“Not this again!” Minerva said. “Albus, it was You-Know-Who, not you, who marked Harry as his equal. There is no possible way that the prophecy could be talking about you!”
The old wizard nodded, but his eyes still seemed distant, fixed only on the road head.
This is another brick in the wall of the Prophecy and Potter massacre being a setup by Dumbledore.
Not a nail in the coffin? Evidence for and against Dumbledore and Voldemort as authors of the prophecy:
+Dumbledore
Was the apparent beneficiary of the prophecy
-Dumbledore
Seems to have a world model that includes such entities as “heroes” and “evil”, and is ripe for exploitation
Gives every outward sign of believing the prophecy is genuine
Gave Trelawney a magical clock that’s probably a listening device
+Voldemort
Was the actual beneficiary of the prophecy, if he pretended to lose
Suddenly has a history of setting up both sides of a conflict (My reaction to Ch. 84 was: …really? You waited until you were half a million words into the fic before introducing this? Really?)
Has a history of creating orphaned heroes of destiny
Would have been the one who sent Snape to overhear the prophecy
Chose Harry and not Neville as his target, then allowed Snape to learn the meaning of the prophecy and that he intended to attack the Potters
-Voldemort
Reacted strongly to a mention of prophecy once, possibly because he takes prophecies seriously
Could have defeated Dumbledore by conventional means
Should not be trying plots as complicated as this one
Quirrell has indicated that he plans to go to war with the Muggles and rule the entire world. If Percent_Carbon is right, and “Tom didn’t want to be Hitler. Tom wanted to actually win”, he may think that conquering Britain as Voldemort would cost him the larger war. He needs a hero, and his first hero failed. So for eight years afterward, he continued to build up the legend of Voldemort, slowly grinding down the opposition, and then, when all hope seemed lost, a prophecy struck like a bolt of lightning and Voldemort was defeated by a baby in his crib.
On the evidence so far, I’ve switched to Team Voldemort. You were right the first time. Dumbledore could still be responsible for the Potters being betrayed, because he expected Voldemort to be blindsided by Lily’s sacrifice, since “evil cannot ever understand love”. The prophecy itself came from Tom. Harry is the Last Scion Redux, but this time his storybook hero status is even more blatant, and he’ll rise to power with the insights into rulership that Tom learned as Voldemort. Like creating a “Light Mark”.
That’s what I think today, anyway. Updating is fun.
Suddenly has a history of setting up both sides of a conflict
Hmm? We have no good evidence to distinguish between the following two hypotheses:
Voldemort was playing both sides of things up until 1973, when he dropped one side for some reason
When Voldemort embarked on the Quirrell deception, he knew investigation would reveal that he wasn’t actually Quirrell, so he deliberately dropped hints that would deceive investigators into believing he was a hero who, in reality, died back in 1973.
All we know is Quirrell has let hints drop that he was the hero who disappeared. There is no reason to expect that any of his hints are anything other than deliberate lies. If a competent investigation would discover that Qurrell’s not really Qurrell, then the deception absolutely requires a second layer to last the year, so people like Bones can feel satisfied that they’ve discovered “the truth” about Quirrell without suspecting he’s Voldemort. The existence of this second-layer deception now does not provide any evidence that the same deception existed eighteen years earlier.
There is no reason to expect that any of his hints are anything other than deliberate lies.
Quirrell certainly talks about the need to act exactly as the person you’re impersonating would act. His speech to Hermione would be no evidence at all if it were delivered by someone who practised what Quirrell preaches.
But that isn’t Quirrell. Far from putting up a perfect facade, Quirrell’s mask is constantly slipping. He “makes a game of lying with truths, playing with words to conceal his meanings in plain sight.” His dialogue is peppered with hints to his identity, his past, and his intentions. Almost everything he says about himself is a clue.
His love of the killing curse and his intent to kill. His childhood ambition to become a Dark Lord. The Muggle dojo. The Pioneer plaque. His intention to crush Rita Skeeter. Repeateduse of the word ‘Riddle’. His willingness to be identified as having eaten ‘death’. His wish for Britain to grow strong under a strong leader. The story of Merope’s enslavement of Tom Riddle Sr. His theft of Quirrell’s body using incredibly dark magic.
I think you’ve confused the actual character of Quirrell with the master of deception that he claims to be. When he tells Hermione about the time he spent as a hero, that is evidence that what he’s relating is a twisted version of the truth. Because it usually is.
Incidentally, while I was collecting links, I discovered that Quirrell foreshadowed this after all.
“It has sometimes amused me to play the part of a hero. Who knows but that You-Know-Who would say the same.”
I read this as his saying Voldemort has previously played the part of a hero. And, as above, I think it’s probably true. What’s your take?
Hmm? We have no good evidence to distinguish between the following two hypotheses...
Yeah we do. When EY writes that the heroic Scion of X vanished while traveling Ablania in 45 he is telling the readers that Voldemort took him by making a shout out to what happened to Quirrell in canon.
I guess it depends on your definition of “good”. Care to quantify yours?
I guess you should quantify your own definition of the word, perhaps in the same post in which you ask someone else to quantify theirs, since you used it first.
I’d say p>0.95 that “Went on a graduation tour abroad and disappeared while visiting Albania.” is meant to communicate something to the readers that it does not communicate to the characters.
