Somewhat trivially… I hadn’t realized that Patronuses (Patroni?) could be sent on remote missions, or that they were able to track down individuals whose location the casting mage didn’t know (as Professor McGonagall seems to do here).
I’m trying to figure out why, given that, anyone would break into Azkaban to give prisoners temporarily relief from Dementors, rather than just send a Patronus (or hire someone who can send a Patronus) to do the same thing.
So far I can’t think of a plausible reason. Admittedly, Patronuses can’t bring chocolate, but that seems inadequate reason to take the additional risk of breaking in personally.
A related nitpick: I was wondering why McGonagall’s Patronus found this Harry if there are multiple Harrys around at this time because of his use of the Time-Turner. It seems likely that either the earlier Harry is still around at this time, or the later Harry has come back and is around at this time, or both. Is it because this Harry is using his Patronus?
(A similar issue about communicating with people who have time traveled naq oebhtug gurve pryy cubarf came up in another work of fiction, but I won’t say anything more about that to avoid spoilers.)
First, as I initially assumed, wards that Quirrel cast at Mary’s are rendering them undetectable to patronus communication. That way, if there were no second Harry in Azkaban and third Harry on the way back, McGonagall’s patronus wouldn’t be able to contact him at all.
Second, for all we know about patronus’ methods of travel, it might get autonomously dispatched directly to target’s location, which is normally unique. There are no conservation laws that prohibit patronus splitting into two independent messengers, as there are no conservation laws preventing you from having two mirror reflections, or two acoustic echoes at the same time; and reflections and echoes can be interacted with in magical ways in Potterverse. That means that all two or three copies of Harry can get the same message, give non-conflicting answers, and McGonagall won’t suspect anything.
This must mean that when Harry’s Patronus knows that another Patronus is looking for it, it isn’t because Harry, say, went back in time and sent himself a Patronus message. (Which would have been problematic on its own: where would the information have come from in the first place? It’d be a stable loop with no reason to exist, and I’d like to think such things don’t happen.)
So either someone who has non-time-travel knowledge of Dumbledore’s actions sent this message to Harry (and who could have done this?)...
or his Patronus knows this on its own, and it isn’t a message after all.
The first option is unlikely, but I am confused by both options. A Patronus isn’t actually that intelligent is it? And even if Harry’s Patronus is, how would it know that another Patronus is looking for it?
I have a theory about that, actually. If the experiment had gone just as Harry expected, would he have been able to avoid the temptation to write something different on the paper, just to see what happens?
Quite possibly the only stable time loop was one which involved a sufficiently creepy experimental result.
My pet theory was that Harry wrote “Don’t mess with time” to himself because in a previous iteration, he had succeeded in using Time Turners to quickly factorise, and then parlayed this capability into a money-making scheme; shortly followed by a world takeover-cum-ascension to godhood, realised it was overall a bad thing, had one of his “this is that moment twenty years from then where I look back and point to exactly where it went wrong” moments, and used his power to return to that time, complete with the knowledge that he shouldn’t mess with time. Which leads to him writing “DO NOT MESS WITH TIME” down, which leads to him seeing that, realising none of this, but writing down “DO NOT MESS WITH TIME” with the same level of fear and thus the same hand-shakiness, and thus we get a stable loop.
I would like to point out that this theory is both more consistent with the evidence available to us from the story, and more consistent with what we know about Eliezer: that a world that simply cheats is aesthetically unpleasing; and that it would amuse him to hide this from us.
I get this as meaning you can’t use the Time-turner inside Azkaban. I’m not sure if this is relevant to the story, but could one “duplicate” himself (or more) outside Azkaban, and then get all copies inside it? E.g., go to Azkaban, get out, go back to before entering Azkaban, and enter again? Are you forbidden to go back in time over a period you were in it, or is your copy prevented from approaching, or what?
A copy with knowledge of a Azkaban at a certain time seems forbidden from approaching/entering Azkaban at a prior time. See “Azkaban’s future couldn’t interact with its past, so she hadn’t been able to arrive before the DMLE had gotten the message,” in Ch55. The restraint isn’t so much when the DMLE gets the message, it’s when Azkaban sends the message. It can’t send a message that affects its past.
Azkaban might be a good place to try a can of Comed-tea.
