Dumbledore just cast himself from time in order to fulfill the prophecy about Harry Potter.
Everything we’ve seen of Dumbledore shows him to be a man who thinks in stories. I can’t see him fulfilling a prophecy by cheating, especially given that he’s already lost a friend due to a failed attempt to mess with time. (plus it would raise the question of why he’s spent the whole story telling everyone that Voldemort is Harry’s fated foe)
For that matter, that is a hard prophecy to make apply to Harry and some new dark lord. What other candidates do we have for the “him” of “born to those who have thrice defied him”?
I don’t know what the “stone of resurrection” actually is, but I think Voldy will not like what it does, not one tiny bit.
The only way Voldemort would know that the Stone of Resurrection grants him free-floating ghost powers is by testing it out, since no one has ever been able to use it in that fashion before. We must assume that he’s tested it, and whatever else it does, it really does possess that devastatingly powerful function. How and why would Dumbledore and co. fake that?
The old wizard glanced at her, and his voice caught as he said, “Minerva, you have known me long, and as well as any soul still living—tell me, have I lost myself to darkness already?”
“What?” said Professor McGonagall in genuine surprise. Then, “Oh, Albus, no!”
The old wizard’s lips pressed together tightly before he spoke. “For the greater good. I have sacrificed so many, for the greater good. Today I almost condemned Hermione Granger to Azkaban for the greater good. And I find myself—today, I found myself—beginning to resent the innocence that is no longer mine—” The old wizard’s voice halted. “Evil done in the name of good. Evil done in the name of evil. Which is worse?”
“You are being silly, Albus.”
The old wizard glanced at her again, before turning his eyes back to their way. “Tell me, Minerva—did you pause to weigh the consequences, before you told Miss Granger how to bind herself to the Potter family?”
She took an involuntary breath as she understood what she had done -
“So you did not.” Albus’s eyes were saddened. “No, Minerva, you must not apologize. It is well. For what you have seen of me this day—if your first loyalty is now to Harry Potter, and not to me, then that is right and proper.” She opened her lips to protest, but Albus went on before she could say a word. “Indeed—indeed—that will be necessary and more than necessary, if the Dark Lord that Harry must defeat to come into his power is not Voldemort after all—”
“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 ahead.
He is the hogwarts headmaster. I figure they defied him in that capacity quite sufficiently. Heck, possibly even in his capacity as head honcho of the Ootp
The theory is that the prophecy was always about him—or at least that it was always a possible read on it, in the same way as Neville could have been the prophecied child. That is why it was spoken in his presence, not in Voldemorts. It isn’t cheating, it is settling the open question. And well, he told people it was about Voldemort because letting it be known that you suspect you are a dark lord with prophecies about you is not very politically helpful.
Because it doesn’t let him actually possess people? Being permanently intangible and voiceless makes him rather less of a threat. Or the darn thing is a monstrously powerhungry magic sink and his tests have used up dozens and dozens of horcruxes.. if it’s a trap, there is a lot of things it could be doing.
And the mirror is easy, it can be programmed to let people go who believe themselves safe from it, regardless of if they are.
Heck, it occurs to me that they could be the true artefacts, just cursed—the point is that Voldemort was told about them quite deliberately, and so his use of them cannot possibly be to his benefit.
A couple of problems:
Everything we’ve seen of Dumbledore shows him to be a man who thinks in stories. I can’t see him fulfilling a prophecy by cheating, especially given that he’s already lost a friend due to a failed attempt to mess with time. (plus it would raise the question of why he’s spent the whole story telling everyone that Voldemort is Harry’s fated foe)
For that matter, that is a hard prophecy to make apply to Harry and some new dark lord. What other candidates do we have for the “him” of “born to those who have thrice defied him”?
The only way Voldemort would know that the Stone of Resurrection grants him free-floating ghost powers is by testing it out, since no one has ever been able to use it in that fashion before. We must assume that he’s tested it, and whatever else it does, it really does possess that devastatingly powerful function. How and why would Dumbledore and co. fake that?
I don’t think Dumbledore thinks it’s cheating:
He is the hogwarts headmaster. I figure they defied him in that capacity quite sufficiently. Heck, possibly even in his capacity as head honcho of the Ootp
The theory is that the prophecy was always about him—or at least that it was always a possible read on it, in the same way as Neville could have been the prophecied child. That is why it was spoken in his presence, not in Voldemorts. It isn’t cheating, it is settling the open question. And well, he told people it was about Voldemort because letting it be known that you suspect you are a dark lord with prophecies about you is not very politically helpful.
Because it doesn’t let him actually possess people? Being permanently intangible and voiceless makes him rather less of a threat. Or the darn thing is a monstrously powerhungry magic sink and his tests have used up dozens and dozens of horcruxes.. if it’s a trap, there is a lot of things it could be doing.
And the mirror is easy, it can be programmed to let people go who believe themselves safe from it, regardless of if they are.
Heck, it occurs to me that they could be the true artefacts, just cursed—the point is that Voldemort was told about them quite deliberately, and so his use of them cannot possibly be to his benefit.
The prophecy was only heard by Severus and Minerva.