I’d say p>0.75 that the thing it is meant to communicate is that the hero was compromised by Riddle, like Quirrell was in canon.
I don’t expect it to be thesame. Voldemort’s shade in canon may have had possession capacity that young Tom Riddle did not.
I’d say p>0.5 that the hero was replaced, that Tom Riddle physically played both roles in his own flesh.
(I asked you to quantify what you meant by “good” because I was suspecting you were treating a probability of, say, 30% as “good”, and we were getting our terms crossed. Obviously not.)
I’d say p>0.75 that the thing it is meant to communicate is that the hero was compromised by Riddle, like Quirrell was in canon.
Whereas I’d put that at roughly p=0.25.
I mean, sure, it might be trying to communicate that, but, I’ve got:
“Reader! She’s about to undercover the Defense Professor is Voldemort!” as a message intended to be sent to the reader but not the characters at about p=0.25.
“The heroic Slytherin discovered something about Riddle in Albania in 1945, and spent his time trying to follow up on it. When Voldemort came back openly to Britain, so did he. What the hero learned in 1945, or in the years between 1945-1970, is going to be important to Harry’s defeat of Voldemort, and here’s the hint that keeps it from coming entirely out of the blue” (or variations of the theme) as about p=0.15
“The ‘heroic’ Slytherin died in 1945 in a confrontation with Riddle/Voldemort. In 1970, an ambitious person unconnected to Voldemort then tried to exploit the Voldemort’s rise as a chance to make himself leader of Britain under the dead man’s name, and died or quit in 1973. Voldemort then found it useful to try the same con as a backup for Quirrel.” at roughly p=0.15
And, “Eilizer is planning to do something else with it, that I haven’t thought of” at about p=0.2
I dismiss the bait and switch because the passage does not seem to lay down that tease; p0.8 he would clean out other things that only exist to support his ill conceived tease. There isn’t a WHAM paragraph with few words surrounded by white space. It’s just not built like a bait and switch shocker.
While reading, I thought that Scion of X did fight Riddle and did as Hermione suggested:
“You left your friends behind where they’d be safe, and tried to attack the Dark Wizard all by yourself?”
And after Voldemort killed him he kept the identity close because things like that can be useful. But I know that I am gullible and literal (p>0.2 that I under value literal interpretations after an alternative is available), so I dismissed that as soon as I thought up an explanation that worked on a more in character plot. p<0.01
I dismiss the unknown, unrelated, unremarked third party because of Conservation of Detail. p<0.01
I don’t have any other speculation worth mentioning, so “something else” gets p<0.25.
If 1970-1973 was a con by Voldemort, why was it given up in 1973? Surely he expected it to take longer than a couple of years to begin with, didn’t he?
“In all honesty,” said Professor Quirrell, looking up at the stars, “I still don’t understand it. They should have known that their lives depended on that man’s success. And yet it was as if they tried to do everything they could to make his life unpleasant. To throw every possible obstacle into his way. I was not naive, Miss Granger, I did not expect the power-holders to align themselves with me so quickly—not without something in it for themselves. But their power, too, was threatened; and so I was shocked how they seemed content to step back, and leave to that man all burdens of responsibility. They sneered at his performance, remarking among themselves how they would do better in his place, though they did not condescend to step forward.” Professor Quirrell shook his head as though in bemusement. “And it was the strangest thing—the Dark Wizard, that man’s dread nemesis—why, those who served him leapt eagerly to their tasks. The Dark Wizard grew crueler toward his followers, and they followed him all the more. Men fought for the chance to serve him, even as those whose lives depended on that other man made free to render his life difficult… I could not understand it, Miss Granger.” Professor Quirrell’s face was in shadow, as he looked upward. “Perhaps, by taking on himself the curse of action, that man removed it from all others? Was that why they felt free to hinder his battle against the Dark Wizard who would have enslaved them all? Believing men would act in their own interest was not cynicism, it turned out, but sheerest optimism; in reality men do not meet so high a standard. And so in time that one realized he might do better fighting the Dark Wizard alone, than with such followers at his back.”
I don’t know how long he thought it would take, but it sounds like he had no idea how hard it would suck.
If EY originally intended the bait and switch, then regretted it, p>0.8 he would clean out other things that only exist to support his ill conceived tease.
What other things?
That is, if the bait-and-switch was intended, he would’ve had to come up with an actual character that fit all those facts as well, and it seems like “he spent seven years sleeping in the same room as Voldemort” is a non-trivial detail to change.
If EY originally intended the bait and switch, then regretted it, p>0.8 he would clean out other things that only exist to support his ill conceived tease.
What other things?
The Albanian Shuffle. See says there is a real chance that it is mentioned just to string the reader along and make us think Bones is about to say that Quirrell is Riddle.
“Reader! She’s about to undercover the Defense Professor is Voldemort!” as a message intended to be sent to the reader but not the characters at about p=0.25.
I dismiss this because EY changed the date, which comes at the top of the passage, just so readers wouldn’t jump to think Bones is talking about Riddle. If EY took such a step to prevent the tease that Bones was about to name Riddle, then I would expect EY would not leave things in that were only there to build up that tease.
So the Albanian Shuffle is dismissively unlikely to be referenced for the sake of making the reader think Bones was about to name Riddle. I really don’t know how you could think that in the first place unless you first read that paragraph after already thinking that Bones was going to name Riddle.