I’m still curious how it actually works. The portal she used could simply refuse to work, but how would you be prevented from simply walking in? An invisible wall you can’t walk through, or just a sequence of increasingly improbable events happen that keep stopping you?
(If Harry’s explanation of how Comed-tea is right, it probably means just that you won’t get the urge to drink it. That “or your money-back” line suggests that you can drink it without a result, presumably if you figured it out. Though the charm might also inhibit your wanting to drink it when nothing will happen; otherwise, there would be a lot of unsatisfied customers who drank it just because it was hot and they were thirsty. If it does, you might not get the idea to test it.)
The reason Harry lied to McGonagall, was because he didn’t want her to know his location, and suspected that the only thing she was going to warn him about was that Quirell might be involved in a break in at Azkabam, which he already knows about. If her Patronus had reached earlier Harry, he would have listened to her and told the truth, and she would have arrived, and he certainly wouldn’t have time travelled. But then there would have been no attempt to enter Azkabam, and so she wouldn’t have know that something was wrong. Since time-turners don’t cause these sorts of paradoxes, her Patronus had to find later Harry.
That explains not finding pre-Azkaban Harry. If Harry makes it out of there, there should be a post-Azkaban Harry as well. They want to time it so that they return to Mary’s place at about the time they leave. Travel time means there should be three.
If the patronus found post-Azkaban Harry, then Harry would not have known to travel back in time to by found by it; another paradox that time-turners don’t cause.
For the sake of argument, let’s assume that in later chapters we will discover that Harry’s future goes according to the plan he lays out… that is, at T1 Minerva sends her Patronus, and at T2 Harry gets out of Azkaban and travels to T1.
So at T1 Harry is in Azkaban and in Mary’s Room.
If the Patronus finds Harry in Azkaban (as we’ve read), Harry travels to T1 in order to be found by Minerva, as you say.
But if the Patronus finds Harry in Mary’s Room (as you’re arguing couldn’t happen), then Harry travels to T1 for some other reason, or no reason at all.
“But then there’s no actual motivation for Harry’s action!”, I hear someone object. “No fair!”
Well, I agree. Similarly, by this theory, there’s no actual motivation for the Patronus’ choice.
“Because it would cause a paradox” is a little bit like “Because it would violate conservation of energy”… it’s a reason to predict one consequence over another, but it isn’t actually an explanation.
Think of the interference patterns of the double slit experiment. The wave-functions of universes with paradoxes cancel out to give zero probability to those collective sets of conditions.
I am not sure, I remember having the impression that Harry was making specific time travel plans in response to meeting the patronus. They had already travelled backwards in time, I am not sure how much time has passed. I will re-read the chapter later tonight.
Though if it was non paradox causing either way, then the patronus was acting in accordance with another global law of the HP:MOR universe: it was more awesome for the patronus to meet Harry in Azkaban and make the situation more complicated.
Actually, I was thinking about it the other way around: that maybe Harry had to make sure not only that he arrived earlier than the time he recorded so he’d be there for Minerva to find, but also that he arrived after the time of the communication to avoid there being two Harrys for the Patronus to find.
But putting it that way made me realize that no, clearly that isn’t a problem: the Patronus (did/does) find the Harry in Azkaban, regardless of what else might be true.
As you point out, we don’t know how it did so… maybe it flipped a glowing animal-headed coin… but we know it did so, by observation, and Harry does too.
(A similar issue about communicating with people who have time traveled naq oebhtug gurve pryy cubarf came up in another work of fiction, but I won’t say anything more about that to avoid spoilers.)
I bet the Patronus’ power isn’t very strong when it’s far away for its owner. It’s just strong enough to get the message across, but not enough to repel dementors.
I hereby declare this to be fact. Not least because otherwise Harry would be tempted to send his Patronus into the Dementors’ pit at any time, which problem I had thought about and planned to have him just not think of.
It seems that messenger Patroni don’t have quite the anti-dementor effects that a local Patronus does. This would make sense both for the reason people go into Azkaban and for the reason that Harry didn’t feel any different from the sending being around.
It would still be a lot easier. Besides, if this is true, then Harry’s cover story to McGonagall about being in Mary’s room is blown. Especially with the heightened security, the Aurors would have noticed her patronus. Unless communication between McGonagall and Dumbledore + Aurors is especially poor, this would tell them that Harry is in there.
