Nnnnot quite. Remember, for Harry, part of defeating death is mass true resurrection. And the only method of resurrection Harry knows of requires a finite amount of his own life-force. (I suppose that may not apply to Muggles, though.)
Also, he needs the body, which doesn’t usually exist for anyone dead too long ago...
I said he would defeat death if he got the Philosopher’s Stone (and it didn’t have a finite charge). It can be used to return any living or recently dead human to a healthy young state.
Granted, Harry can’t use it as fast as people die (roughly 2 people per second around the world). So he would still need to make more Stones.
Nnnnot quite. Remember, for Harry, part of defeating death is mass true resurrection. And the only method of resurrection Harry knows of requires a finite amount of his own life-force. (I suppose that may not apply to Muggles, though.)
Also, he needs the body, which doesn’t usually exist for anyone dead too long ago...
I said he would defeat death if he got the Philosopher’s Stone (and it didn’t have a finite charge). It can be used to return any living or recently dead human to a healthy young state.
Granted, Harry can’t use it as fast as people die (roughly 2 people per second around the world). So he would still need to make more Stones.
Pretty much. It’s not mass producible, is the problem here.
It’s a start, and a pretty good start at that, but it’s not done.