in this society, where it cannot easily be fulfilled.
But imagine that puberty, instead of leading people to want to have sex, led us (or some of us) to want to die. While this might be as bad as puberty currently is, with new hormones and great confusion, hopefully a competent genetic engineer would actually make it better. No depression here, but looking forward to becoming an adult, with all that this entails. Presumably the engineer even has some purpose in mind, but even if not, I’m sure that society is more than capable of making one up.
There must already be a science fiction story out there with this premise, but I don’t know one.
It would be immoral to genetically engineer suicidal depression, and it would be immoral to engineer the desire to die in this society, where it cannot easily be fulfilled.
It would be immoral to engineer the desire to die in this society, where it is considered immoral to make people want to kill themselves.
Animate armor.
As Dumbledore demonstrates in Order of the Phoenix, any spell, even Avada Kadavra, can be blocked by a temporarily animate statue (the spell “kills” the statue instead). Which actually annoyed me when I read it, since that implies wizards could imbue each layer of their clothing with intelligence before a battle, and gain a bunch of extra lives.
(Having your breastplate shout taunts at your enemy also frees you up to focus on fighting.)
It wasn’t the animatedness of the statue that made it block Avada Kedavra, it was that it was a huge block of solid stuff. Voldemort in the same sequence crafted a physical shield for himself, though he didn’t need to block any Avada Kedavras (as Dumbledore didn’t cast any).
Of course, imbuing your clothing with intelligence so it will absorb killing curses has some truly horrifying moral implications.
Does Avada Kedavra require that its victim be intelligent, or just alive? If it’s the latter, then a wizard could presumably turn a leather jacket into a flesh golem or something. It’s gruesome enough that there would probably be an old book giving detailed instructions, with horrible illustrations.
I believe Bartemius Crouch Jr. demonstrates the curse by casting it on a spider so intelligence is not required in the books, but this seems like something that might be changed in the fanfic.
Quirrell distinguished himself early on in the fic as saying that the Killing Curse was a spell that solved many problems. He also said (ch 16):
Didn’t think of that. I suspect that the exact requirement amounts to having a ‘soul’, whatever that means.
Only if you’re death-averse. I figure intelligence for a little bit is better than no intelligence at all.
Besides, you cease to be intelligent every time you fall asleep. People never seem to worry about the moral implications of that.
I admit Harry is death-averse. I suppose he just never thought about sleep.
Comparing sleep to death for intelligence is like comparing a screensaver to dismantling for a computer. The brain is still very active during sleep, external stimuli can still be recognized, and sleep isn’t a permanent condition. I don’t see how such a comparison is meaningful for discussing intelligence.
All those things except permanence are true of animals, or for that matter, a computer.
Permanence causes a lot of paradoxes. For example, if you “kill” someone in their sleep, they never wake up, so it was permanent. That is, unless you start using counterfactuals, and talk about if they could have been woken up. In that case, they still can. It’s not completely impossible, just really unlikely. But if you were dead set on killing them once they went to sleep, it would be really unlikely for them to wake up from that.
Also, if they stop being intelligent, it becomes impossible to follow what “them” is. Intelligence stops. Intelligence starts. Who’s to say it’s the same one?
hides face behind hands
reveals
PEEKABOO!
That’s a weak use of permanence. Nothing about the process of sleep requires that it be permanent, so sleep does not have the inherent property of permanence. Sometimes, people incidentally never wake from sleep, but that’s not permanence in the way that death is inherently permanent.
I don’t agree that we stop being intelligent when we sleep. You continue to assert this, but without supporting it. Again:
Also, if intelligence “stops” and “starts” from the same physical generator, i.e. the brain, (which isn’t what happens with sleep) then it is the same one.
(Edited to add article link.)
What makes it inherently permanent? The only difference between sleep, cryostasis, and being shot in the head is how likely you are to be revived. It’s never certain, and it’s never impossible. Death is permanent by definition, but that just means we’re never quite certain anybody is dead.
Pretty much everyone’s brain is made of the same quarks and leptons, so the same physical generator doesn’t exactly narrow it down any. I would explain what I mean by that, but the link you have already does it.
Yes, it does. The link says, actually:
The physical generator includes the configuration of those quarks and leptons, which is what gives rise to the specific intelligence.
The configuration isn’t the same when you wake up. It’s similar, but how do you know how similar it has to be?
Again, there’s nothing prevent a given configuration from ever occuring again, so you can’t tell if someone dies. Also, the configuration I had when I was little no longer exists. Wouldn’t that mean that as I live, each earlier instance of me is slowly dying?
When the butterfly emerges, is the caterpillar dead? I don’t think so. Life still exists, and though its form changes, there is continuity from one moment to the next. The same is true for intelligence. To say otherwise is to stretch the meaning of “death” beyond relevance.
If they have the same memories and the same personality then its still them.
But then you’re not the same person “you” were a year ago, and it’s possible for you to be two people at once.
Also, that means that it’s impossible to ever tell if you’re dead. Even without some way of working out who you were, another you could start by complete coincidence.
The Sorting Hat disagreed. It seemed pretty pissed at Harry for accidentally making it sentient, which then meant Harry would be forced to kill it by removing the source if the hat’s sentience.
You could imbue an item with intelligence and the desire to die gloriously in battle.
In response, DanielLC seems to take it for granted that the rule of morality is “Do to others what you would have them do to you.”, which is not bad as a rule of thumb, but leads to irreconcilable conflict when applied by people with different preferences (such as intelligence, even for a brief period, vs continuing to survive, once intelligence exists). The real rule should be “Do to others what they would have you do to them.”.
Since your clothing has no preferences before imbuing it with intelligence, anything that you do to it is (directly) morally neutral. As for the indirect effect that it’s liable to be horribly killed, the morality of that depends entirely on what its preferences are after it is imbued with intelligence.
All that said, I didn’t read the statues in OotP as having intelligence at all.
Edit: I forgot to state the correction to the Golden Rule above! Fixed. (Also minor grammar fix and removing the false reference to Dreaded Anomaly.)
And noting, of course, that this precise issue comes up when Harry has accidentally made the Sorting Hat sentient.
Would it also be moral to genetically engineer a human so that it becomes suicidal as a teenager?
It would be immoral to genetically engineer suicidal depression, and it would be immoral to engineer the desire to die in this society, where it cannot easily be fulfilled.
But imagine that puberty, instead of leading people to want to have sex, led us (or some of us) to want to die. While this might be as bad as puberty currently is, with new hormones and great confusion, hopefully a competent genetic engineer would actually make it better. No depression here, but looking forward to becoming an adult, with all that this entails. Presumably the engineer even has some purpose in mind, but even if not, I’m sure that society is more than capable of making one up.
There must already be a science fiction story out there with this premise, but I don’t know one.
It would be immoral to engineer the desire to die in this society, where it is considered immoral to make people want to kill themselves.
I haven’t commented on the morality of the issue at all, just the comparison of death to sleep.
Sorry, the opposing moral viewpoint against which Daniel argues is actually Daniel’s interpretation of Harry, not you. I’ve edited my comment.