If there are thousands of inmates at Azkaban, and the wizarding justice system is not always absolutely correct, even if then are only wrong a percent or two of the time, there are tens or even maybe hundreds of innocent prisoners of Azkaban. So, “not the usual outcome”, is irrelevant, what matters is the numbers. But of course it doesn’t hit as hard, and that is precisely because of the numbers. It is a bug in the human brain that one innocent person being ripped to death in front of you hurts a lot more than tens of innocent people being tortured to death out of sight, especially surrounded by thousands more people also being tortured to death who some say have lower moral priority.
I don’t think it’s the numbers so much as it is the familiarity. Were I familiar with any one Azkaban inmate, assuming the wizarding justice system is at least decently effective, I’d probably say “Yeah, this guy is probably guilty. Sucks to be him, but he should really avoid killing people next time”. That is not what I think when I see Hermione suffering. Even knowing that there’s probably several Hermiones in there, not knowing which ones they are makes empathizing with them a lot harder.
assuming the wizarding justice system is at least decently effective
Based on how Hermione’s trial went, this probably isn’t a safe assumption. Many of the people in Azkaban may have just pissed off the wrong person (e.g. Lucius).
I doubt most trials are decided by political pressure. There’s a few, but the typical trial is done in an ordinary way, with no bias more malicious than a prosecutor wanting to avoid looking stupid and the judge wanting to get done in time for lunch.
If there are thousands of inmates at Azkaban, and the wizarding justice system is not always absolutely correct, even if then are only wrong a percent or two of the time, there are tens or even maybe hundreds of innocent prisoners of Azkaban. So, “not the usual outcome”, is irrelevant, what matters is the numbers. But of course it doesn’t hit as hard, and that is precisely because of the numbers. It is a bug in the human brain that one innocent person being ripped to death in front of you hurts a lot more than tens of innocent people being tortured to death out of sight, especially surrounded by thousands more people also being tortured to death who some say have lower moral priority.
I don’t think it’s the numbers so much as it is the familiarity. Were I familiar with any one Azkaban inmate, assuming the wizarding justice system is at least decently effective, I’d probably say “Yeah, this guy is probably guilty. Sucks to be him, but he should really avoid killing people next time”. That is not what I think when I see Hermione suffering. Even knowing that there’s probably several Hermiones in there, not knowing which ones they are makes empathizing with them a lot harder.
Based on how Hermione’s trial went, this probably isn’t a safe assumption. Many of the people in Azkaban may have just pissed off the wrong person (e.g. Lucius).
I doubt most trials are decided by political pressure. There’s a few, but the typical trial is done in an ordinary way, with no bias more malicious than a prosecutor wanting to avoid looking stupid and the judge wanting to get done in time for lunch.