I feel like the problem turned out to be unnecessarily easier than it had to, that too much of the credit is due to luck, and some things could’ve been done better (Death Eaters could be saved). It’s somewhat of a theme with all these spells and rituals being performed in unique situations and working on the first try, with little precaution taken to test them or theoretical grounds to expect reliability. For example, Hermione still wasn’t tested. It’s the first resurrection ever performed, at least by the people present. It involved further effects that might’ve never been combined in this way before. The person who knows the details is now defunct. He didn’t plan to test it either, for the primary use case intended. Hermione’s brain is warm and might be losing information or she might get terminally sick soon, with brain damage. We just assume everything worked.
One problem is that Harry didn’t know that he can remain conscious after directly casting a spell at Voldemort, so it should’ve been planned around, with the less direct transfiguration being plan A for rendering Voldemort unconscious. We now know that this might’ve failed (more likely than before Ch. 114), and there had to be another attempt. But failing to remain conscious while Voldemort is unconscious amounts to losing the war, so it was very important to avoid risking that Stuporfy. For example, grabbing the Time Turner might’ve been a better idea, then he could’ve made the same shot at the same time using the future self, but with an ally ready to Innervate the future self afterwards and/or contain the resulting unconscious Voldemort. Voldemort, in turn, should’ve made more of an attempt to get out of there in response to the situation he didn’t understand, rather than just dodging. Then there’s the wand, which had no place being available at that particular moment. It should’ve been used around when the Vow was made instead.
The setting also made it possible for Harry to cast further spells on Voldemort, even Transfigure him. This capability isn’t necessary for the tasks at hand, as he could’ve got help. In any case, Transfiguring Voldemort into an inanimate form wasn’t a safe thing to do (at least he didn’t apply the Stone, which might’ve made it a regular ring unrelated to the original body and unable to anchor the spirit, although it might eliminate the spirit if it was also Transfigured). It might’ve let the spirit free (either by default or as a result of Voldemort preparing for this possibility), so at least there should’ve been further precautions taken before (such as making a Harry-Transfigured sarcophagus around the body to attempt containing the spirit). Further precautions unknown to Harry could’ve been taken by using the Time Turner to summon help to arrive immediately (not to mention saving the Death Eaters by cooling their brains, so that after all nobody had to die). Harry continuing to blast the body with resonance stunners could’ve prolonged Voldemort’s unconscious state. Drugging the body would be further redundancy. If a Transfiguration of the body is risked, it could’ve been into a living thing, paralyzed-by-construction and with a smaller brain.
Severely Obliviating Voldemort wasn’t a safe thing to do, as having an insane immortal spirit might be a very bad thing in the long run (such as in a thousand years, assuming no intelligence explosion), if it ever got out of the body, for example as a result of the body getting Transfigured. We know Voldemort doesn’t want the World destroyed and is at least somewhat human, but a person resulting from centuries worth of reflection by an insane remnant of Voldemort might want some very strange things far removed from human values. Torturing to insanity would’ve been even more irresponsible. It was better to avoid these events, if possible, and at least delay them until further consideration if Transfiguration was planned as a method of indefinite temporary containment. For example, a more careful Obliviation by a more experienced wizard could’ve shaped the person to have more agreeable values and less capability (and could be applied immediately, via Time Turner, to avoid Transfiguration). If the result is no person at all, there should be an understanding of the process that guarantees that after a million years there still won’t be a person in the spirit.
To clarify, Harry at one point was given a list of wards an inner-circle Death Eater would be expected to have prepared, which include anti-time-turning. We don’t see Voldemort or anyone else cast such wards, so it’s down to whether we think Voldemort has permanent versions around his sanctum.
I feel like the problem turned out to be unnecessarily easier than it had to, that too much of the credit is due to luck, and some things could’ve been done better (Death Eaters could be saved). It’s somewhat of a theme with all these spells and rituals being performed in unique situations and working on the first try, with little precaution taken to test them or theoretical grounds to expect reliability. For example, Hermione still wasn’t tested. It’s the first resurrection ever performed, at least by the people present. It involved further effects that might’ve never been combined in this way before. The person who knows the details is now defunct. He didn’t plan to test it either, for the primary use case intended. Hermione’s brain is warm and might be losing information or she might get terminally sick soon, with brain damage. We just assume everything worked.
One problem is that Harry didn’t know that he can remain conscious after directly casting a spell at Voldemort, so it should’ve been planned around, with the less direct transfiguration being plan A for rendering Voldemort unconscious. We now know that this might’ve failed (more likely than before Ch. 114), and there had to be another attempt. But failing to remain conscious while Voldemort is unconscious amounts to losing the war, so it was very important to avoid risking that Stuporfy. For example, grabbing the Time Turner might’ve been a better idea, then he could’ve made the same shot at the same time using the future self, but with an ally ready to Innervate the future self afterwards and/or contain the resulting unconscious Voldemort. Voldemort, in turn, should’ve made more of an attempt to get out of there in response to the situation he didn’t understand, rather than just dodging. Then there’s the wand, which had no place being available at that particular moment. It should’ve been used around when the Vow was made instead.
The setting also made it possible for Harry to cast further spells on Voldemort, even Transfigure him. This capability isn’t necessary for the tasks at hand, as he could’ve got help. In any case, Transfiguring Voldemort into an inanimate form wasn’t a safe thing to do (at least he didn’t apply the Stone, which might’ve made it a regular ring unrelated to the original body and unable to anchor the spirit, although it might eliminate the spirit if it was also Transfigured). It might’ve let the spirit free (either by default or as a result of Voldemort preparing for this possibility), so at least there should’ve been further precautions taken before (such as making a Harry-Transfigured sarcophagus around the body to attempt containing the spirit). Further precautions unknown to Harry could’ve been taken by using the Time Turner to summon help to arrive immediately (not to mention saving the Death Eaters by cooling their brains, so that after all nobody had to die). Harry continuing to blast the body with resonance stunners could’ve prolonged Voldemort’s unconscious state. Drugging the body would be further redundancy. If a Transfiguration of the body is risked, it could’ve been into a living thing, paralyzed-by-construction and with a smaller brain.
Severely Obliviating Voldemort wasn’t a safe thing to do, as having an insane immortal spirit might be a very bad thing in the long run (such as in a thousand years, assuming no intelligence explosion), if it ever got out of the body, for example as a result of the body getting Transfigured. We know Voldemort doesn’t want the World destroyed and is at least somewhat human, but a person resulting from centuries worth of reflection by an insane remnant of Voldemort might want some very strange things far removed from human values. Torturing to insanity would’ve been even more irresponsible. It was better to avoid these events, if possible, and at least delay them until further consideration if Transfiguration was planned as a method of indefinite temporary containment. For example, a more careful Obliviation by a more experienced wizard could’ve shaped the person to have more agreeable values and less capability (and could be applied immediately, via Time Turner, to avoid Transfiguration). If the result is no person at all, there should be an understanding of the process that guarantees that after a million years there still won’t be a person in the spirit.
Good points here.
About the Time Turner, I thought there were wards against it. The stunning hex was a bet, but jumping on the Time Turner could have gone even wronger.
To clarify, Harry at one point was given a list of wards an inner-circle Death Eater would be expected to have prepared, which include anti-time-turning. We don’t see Voldemort or anyone else cast such wards, so it’s down to whether we think Voldemort has permanent versions around his sanctum.