There’s a lot to like about this hypothesis. It doesn’t require any additional characters, and exploiting Dumbledore’s love of stories and Snape’s love of Lily would be very Quirrell. I can see two problems with it. Quirrell has acted like he takes prophecies seriously, which seems to me more consistent with someone who believes in them than one who orchestrates them. It also doesn’t seem to have been necessary. As far as I know, we haven’t been given any reason for him to have suddenly changed direction and abandoned his war. If he’d just stayed the course, he’d have won.
In the passage you link to, I don’t think Quirrell was interested in the prophecy as much as the plot that took Skeeter down. He seemed generally interested in the latter, and the demand for the paper was one of those “give me that’s” where incredulity is pushed too far on something otherwise believed to be real.
As for objection #2, how would he have defeated the invincible Dumbledore, holder of the Elder wand?
In my preferred scenario, where Voldemort uploads into Harry as Harry seemingly defeats Voldemort, Voldemort doesn’t have to defeat Dumbledore. Dumbledore becomes his ally, and likely passes the Order of Merlin onto him before he dies. If nothing else, Harrymort would have better opportunities to kill Dumbledore than Quirrellmort.
Ruling as Harrymort has more benefits and is more secure than ruling as Voldemort, even if we assume Voldemort would have won the war. Successfully terrorizing magical Britain isn’t the same as winning the war. Once Dumbledore and the Order started using some terror of their own, I think it’s likely that they would have eventually won.
There’s a lot to like about this hypothesis. It doesn’t require any additional characters, and exploiting Dumbledore’s love of stories and Snape’s love of Lily would be very Quirrell. I can see two problems with it. Quirrell has acted like he takes prophecies seriously, which seems to me more consistent with someone who believes in them than one who orchestrates them. It also doesn’t seem to have been necessary. As far as I know, we haven’t been given any reason for him to have suddenly changed direction and abandoned his war. If he’d just stayed the course, he’d have won.
In the passage you link to, I don’t think Quirrell was interested in the prophecy as much as the plot that took Skeeter down. He seemed generally interested in the latter, and the demand for the paper was one of those “give me that’s” where incredulity is pushed too far on something otherwise believed to be real.
As for objection #2, how would he have defeated the invincible Dumbledore, holder of the Elder wand?
In my preferred scenario, where Voldemort uploads into Harry as Harry seemingly defeats Voldemort, Voldemort doesn’t have to defeat Dumbledore. Dumbledore becomes his ally, and likely passes the Order of Merlin onto him before he dies. If nothing else, Harrymort would have better opportunities to kill Dumbledore than Quirrellmort.
Ruling as Harrymort has more benefits and is more secure than ruling as Voldemort, even if we assume Voldemort would have won the war. Successfully terrorizing magical Britain isn’t the same as winning the war. Once Dumbledore and the Order started using some terror of their own, I think it’s likely that they would have eventually won.