Before the date change, there was a legitimate chance that the reader would come away from the discussion thinking that the person Bones was describing actually was Riddle, and that both Bones and Quirrell understood her to have been talking about Riddle. Which if unintended is a far greater problem than “thinking Bones was about to name Riddle, then it turns out no”. This was, in fact, my reading when I was actually going through the chapter.
(tl;dr: It’s not a “tease” that Bones was about to name Riddle that’s the problem, the problem is that it wasn’t resolved with a clear indication that they’re not talking about Riddle)
Changing the date fixes this because the reader can go look it up and realize that it can’t be Riddle after all.
Changing the date fixes this because the reader can go look it up and realize that it can’t be Riddle after all.
“OhmygodohmygodOHMYGOD! Bones is going to figure out Quirrell is Voldemort! OHMYGOD! What’s he going to do?!?! He’s surrounded by aurors, he’s in DMLE headquarters!… Oh my GOD! Those aurors are so screwed!!”
“Oh, hm. That’s not Riddle then. I wonder who it is?”
...
Are you really suggesting that EY means the reader to do this? He said he wasn’t going to lie to us anymore. See’s low-probability theory of tease and WHAM involves EY lying to his readers, but your take on it that they were supposed to be totally tricked until the look it up online (?!?!) is turns that up to ridiculous levels.
The fact that the conversation doesn’t end with her actually saying Riddle is what would prompt readers to look it up. Are you saying that readers that are still with the fic after eighty chapters haven’t learned enough about rationality to take two minutes to verify an assumption after noticing they are confused?
He said he wasn’t going to lie to us anymore.
If that meant he couldn’t ever make a conversation that seems to be going one way but turns out to be different a few paragraphs later, it would lead to a VERY boring story.
P.S. My point was that the problem that EY fixed was that the obvious thing to check (looking up canon!Riddle’s biography) leads to an apparent confirmation.
That would only have changed if the year he started Hogwarts changed, which it did not. The birth date didn’t change by a whole year, just from late enough in 1926 to enter Hogwarts in 1938 to early enough in 1927 to enter Hogwarts in that same year.
(I lost track of what you were trying to argue, and the comment in isolation seemed to suggest that the non-trivial change had happened. A clause like “so the fact that this was carefully kept constant is evidence in favor of …” would have helped. )
It’s suggestive, sure, that he showed up from a long disappearance at about the same time as the “First Wizarding War” began. But the year could just be the one he returned at for some other reason, like, say, his Muggle Albanian wife dying.
In the latter case, why 1970? Because, like the original coincidental 1926 birth year, Eliezer was trying to make people go, “‘Oh no, is she about to identify Voldemort?’ . . . to be contradicted soon after by the Gaunts not exactly being on the Wizengamot or having a patroness grandmother.”
Anyway, if you really think it’s “almost certain”, I’d like to arrange a bet on that. Say, my $5 against your $100?
Canon!Riddle got Ravenclaw’s diadem out of a hiding place in Albania circa 1945. Thus the inclusion of all four details — 1926, 1945, Albania, and 1970 — can all be explained as part of the same “Oh no, is she about to identify Riddle/Voldemort?” fake-out that was then deliberately blown up by the inconsistency with the Gaunts.
None of them need a separate cause to explain why Eliezer included them; all of them are explained sufficiently by the author-confirmed fake-out without adding the hypothesis “The hero who showed up in 1970 was a trick by Voldemort.”
But if you’re so sure I’m wrong, how about I put up my $5 against, say, your $500?
I will make three excuses for not taking the gracious offer of $5.00 (pre-tax) from the Holy See of Whereever, then I will give you a real answer.
I’m acclimating to your subculture too fast for my taste and don’t care to speed things along by participating in your quaint rituals of sacrifice.
Five bucks is sufficiently low status that winning would set me back from taking the offer.
I have butter on my face.
I kind of lied: the status matter is totally part of the issue. But the real reason is that I have been conditioned to overvalue losses to gambling. I can only play poker by convincing myself it isn’t gambling.
Really, though, isn’t that gauche? Does it feel right to taunt a stranger with two-thirds of a fast food meal?
Really, though, isn’t that gauche? Does it feel right to taunt a stranger with two-thirds of a fast food meal?
Is that really it? Would you have been happier with, say, $20 against $400? I generally think of “almost certain” as indicating p≥0.95; the $5 was driven by the math of keeping your potential loss down.
And, not that I’m asking for you to actually answer, but ask yourself—is it really that you overvalue losses from gambling? If I were offering to put $2,000 up against your $100, would you still refuse because of the exact same chance you’d lose that exact same $100?
(I raised the odds to reflect p≥0.99 for pedanterrific because he implied that I was being a sucker for offering 1-for-20 odds.)
If I understand you correctly, you’re saying that unless I am willing to tie significant amounts of money up for the sake of winning tiny amounts of money, I lack the confidence I claim.
It that didn’t have the sound, the feel of a scam with it’s a-sure-thing-isn’t vibe it’d be a passable bullying tactic for the mathematically adept sort with something to prove. I’ve pushed people around for a living, so I like to think can appreciate a good push.
Or maybe that scamishness is part of the push?
The mark thinks himself a rational fellow, so he’s unlikely to bolt. Bringing money into it makes the mark nervous. The mark mistakes his nervousness about money for doubt about his claim. You capitalize when the mark starts backing down, and claim some petty victory.
