When Harry asked Griphook what he could do with a ton of silver, Griphook originally looked at him suspiciously and asked if he hadEDIT: expected to soon /EDIT come into possession of a philosopher’s stone. It seemed pretty awkward really—I’m glad it’s gone.
Yes, that is awkward. In alchemic lore, there are projections and steps in the process that would let you turn base metals into silver, but this is extremely obscure stuff and so Griphook jumping from ‘ton of silver’ to ‘possession of a Philosopher’s Stone’ looks simply like an error on the author’s part since 99.9% of everyone reading it only knows of the Stone turning base metals into gold and not silver.
The expression is “the medicine of metals”, I think — the use of the Stone of the Wise to heal metals of the infirmity which causes them to be less noble than gold.
No, but almost. Griphook said “are you expecting to find a Philosopher’s Stone soon”? He was probing Harry to see if Harry knew that the Stone was at Hogwarts, and then McGonagall scolded him for giving away a hint. I liked it. And Harry totally missed the hint, which is reasonable but I was kind of bummed because I want him to be a superhero.
The problem is, hearing this would almost certainly cause Harry to research what a Philosopher’s Stone is, and given his stance on immortality vs death, would almost certainly do everything he can to try to get one (unless there turn out to be insurmountable obstacles to using it to mass-produce elixir of life for general distribution).
Only an issue if making the elixir consumes the stone (which is more what I was getting at) - one already exists, so it’s a sunk cost.
It could also be an obstacle to mass production if the rate at which it can be produced with the existing supply of stones is insufficient to make enough volume for mass distribution.
The best “theory” I read was that only the person who makes the Stone can drink the Elixir, which would explain why only Mr and Mrs Flamel have benefited from it.
When Harry asked Griphook what he could do with a ton of silver, Griphook originally looked at him suspiciously and asked if he
hadEDIT: expected to soon /EDIT come into possession of a philosopher’s stone. It seemed pretty awkward really—I’m glad it’s gone.Yes, that is awkward. In alchemic lore, there are projections and steps in the process that would let you turn base metals into silver, but this is extremely obscure stuff and so Griphook jumping from ‘ton of silver’ to ‘possession of a Philosopher’s Stone’ looks simply like an error on the author’s part since 99.9% of everyone reading it only knows of the Stone turning base metals into gold and not silver.
The expression is “the medicine of metals”, I think — the use of the Stone of the Wise to heal metals of the infirmity which causes them to be less noble than gold.
No, but almost. Griphook said “are you expecting to find a Philosopher’s Stone soon”? He was probing Harry to see if Harry knew that the Stone was at Hogwarts, and then McGonagall scolded him for giving away a hint. I liked it. And Harry totally missed the hint, which is reasonable but I was kind of bummed because I want him to be a superhero.
The problem is, hearing this would almost certainly cause Harry to research what a Philosopher’s Stone is, and given his stance on immortality vs death, would almost certainly do everything he can to try to get one (unless there turn out to be insurmountable obstacles to using it to mass-produce elixir of life for general distribution).
There’s an active prediction on PB.com that making Stones requires human sacrifice etc.
Only an issue if making the elixir consumes the stone (which is more what I was getting at) - one already exists, so it’s a sunk cost.
It could also be an obstacle to mass production if the rate at which it can be produced with the existing supply of stones is insufficient to make enough volume for mass distribution.
The best “theory” I read was that only the person who makes the Stone can drink the Elixir, which would explain why only Mr and Mrs Flamel have benefited from it.