Are you sure you understood the point? I am highlighting a writing technique where you write the same short story over and over again slightly differently to convey a probabilistic model to the reader in a way that is interesting. HPMoR is not quite this; it’s a different story every time, with a different lesson every time, that is treated as a sequence of events.
Ah yes. There are at least two aspects in the ‘war stories’: The ‘probabilistic’ aspect which indeed I didn’t mention and the ‘no plot, no sense’ part which I do see in the failure to double guess and the confusion it leaves the reader in.
One could argue though that as this is repeated and repeated between Harry and Quirrell and thus kind of probabilistic.
Are you sure you understood the point? I am highlighting a writing technique where you write the same short story over and over again slightly differently to convey a probabilistic model to the reader in a way that is interesting. HPMoR is not quite this; it’s a different story every time, with a different lesson every time, that is treated as a sequence of events.
Ah yes. There are at least two aspects in the ‘war stories’: The ‘probabilistic’ aspect which indeed I didn’t mention and the ‘no plot, no sense’ part which I do see in the failure to double guess and the confusion it leaves the reader in.
One could argue though that as this is repeated and repeated between Harry and Quirrell and thus kind of probabilistic.