Seems like an awful lot of work for a small show, but thanks for the trick. Maybe I’ll make something of it.
you’re saying that unless I am willing to tie significant amounts of money up for the sake of winning tiny amounts of money, I lack the confidence I claim.
No, not at all. Not being willing to tie up the money is a perfectly sensible reason to refuse the bet. Opportunity cost isn’t remotely connected to confidence levels; that I quite confidently expect a Treasury bond to pay me the promised interest doesn’t mean I’d rather spend the money on something else that I value more.
And you certainly don’t owe me an explanation of any kind as to why you refuse a bet. You merely owe yourself a good one instead of a bad one.
Seems like an awful lot of work for a small show,
Then it would seem improbable that I’m putting the work in for the small show you identified, no? Not impossible, of course, but maybe you need a better theory of what I was trying to do.
I’m not saying it can’t be used as a status attack the way you’re suggesting, but this is a thing people do here. Something about calibrating confidence levels.
When I accepted the bet by ITakeBets, it didn’t feel like a status attack—just that he/she was honestly evaluating the likelihood of the event differently than I was, and so we both had a positive-return expectation given our different models. And I had the odds enough tilted enough away from my confidence levels, so that it worth the bother of betting.
I’d most likely not have accepted a bet from someone that offered it in the way that “see” did though. And I’d not feel the need to offer any excuse other than “No, I don’t feel like making a bet with you”.
If anyone makes you feel like you’re obliged to bet money, just refuse to bet—you don’t have to offer any excuses.
When the Pedant One used the term ‘status attack’ instead of push or bully or buffalo, I thought maybe that indicated there were resources on the topic. I love the feeling when I find there is a developed system and language for describing and expanding on something I thought I was familiar with. It’s almost always a game-changer.
Without confirmation bias, would that actually have helped? I’m certain I don’t know what that would look to someone who didn’t know what I was going for. But I have the Illusion of Transparency on my mind since I saw someone catch it while trying to help someone with it.
Yes—I’d suspect that the phrase as used in the top search result was the canonical version, then search for that instead, and find it had a lot more hits than the quoted original search and the first reference is repeated several times.
The detail is already conserved by its known use to try to make the reader suspect Bones is going to discover Quirrell is Riddle/Voldemort. Now the question left is whether Albania is a Chekhov’s Boomerang, or whether theories based on it are an example of Epileptic Trees. I know I’m not “almost certain” either way.
So let me follow along. It seems like one extra level to what I’ve been thinking in terms of plotting.
The whole Voldemort Dark Lord war is just part of a bigger plot. First he creates the Villain of Voldemort. Then he creates a prophecy about a child destined to kill him—the eventual Hero. Dumbledore walks right into it by trying to use the prophecy as a trap to kill Tom, with Lily sacrificing herself in a dark ritual as the trap. So Tom gleefully takes the bait to create his Hero, and either is really diminished, or just goes on vacation for a few years waiting for Harry to get older. But clearly he also does something to Harry—creating the ultra resourceful Dark Side which itself contributes to the Harry Legend. And then Dumbledore grooms his hero as well, because he believes that he is destined to be the Hero because of what Voldemort has done to him.
IN the end, he’ll lose to Harry again, once Harry is well on his way to being the Light Lord, but he’ll upload into Harry and become the Hero ruler instead of the Dark Lord, until he uses up Harry’s body. The end.
Another point in favor of this is Quirrell’s talk with Harry after the bully climax, where he said Harry has everything Quirrell had ever wanted—the love, fear, respect, and admiration of everyone in school. This is exactly what he is after again—to rule and be feared, loved, respected, and admired.
You may or may not be going for the Upload bit.
That’s a little bit of an evolution for me. I considered taking over Good Harry as a target of opportunity for Voldemort. That even the Voldemort persona is part of the scheme is new.
But I’ve got a new shiny toy. Evil for the Sake of Evil. In his contempt for the stupidity and weakness of people, I have a hard time seeing him even wanting to be the Hero anymore. He’s now the Joker. He’s Lord Foul—Corruption. He wants to corrupt Good. Corrupt Dumbledore into things like killing Narcissa. Corrupt Harry into being a Dark Lord. Corrupt Hermione and turn her away from Good. He wants Evil to be taken as Good. Then maybe he takes over.
I think it’s the other way: he wants good people to be seen as fallible and fallen.
My model of him is like: “So when I tried to be the hero, people disrespected me, but for some reason the same people respect Dumbledore, Hermione, Harry. Why?! Oh, they are probably better at signalling. So let’s manipulate them into difficult situations where even if they choose good, it will either ruin them or send bad signals.”
He does not want to redefine the words with capital letters. That’s a fool’s game. He is just jealous that other people succeeded in having a good image, where he failed despite his cool plans. He wants good people to have bad image, so that he can become a person with the best image, which is his preferred way to rule the world; probably because it seems safer in long run than being an evil overlord.
I believe his frustration at his inability to become a credible hero. But at least he is learning. He has learned that “a single super-heroic action” is not a good plan, so now he is trying “a child with magical destiny” plan. He cynically believed that he could fool all people; now he is even more cynical, because he believes that he cannot fool them by something that makes sense (killing a few Death Eaters and saving a princess? meh.), but could do it by a superstition (to kill Voldemort while being a baby? cool, and nobody suspects anything!).
