Where story and didacticism are in tension, I chuck didacticism in favor of story.
It’s too bad you can’t do both; I liked Luminosity-the-articles.
Well, good, I wouldn’t want to be doing the exact same thing. How redundant.
I don’t think it’s any more redundant than any 2 LW articles on applying probability theory or akrasia are. The universe of plots featuring sane characters ought to be as large as the usual universe of plots featuring less-than-rational characters.
Pretty much everybody who spends any amount of time with Harry in his story figures he’s probably kind of hazardous to have around, even as an ally, and he doesn’t curb this tendency very quickly.
Yes, and he gets away with his lack of secrecy because he knows of no live enemies. He’s told pretty shortly after being introduced to the wizarding world ‘oh and by the way your only real enemy or competitor is apparently dead and all his followers are keeping their heads low’, and shortly thereafter he’s busily recruiting the most dangerous & active of his enemies—Quirrel and the Malfoys—into being his mentor and student.
Any reasonable extrapolation of MoR Harry involves him being frightened out of his wits by depraved enemies with millions of years of experience the moment he’s told of them, and if we somehow postulate that he decides to go around being scary, his visit to Volterra would cure that.
That would be boring and tweaks personal buttons of mine. Sorry.
Also unfortunate. I winced at the Demetri bit in the chapter today. Of course it matters how good Demetri is at hand-to-hand combat compared to other handy vampires, because we all know there’s no other way to fight. A pity their kung fu is not best!
There is a sharp limit to how much this can really surprise you if you have been paying any attention.
A deontologist who can’t justify war or bombings is in a sorry state indeed. I tend to assume you aren’t writing stupid deontologists and so they ought to be considering more effective methods.
It’s too bad you can’t do both; I liked Luminosity-the-articles.
I don’t think it’s any more redundant than any 2 LW articles on applying probability theory or akrasia are. The universe of plots featuring sane characters ought to be as large as the usual universe of plots featuring less-than-rational characters.
Yes, and he gets away with his lack of secrecy because he knows of no live enemies. He’s told pretty shortly after being introduced to the wizarding world ‘oh and by the way your only real enemy or competitor is apparently dead and all his followers are keeping their heads low’, and shortly thereafter he’s busily recruiting the most dangerous & active of his enemies—Quirrel and the Malfoys—into being his mentor and student.
Any reasonable extrapolation of MoR Harry involves him being frightened out of his wits by depraved enemies with millions of years of experience the moment he’s told of them, and if we somehow postulate that he decides to go around being scary, his visit to Volterra would cure that.
Also unfortunate. I winced at the Demetri bit in the chapter today. Of course it matters how good Demetri is at hand-to-hand combat compared to other handy vampires, because we all know there’s no other way to fight. A pity their kung fu is not best!
A deontologist who can’t justify war or bombings is in a sorry state indeed. I tend to assume you aren’t writing stupid deontologists and so they ought to be considering more effective methods.