First, as I initially assumed, wards that Quirrel cast at Mary’s are rendering them undetectable to patronus communication. That way, if there were no second Harry in Azkaban and third Harry on the way back, McGonagall’s patronus wouldn’t be able to contact him at all.
Second, for all we know about patronus’ methods of travel, it might get autonomously dispatched directly to target’s location, which is normally unique. There are no conservation laws that prohibit patronus splitting into two independent messengers, as there are no conservation laws preventing you from having two mirror reflections, or two acoustic echoes at the same time; and reflections and echoes can be interacted with in magical ways in Potterverse. That means that all two or three copies of Harry can get the same message, give non-conflicting answers, and McGonagall won’t suspect anything.
IIRC, The method for sending messages using a Patronus was developed in canon by either DA or OoTP, and is not common knowledge. In MoR, Harry develops it himself but it presumably has been used in the war games by now.
ETA: Chapter 28, it’s mentioned that Minerva’s cat patronus contacted Harry, so that’s probably where he got the idea.
(ch56)
Somewhat trivially… I hadn’t realized that Patronuses (Patroni?) could be sent on remote missions, or that they were able to track down individuals whose location the casting mage didn’t know (as Professor McGonagall seems to do here).
I’m trying to figure out why, given that, anyone would break into Azkaban to give prisoners temporarily relief from Dementors, rather than just send a Patronus (or hire someone who can send a Patronus) to do the same thing.
So far I can’t think of a plausible reason. Admittedly, Patronuses can’t bring chocolate, but that seems inadequate reason to take the additional risk of breaking in personally.
Am I being dense?
A related nitpick: I was wondering why McGonagall’s Patronus found this Harry if there are multiple Harrys around at this time because of his use of the Time-Turner. It seems likely that either the earlier Harry is still around at this time, or the later Harry has come back and is around at this time, or both. Is it because this Harry is using his Patronus?
(A similar issue about communicating with people who have time traveled naq oebhtug gurve pryy cubarf came up in another work of fiction, but I won’t say anything more about that to avoid spoilers.)
I want to propose two more possible solutions.
First, as I initially assumed, wards that Quirrel cast at Mary’s are rendering them undetectable to patronus communication. That way, if there were no second Harry in Azkaban and third Harry on the way back, McGonagall’s patronus wouldn’t be able to contact him at all.
Second, for all we know about patronus’ methods of travel, it might get autonomously dispatched directly to target’s location, which is normally unique. There are no conservation laws that prohibit patronus splitting into two independent messengers, as there are no conservation laws preventing you from having two mirror reflections, or two acoustic echoes at the same time; and reflections and echoes can be interacted with in magical ways in Potterverse. That means that all two or three copies of Harry can get the same message, give non-conflicting answers, and McGonagall won’t suspect anything.
Azkaban’s future cannot interact with its past.
McGonagall and the other two Harrys aren’t in Azkaban, so don’t see why that fact would make her Patronus go to the Harry that is in Azkaban.
WTF. There are multiple Harry’s now? Wow, I must catch up on the recent chapters!
Yeah, he suffers from spontaneous duplication, which is being treated by his spinster wicket.
This must mean that when Harry’s Patronus knows that another Patronus is looking for it, it isn’t because Harry, say, went back in time and sent himself a Patronus message. (Which would have been problematic on its own: where would the information have come from in the first place? It’d be a stable loop with no reason to exist, and I’d like to think such things don’t happen.)
So either someone who has non-time-travel knowledge of Dumbledore’s actions sent this message to Harry (and who could have done this?)...
or his Patronus knows this on its own, and it isn’t a message after all.
The first option is unlikely, but I am confused by both options. A Patronus isn’t actually that intelligent is it? And even if Harry’s Patronus is, how would it know that another Patronus is looking for it?
Patroni are sentient!
The same place where “Don’t mess with time travel” came from.
I have a theory about that, actually. If the experiment had gone just as Harry expected, would he have been able to avoid the temptation to write something different on the paper, just to see what happens?
Quite possibly the only stable time loop was one which involved a sufficiently creepy experimental result.