Some time after Chapter 38 showed us that Lucius thinks HJPEV is Voldemort, I took his position seriously and looked over the rest of the story.
If Voldemort is the hero, what is Quirrell? I figured he was the Basilisk. And if Quirrell was not the antagonist, who was? I figured it was Dumbledore because the opposite of rational is insane, not stupid.
I now think Quirrell is Voldemort and Dumbledore is not especially insane, but I wish I had thought to reinterpret the prophesy without Voldemort as the obvious bad guy back then. There is so much potential there.
Yay!
This is another brick in the wall of the Prophecy and Potter massacre being a setup by Dumbledore.
Not a nail in the coffin? Evidence for and against Dumbledore and Voldemort as authors of the prophecy:
+Dumbledore
Was the apparent beneficiary of the prophecy
-Dumbledore
Seems to have a world model that includes such entities as “heroes” and “evil”, and is ripe for exploitation
Gives every outward sign of believing the prophecy is genuine
Gave Trelawney a magical clock that’s probably a listening device
+Voldemort
Was the actual beneficiary of the prophecy, if he pretended to lose
Suddenly has a history of setting up both sides of a conflict (My reaction to Ch. 84 was: …really? You waited until you were half a million words into the fic before introducing this? Really?)
Has a history of creating orphaned heroes of destiny
Would have been the one who sent Snape to overhear the prophecy
Chose Harry and not Neville as his target, then allowed Snape to learn the meaning of the prophecy and that he intended to attack the Potters
-Voldemort
Reacted strongly to a mention of prophecy once, possibly because he takes prophecies seriously
Could have defeated Dumbledore by conventional means
Should not be trying plots as complicated as this one
Quirrell has indicated that he plans to go to war with the Muggles and rule the entire world. If Percent_Carbon is right, and “Tom didn’t want to be Hitler. Tom wanted to actually win”, he may think that conquering Britain as Voldemort would cost him the larger war. He needs a hero, and his first hero failed. So for eight years afterward, he continued to build up the legend of Voldemort, slowly grinding down the opposition, and then, when all hope seemed lost, a prophecy struck like a bolt of lightning and Voldemort was defeated by a baby in his crib.
On the evidence so far, I’ve switched to Team Voldemort. You were right the first time. Dumbledore could still be responsible for the Potters being betrayed, because he expected Voldemort to be blindsided by Lily’s sacrifice, since “evil cannot ever understand love”. The prophecy itself came from Tom. Harry is the Last Scion Redux, but this time his storybook hero status is even more blatant, and he’ll rise to power with the insights into rulership that Tom learned as Voldemort. Like creating a “Light Mark”.
That’s what I think today, anyway. Updating is fun.
Hmm? We have no good evidence to distinguish between the following two hypotheses:
Voldemort was playing both sides of things up until 1973, when he dropped one side for some reason
When Voldemort embarked on the Quirrell deception, he knew investigation would reveal that he wasn’t actually Quirrell, so he deliberately dropped hints that would deceive investigators into believing he was a hero who, in reality, died back in 1973.
All we know is Quirrell has let hints drop that he was the hero who disappeared. There is no reason to expect that any of his hints are anything other than deliberate lies. If a competent investigation would discover that Qurrell’s not really Qurrell, then the deception absolutely requires a second layer to last the year, so people like Bones can feel satisfied that they’ve discovered “the truth” about Quirrell without suspecting he’s Voldemort. The existence of this second-layer deception now does not provide any evidence that the same deception existed eighteen years earlier.
Quirrell certainly talks about the need to act exactly as the person you’re impersonating would act. His speech to Hermione would be no evidence at all if it were delivered by someone who practised what Quirrell preaches.
But that isn’t Quirrell. Far from putting up a perfect facade, Quirrell’s mask is constantly slipping. He “makes a game of lying with truths, playing with words to conceal his meanings in plain sight.” His dialogue is peppered with hints to his identity, his past, and his intentions. Almost everything he says about himself is a clue.
His love of the killing curse and his intent to kill. His childhood ambition to become a Dark Lord. The Muggle dojo. The Pioneer plaque. His intention to crush Rita Skeeter. Repeated use of the word ‘Riddle’. His willingness to be identified as having eaten ‘death’. His wish for Britain to grow strong under a strong leader. The story of Merope’s enslavement of Tom Riddle Sr. His theft of Quirrell’s body using incredibly dark magic.
I think you’ve confused the actual character of Quirrell with the master of deception that he claims to be. When he tells Hermione about the time he spent as a hero, that is evidence that what he’s relating is a twisted version of the truth. Because it usually is.
Incidentally, while I was collecting links, I discovered that Quirrell foreshadowed this after all.
I read this as his saying Voldemort has previously played the part of a hero. And, as above, I think it’s probably true. What’s your take?
Yeah we do. When EY writes that the heroic Scion of X vanished while traveling Ablania in 45 he is telling the readers that Voldemort took him by making a shout out to what happened to Quirrell in canon.
The Ablanian Shuffle is good evidence.
I guess it depends on your definition of “good”. Care to quantify yours?
I guess you should quantify your own definition of the word, perhaps in the same post in which you ask someone else to quantify theirs, since you used it first.
I’d say p>0.95 that “Went on a graduation tour abroad and disappeared while visiting Albania.” is meant to communicate something to the readers that it does not communicate to the characters.
