I think we can all agree that Harry’s inability to accept natural death as a good thing (hubris) is an impossible trait for a young boy to have unless they have been exposed to great evil.
I expect it to later be revealed that Harry’s inability to accept the natural order is due to Voldemort’s horcrux being placed within him. When he is healed of it he will probably remain intelligent but stop being power-hungry/evil.
If an eleven-year-old can have Eliezer’s knowledge of Bayes’ Theorum or the ability to cite studies on most fallacies off the top of their head, they can come to the proper conclusions about death.
I think we can all agree that Harry’s inability to accept natural death as a good thing (hubris) is an impossible trait for a young boy to have unless they have been exposed to great evil.
First: is the parenthetical comment meant to be a summation of the previous term? Second: agreed, as long as the definition of “great evil” includes the fact that roughly a hundred and fifty thousand people die every day.
I expect it to later be revealed that Harry’s inability to accept the natural order is due to Voldemort’s horcrux being placed within him. When he is healed of it he will probably remain intelligent but stop being power-hungry/evil.
This is an interesting idea, because Harry’s inability to accept the natural order was explicitly stated to be the reason he could cast the True Patronus Charm. Is that part of what you refer to as “power-hungry/evil”, or...?
I think we can all agree that Harry’s inability to accept natural death as a good thing (hubris) is an impossible trait for a young boy to have unless they have been exposed to great evil.
I expect it to later be revealed that Harry’s inability to accept the natural order is due to Voldemort’s horcrux being placed within him. When he is healed of it he will probably remain intelligent but stop being power-hungry/evil.
If an eleven-year-old can have Eliezer’s knowledge of Bayes’ Theorum or the ability to cite studies on most fallacies off the top of their head, they can come to the proper conclusions about death.
First: is the parenthetical comment meant to be a summation of the previous term? Second: agreed, as long as the definition of “great evil” includes the fact that roughly a hundred and fifty thousand people die every day.
This is an interesting idea, because Harry’s inability to accept the natural order was explicitly stated to be the reason he could cast the True Patronus Charm. Is that part of what you refer to as “power-hungry/evil”, or...?
There are better ways for a fundamentalist Christian to troll LW. Ask Will_Newsome to give you a few lessons.