My pet theory was that Harry wrote “Don’t mess with time” to himself because in a previous iteration, he had succeeded in using Time Turners to quickly factorise, and then parlayed this capability into a money-making scheme; shortly followed by a world takeover-cum-ascension to godhood, realised it was overall a bad thing, had one of his “this is that moment twenty years from then where I look back and point to exactly where it went wrong” moments, and used his power to return to that time, complete with the knowledge that he shouldn’t mess with time. Which leads to him writing “DO NOT MESS WITH TIME” down, which leads to him seeing that, realising none of this, but writing down “DO NOT MESS WITH TIME” with the same level of fear and thus the same hand-shakiness, and thus we get a stable loop.
I would like to point out that this theory is both more consistent with the evidence available to us from the story, and more consistent with what we know about Eliezer: that a world that simply cheats is aesthetically unpleasing; and that it would amuse him to hide this from us.
I get this as meaning you can’t use the Time-turner inside Azkaban. I’m not sure if this is relevant to the story, but could one “duplicate” himself (or more) outside Azkaban, and then get all copies inside it? E.g., go to Azkaban, get out, go back to before entering Azkaban, and enter again? Are you forbidden to go back in time over a period you were in it, or is your copy prevented from approaching, or what?
A copy with knowledge of a Azkaban at a certain time seems forbidden from approaching/entering Azkaban at a prior time. See “Azkaban’s future couldn’t interact with its past, so she hadn’t been able to arrive before the DMLE had gotten the message,” in Ch55. The restraint isn’t so much when the DMLE gets the message, it’s when Azkaban sends the message. It can’t send a message that affects its past.
Azkaban might be a good place to try a can of Comed-tea.
You’re right, I had forgotten that passage.
I’m still curious how it actually works. The portal she used could simply refuse to work, but how would you be prevented from simply walking in? An invisible wall you can’t walk through, or just a sequence of increasingly improbable events happen that keep stopping you?
(If Harry’s explanation of how Comed-tea is right, it probably means just that you won’t get the urge to drink it. That “or your money-back” line suggests that you can drink it without a result, presumably if you figured it out. Though the charm might also inhibit your wanting to drink it when nothing will happen; otherwise, there would be a lot of unsatisfied customers who drank it just because it was hot and they were thirsty. If it does, you might not get the idea to test it.)
The reason Harry lied to McGonagall, was because he didn’t want her to know his location, and suspected that the only thing she was going to warn him about was that Quirell might be involved in a break in at Azkabam, which he already knows about. If her Patronus had reached earlier Harry, he would have listened to her and told the truth, and she would have arrived, and he certainly wouldn’t have time travelled. But then there would have been no attempt to enter Azkabam, and so she wouldn’t have know that something was wrong. Since time-turners don’t cause these sorts of paradoxes, her Patronus had to find later Harry.
That explains not finding pre-Azkaban Harry. If Harry makes it out of there, there should be a post-Azkaban Harry as well. They want to time it so that they return to Mary’s place at about the time they leave. Travel time means there should be three.
If the patronus found post-Azkaban Harry, then Harry would not have known to travel back in time to by found by it; another paradox that time-turners don’t cause.
Er… really?
For the sake of argument, let’s assume that in later chapters we will discover that Harry’s future goes according to the plan he lays out… that is, at T1 Minerva sends her Patronus, and at T2 Harry gets out of Azkaban and travels to T1.
So at T1 Harry is in Azkaban and in Mary’s Room.
If the Patronus finds Harry in Azkaban (as we’ve read), Harry travels to T1 in order to be found by Minerva, as you say.
But if the Patronus finds Harry in Mary’s Room (as you’re arguing couldn’t happen), then Harry travels to T1 for some other reason, or no reason at all.
“But then there’s no actual motivation for Harry’s action!”, I hear someone object. “No fair!”
Well, I agree. Similarly, by this theory, there’s no actual motivation for the Patronus’ choice.
“Because it would cause a paradox” is a little bit like “Because it would violate conservation of energy”… it’s a reason to predict one consequence over another, but it isn’t actually an explanation.
Of course, I will admit that I am confused about what local laws could add up to the “no paradox” global law.
Something like a multiply-branching Universe in which those branches that turn out to contain paradoxes cease to exist?
Not “cease to exist”, simply won’t exist.