I’d say p>0.75 that the thing it is meant to communicate is that the hero was compromised by Riddle, like Quirrell was in canon.
I don’t expect it to be the same. Voldemort’s shade in canon may have had possession capacity that young Tom Riddle did not.
I’d say p>0.5 that the hero was replaced, that Tom Riddle physically played both roles in his own flesh.
Your turn.
(I asked you to quantify what you meant by “good” because I was suspecting you were treating a probability of, say, 30% as “good”, and we were getting our terms crossed. Obviously not.)
Whereas I’d put that at roughly p=0.25.
I mean, sure, it might be trying to communicate that, but, I’ve got:
“Reader! She’s about to undercover the Defense Professor is Voldemort!” as a message intended to be sent to the reader but not the characters at about p=0.25.
“The heroic Slytherin discovered something about Riddle in Albania in 1945, and spent his time trying to follow up on it. When Voldemort came back openly to Britain, so did he. What the hero learned in 1945, or in the years between 1945-1970, is going to be important to Harry’s defeat of Voldemort, and here’s the hint that keeps it from coming entirely out of the blue” (or variations of the theme) as about p=0.15
“The ‘heroic’ Slytherin died in 1945 in a confrontation with Riddle/Voldemort. In 1970, an ambitious person unconnected to Voldemort then tried to exploit the Voldemort’s rise as a chance to make himself leader of Britain under the dead man’s name, and died or quit in 1973. Voldemort then found it useful to try the same con as a backup for Quirrel.” at roughly p=0.15
And, “Eilizer is planning to do something else with it, that I haven’t thought of” at about p=0.2
Fantastic.
I dismiss the bait and switch because the passage does not seem to lay down that tease; p0.8 he would clean out other things that only exist to support his ill conceived tease. There isn’t a WHAM paragraph with few words surrounded by white space. It’s just not built like a bait and switch shocker.
While reading, I thought that Scion of X did fight Riddle and did as Hermione suggested:
And after Voldemort killed him he kept the identity close because things like that can be useful. But I know that I am gullible and literal (p>0.2 that I under value literal interpretations after an alternative is available), so I dismissed that as soon as I thought up an explanation that worked on a more in character plot. p<0.01
I dismiss the unknown, unrelated, unremarked third party because of Conservation of Detail. p<0.01
I don’t have any other speculation worth mentioning, so “something else” gets p<0.25.
If 1970-1973 was a con by Voldemort, why was it given up in 1973? Surely he expected it to take longer than a couple of years to begin with, didn’t he?
I don’t know how long he thought it would take, but it sounds like he had no idea how hard it would suck.
What other things?
That is, if the bait-and-switch was intended, he would’ve had to come up with an actual character that fit all those facts as well, and it seems like “he spent seven years sleeping in the same room as Voldemort” is a non-trivial detail to change.
The Albanian Shuffle. See says there is a real chance that it is mentioned just to string the reader along and make us think Bones is about to say that Quirrell is Riddle.
I dismiss this because EY changed the date, which comes at the top of the passage, just so readers wouldn’t jump to think Bones is talking about Riddle. If EY took such a step to prevent the tease that Bones was about to name Riddle, then I would expect EY would not leave things in that were only there to build up that tease.
So the Albanian Shuffle is dismissively unlikely to be referenced for the sake of making the reader think Bones was about to name Riddle. I really don’t know how you could think that in the first place unless you first read that paragraph after already thinking that Bones was going to name Riddle.
Before the date change, there was a legitimate chance that the reader would come away from the discussion thinking that the person Bones was describing actually was Riddle, and that both Bones and Quirrell understood her to have been talking about Riddle. Which if unintended is a far greater problem than “thinking Bones was about to name Riddle, then it turns out no”. This was, in fact, my reading when I was actually going through the chapter.
(tl;dr: It’s not a “tease” that Bones was about to name Riddle that’s the problem, the problem is that it wasn’t resolved with a clear indication that they’re not talking about Riddle)
Changing the date fixes this because the reader can go look it up and realize that it can’t be Riddle after all.
“OhmygodohmygodOHMYGOD! Bones is going to figure out Quirrell is Voldemort! OHMYGOD! What’s he going to do?!?! He’s surrounded by aurors, he’s in DMLE headquarters!… Oh my GOD! Those aurors are so screwed!!”
looks up Tom Riddle online because that’s totally what all readers would do
“Oh, hm. That’s not Riddle then. I wonder who it is?”
...
Are you really suggesting that EY means the reader to do this? He said he wasn’t going to lie to us anymore. See’s low-probability theory of tease and WHAM involves EY lying to his readers, but your take on it that they were supposed to be totally tricked until the look it up online (?!?!) is turns that up to ridiculous levels.
The fact that the conversation doesn’t end with her actually saying Riddle is what would prompt readers to look it up. Are you saying that readers that are still with the fic after eighty chapters haven’t learned enough about rationality to take two minutes to verify an assumption after noticing they are confused?
If that meant he couldn’t ever make a conversation that seems to be going one way but turns out to be different a few paragraphs later, it would lead to a VERY boring story.
P.S. My point was that the problem that EY fixed was that the obvious thing to check (looking up canon!Riddle’s biography) leads to an apparent confirmation.
