I don’t follow your point. You suggested that Dumbledore could have prepared Godric’s Hollow as a trap, and then a conjunction about it being a trap and Voldemort using it cleverly; I pointed out that Dumbledore’s assessment of Voldemort’s psychology makes the conjunction more likely than a naive analysis would expect, inasmuch as he has explicitly said it and prepared such a trap, and Quirrelmort’s assessment basically agrees: it’s an obvious trap which impresses him with the rare and powerful magics, and would tax his ingenuity to solve.
I see, the statement you used was confusing, which got worse with the clarifying quote. You said “took a trap as a challenge”, which (1) refers to a different trap, using article “a” and not “the”, which I wrote off as a typo in the first comment, and so also discounted the possibility that your comment (2) only states that he took it as a challenge, not that he faced that challenge, which is not the case for the trap I was talking about, and (3) the statement still isn’t strictly speaking true, Dumbledore is saying that he expects this to be likely, not that it happened. I agree that Dumbledore’s saying that makes the conjunction more likely.
I don’t follow your point. You suggested that Dumbledore could have prepared Godric’s Hollow as a trap, and then a conjunction about it being a trap and Voldemort using it cleverly; I pointed out that Dumbledore’s assessment of Voldemort’s psychology makes the conjunction more likely than a naive analysis would expect, inasmuch as he has explicitly said it and prepared such a trap, and Quirrelmort’s assessment basically agrees: it’s an obvious trap which impresses him with the rare and powerful magics, and would tax his ingenuity to solve.
I see, the statement you used was confusing, which got worse with the clarifying quote. You said “took a trap as a challenge”, which (1) refers to a different trap, using article “a” and not “the”, which I wrote off as a typo in the first comment, and so also discounted the possibility that your comment (2) only states that he took it as a challenge, not that he faced that challenge, which is not the case for the trap I was talking about, and (3) the statement still isn’t strictly speaking true, Dumbledore is saying that he expects this to be likely, not that it happened. I agree that Dumbledore’s saying that makes the conjunction more likely.
It’s false that “Dumbledore said that Voldemort took a trap as a challenge to his wit”, please distinguish observation from inference.