Think of the interference patterns of the double slit experiment. The wave-functions of universes with paradoxes cancel out to give zero probability to those collective sets of conditions.
I thought the plan was to have no gaps at Mary’s place—he’d travel back for that in any case to get back there/then.
I am not sure, I remember having the impression that Harry was making specific time travel plans in response to meeting the patronus. They had already travelled backwards in time, I am not sure how much time has passed. I will re-read the chapter later tonight.
Though if it was non paradox causing either way, then the patronus was acting in accordance with another global law of the HP:MOR universe: it was more awesome for the patronus to meet Harry in Azkaban and make the situation more complicated.
I think they were planning on going back anyway, so that it seemed like they had never left Mary’s room.
How are you counting to three?
Uneel vf tbvat gb gnxr n frpbaq gevc onpx va gvzr, fb gung ur pna jnyx bhg bs Nmxnona orsber gur nynez vf fbhaqrq, naq trg onpx gb Znel’f cynpr va gvzr gb zrrg ZpTbantnyy.
I was initially wondering about this too.
Actually, I was thinking about it the other way around: that maybe Harry had to make sure not only that he arrived earlier than the time he recorded so he’d be there for Minerva to find, but also that he arrived after the time of the communication to avoid there being two Harrys for the Patronus to find.
But putting it that way made me realize that no, clearly that isn’t a problem: the Patronus (did/does) find the Harry in Azkaban, regardless of what else might be true.
As you point out, we don’t know how it did so… maybe it flipped a glowing animal-headed coin… but we know it did so, by observation, and Harry does too.
Oyvax ba Qbpgbe Jub?
Huh, I thought he was referring to Cevzre.
I saw that a few times, but dont remember cellphones. Great one still.
I’m not familiar with that one. I was thinking of gur zbivr Cevzre.
Ah. I haven’t seen either.
I hadn’t thought of that, but (in canon) only members of the Order of the Phoenix can use their Patronuses that way.
I bet the Patronus’ power isn’t very strong when it’s far away for its owner. It’s just strong enough to get the message across, but not enough to repel dementors.
I hereby declare this to be fact. Not least because otherwise Harry would be tempted to send his Patronus into the Dementors’ pit at any time, which problem I had thought about and planned to have him just not think of.
Does this count as a violation of the “don’t say ‘Eliezer said X’” rule? :P
This could make sense, but does it say anything about the possibility of long-range Horcrux action?
It seems that messenger Patroni don’t have quite the anti-dementor effects that a local Patronus does. This would make sense both for the reason people go into Azkaban and for the reason that Harry didn’t feel any different from the sending being around.
Normal patroni can be identified, tracked, and presumably dispelled, so there’s not much of a reduction in risk.
It would still be a lot easier. Besides, if this is true, then Harry’s cover story to McGonagall about being in Mary’s room is blown. Especially with the heightened security, the Aurors would have noticed her patronus. Unless communication between McGonagall and Dumbledore + Aurors is especially poor, this would tell them that Harry is in there.
Edit: Sorry, fixed.
Spelling.
Edit: Downvoters: What? There are 4 misspellings in that paragraph (plus nonstandard capitalization). It hurts.
I want to propose two more possible solutions.
First, as I initially assumed, wards that Quirrel cast at Mary’s are rendering them undetectable to patronus communication. That way, if there were no second Harry in Azkaban and third Harry on the way back, McGonagall’s patronus wouldn’t be able to contact him at all.
Second, for all we know about patronus’ methods of travel, it might get autonomously dispatched directly to target’s location, which is normally unique. There are no conservation laws that prohibit patronus splitting into two independent messengers, as there are no conservation laws preventing you from having two mirror reflections, or two acoustic echoes at the same time; and reflections and echoes can be interacted with in magical ways in Potterverse. That means that all two or three copies of Harry can get the same message, give non-conflicting answers, and McGonagall won’t suspect anything.
IIRC, The method for sending messages using a Patronus was developed in canon by either DA or OoTP, and is not common knowledge. In MoR, Harry develops it himself but it presumably has been used in the war games by now.
ETA: Chapter 28, it’s mentioned that Minerva’s cat patronus contacted Harry, so that’s probably where he got the idea.
not the DA, but I think OotP