That would only have changed if the year he started Hogwarts changed, which it did not. The birth date didn’t change by a whole year, just from late enough in 1926 to enter Hogwarts in 1938 to early enough in 1927 to enter Hogwarts in that same year.
Yes. Exactly. That’s my point.
(Not sure why you said this.)
(I lost track of what you were trying to argue, and the comment in isolation seemed to suggest that the non-trivial change had happened. A clause like “so the fact that this was carefully kept constant is evidence in favor of …” would have helped. )
On the contrary, the reference to Albania is almost certainly a clue to the reader that the hero was replaced.
Almost certainly?
It’s suggestive, sure, that he showed up from a long disappearance at about the same time as the “First Wizarding War” began. But the year could just be the one he returned at for some other reason, like, say, his Muggle Albanian wife dying.
In the latter case, why 1970? Because, like the original coincidental 1926 birth year, Eliezer was trying to make people go, “‘Oh no, is she about to identify Voldemort?’ . . . to be contradicted soon after by the Gaunts not exactly being on the Wizengamot or having a patroness grandmother.”
Anyway, if you really think it’s “almost certain”, I’d like to arrange a bet on that. Say, my $5 against your $100?
You’d lose. Canon!Quirrell was possessed by Voldemort in Albania.
Canon!Riddle got Ravenclaw’s diadem out of a hiding place in Albania circa 1945. Thus the inclusion of all four details — 1926, 1945, Albania, and 1970 — can all be explained as part of the same “Oh no, is she about to identify Riddle/Voldemort?” fake-out that was then deliberately blown up by the inconsistency with the Gaunts.
None of them need a separate cause to explain why Eliezer included them; all of them are explained sufficiently by the author-confirmed fake-out without adding the hypothesis “The hero who showed up in 1970 was a trick by Voldemort.”
But if you’re so sure I’m wrong, how about I put up my $5 against, say, your $500?
It would be more like your 1¢ against my empty instant ramen packaging, so no.
If you’re that eager to lose money, loserthree can have it.
Thank you, Pedant One.
I will make three excuses for not taking the gracious offer of $5.00 (pre-tax) from the Holy See of Whereever, then I will give you a real answer.
I’m acclimating to your subculture too fast for my taste and don’t care to speed things along by participating in your quaint rituals of sacrifice.
Five bucks is sufficiently low status that winning would set me back from taking the offer.
I have butter on my face.
I kind of lied: the status matter is totally part of the issue. But the real reason is that I have been conditioned to overvalue losses to gambling. I can only play poker by convincing myself it isn’t gambling.
Really, though, isn’t that gauche? Does it feel right to taunt a stranger with two-thirds of a fast food meal?
Is that really it? Would you have been happier with, say, $20 against $400? I generally think of “almost certain” as indicating p≥0.95; the $5 was driven by the math of keeping your potential loss down.
And, not that I’m asking for you to actually answer, but ask yourself—is it really that you overvalue losses from gambling? If I were offering to put $2,000 up against your $100, would you still refuse because of the exact same chance you’d lose that exact same $100?
(I raised the odds to reflect p≥0.99 for pedanterrific because he implied that I was being a sucker for offering 1-for-20 odds.)
If I understand you correctly, you’re saying that unless I am willing to tie significant amounts of money up for the sake of winning tiny amounts of money, I lack the confidence I claim.
It that didn’t have the sound, the feel of a scam with it’s a-sure-thing-isn’t vibe it’d be a passable bullying tactic for the mathematically adept sort with something to prove. I’ve pushed people around for a living, so I like to think can appreciate a good push.
Or maybe that scamishness is part of the push?
The mark thinks himself a rational fellow, so he’s unlikely to bolt. Bringing money into it makes the mark nervous. The mark mistakes his nervousness about money for doubt about his claim. You capitalize when the mark starts backing down, and claim some petty victory.
Seems like an awful lot of work for a small show, but thanks for the trick. Maybe I’ll make something of it.
No, not at all. Not being willing to tie up the money is a perfectly sensible reason to refuse the bet. Opportunity cost isn’t remotely connected to confidence levels; that I quite confidently expect a Treasury bond to pay me the promised interest doesn’t mean I’d rather spend the money on something else that I value more.
And you certainly don’t owe me an explanation of any kind as to why you refuse a bet. You merely owe yourself a good one instead of a bad one.
Then it would seem improbable that I’m putting the work in for the small show you identified, no? Not impossible, of course, but maybe you need a better theory of what I was trying to do.
I’m not saying it can’t be used as a status attack the way you’re suggesting, but this is a thing people do here. Something about calibrating confidence levels.
Huh.
Doesn’t actually look like fun.
Good for them, though. I’ll stick to poker and “status attacks,” thanks.
Is there much here on status attacks?
When I accepted the bet by ITakeBets, it didn’t feel like a status attack—just that he/she was honestly evaluating the likelihood of the event differently than I was, and so we both had a positive-return expectation given our different models. And I had the odds enough tilted enough away from my confidence levels, so that it worth the bother of betting.
I’d most likely not have accepted a bet from someone that offered it in the way that “see” did though. And I’d not feel the need to offer any excuse other than “No, I don’t feel like making a bet with you”.
If anyone makes you feel like you’re obliged to bet money, just refuse to bet—you don’t have to offer any excuses.
Thanks. Your reassurance isn’t unappreciated.
When the Pedant One used the term ‘status attack’ instead of push or bully or buffalo, I thought maybe that indicated there were resources on the topic. I love the feeling when I find there is a developed system and language for describing and expanding on something I thought I was familiar with. It’s almost always a game-changer.
This is a good resource. Actual ‘attacks’ are a little too Dark Arts-y to get much discussion on LessWrong, though.
Thanks. It’s a nice list.
No DADA, eh?
Is rationality and a desire for self-improvement supposed to provide defense against Dark Arts as a side effect?
Here’s something, but it would be good if there were more discussion of the topic, yeah.
It’s better than that—the classic con is to make the mark feel like he’s putting one over on you.
That is what I meant when I mentioned that a sure thing isn’t.
Even Urban Dictionary is no help with this one. What?
It was totally non sequitur. Also very old. Maybe obscure.
http://www.bash.org/?10739
I think it’s still in the top 200 quotes on the site.
Oh, first google result if I hadn’t used quotes. Duh.
Without confirmation bias, would that actually have helped? I’m certain I don’t know what that would look to someone who didn’t know what I was going for. But I have the Illusion of Transparency on my mind since I saw someone catch it while trying to help someone with it.
Yes—I’d suspect that the phrase as used in the top search result was the canonical version, then search for that instead, and find it had a lot more hits than the quoted original search and the first reference is repeated several times.
I meant, would that have told you what you originally meant to find out.
Did you only want to know where it came from?
No, I didn’t only want to know where it came from.
Yes, it’s clear from context in the link that it doesn’t mean anything.
The author has suggested we pay attention to the Conservation of Detail. With that in mind, the involvement of Albania is enough for almost certainty.
The detail is already conserved by its known use to try to make the reader suspect Bones is going to discover Quirrell is Riddle/Voldemort. Now the question left is whether Albania is a Chekhov’s Boomerang, or whether theories based on it are an example of Epileptic Trees. I know I’m not “almost certain” either way.
So let me follow along. It seems like one extra level to what I’ve been thinking in terms of plotting.
The whole Voldemort Dark Lord war is just part of a bigger plot. First he creates the Villain of Voldemort. Then he creates a prophecy about a child destined to kill him—the eventual Hero. Dumbledore walks right into it by trying to use the prophecy as a trap to kill Tom, with Lily sacrificing herself in a dark ritual as the trap. So Tom gleefully takes the bait to create his Hero, and either is really diminished, or just goes on vacation for a few years waiting for Harry to get older. But clearly he also does something to Harry—creating the ultra resourceful Dark Side which itself contributes to the Harry Legend. And then Dumbledore grooms his hero as well, because he believes that he is destined to be the Hero because of what Voldemort has done to him.
IN the end, he’ll lose to Harry again, once Harry is well on his way to being the Light Lord, but he’ll upload into Harry and become the Hero ruler instead of the Dark Lord, until he uses up Harry’s body. The end.
Another point in favor of this is Quirrell’s talk with Harry after the bully climax, where he said Harry has everything Quirrell had ever wanted—the love, fear, respect, and admiration of everyone in school. This is exactly what he is after again—to rule and be feared, loved, respected, and admired.
You may or may not be going for the Upload bit.
That’s a little bit of an evolution for me. I considered taking over Good Harry as a target of opportunity for Voldemort. That even the Voldemort persona is part of the scheme is new.
But I’ve got a new shiny toy. Evil for the Sake of Evil. In his contempt for the stupidity and weakness of people, I have a hard time seeing him even wanting to be the Hero anymore. He’s now the Joker. He’s Lord Foul—Corruption. He wants to corrupt Good. Corrupt Dumbledore into things like killing Narcissa. Corrupt Harry into being a Dark Lord. Corrupt Hermione and turn her away from Good. He wants Evil to be taken as Good. Then maybe he takes over.
I think it’s the other way: he wants good people to be seen as fallible and fallen.
My model of him is like: “So when I tried to be the hero, people disrespected me, but for some reason the same people respect Dumbledore, Hermione, Harry. Why?! Oh, they are probably better at signalling. So let’s manipulate them into difficult situations where even if they choose good, it will either ruin them or send bad signals.”
He does not want to redefine the words with capital letters. That’s a fool’s game. He is just jealous that other people succeeded in having a good image, where he failed despite his cool plans. He wants good people to have bad image, so that he can become a person with the best image, which is his preferred way to rule the world; probably because it seems safer in long run than being an evil overlord.
I believe his frustration at his inability to become a credible hero. But at least he is learning. He has learned that “a single super-heroic action” is not a good plan, so now he is trying “a child with magical destiny” plan. He cynically believed that he could fool all people; now he is even more cynical, because he believes that he cannot fool them by something that makes sense (killing a few Death Eaters and saving a princess? meh.), but could do it by a superstition (to kill Voldemort while being a baby? cool, and nobody suspects anything!).
Some time after Chapter 38 showed us that Lucius thinks HJPEV is Voldemort, I took his position seriously and looked over the rest of the story.
If Voldemort is the hero, what is Quirrell? I figured he was the Basilisk. And if Quirrell was not the antagonist, who was? I figured it was Dumbledore because the opposite of rational is insane, not stupid.
I now think Quirrell is Voldemort and Dumbledore is not especially insane, but I wish I had thought to reinterpret the prophesy without Voldemort as the obvious bad guy back then. There is so much potential there.