I think it’s more likely that the Horcruxes are static copies, like system backups, and Quirrel’s zombie periods are because the original Quirrel is, in fact, still present in some lobotomized form, and Voldemort is merely imposing his soul / brain state onto the tissue by force of magic. While he can maintain it, it is costly, and he conserves strength by letting the damaged brain run the body most of the time. It might also be the case that this is to preserve the livespan of the possession, since Voldemort’s presence in Quirrel’s body appears to be slowly killing him.
A static copy couldn’t learn, think, or experience time. A static copy is inert. I could imagine horcrux-magic automatically overwriting the brains of people who come into contact with them, so that Quirrell would become Voldemort, but the horcrux can’t be static if Quirrell is still present in lobotomized form. In that scenario, neither one is a running copy of Voldemort.
But the idea of horcruxes as copies may be correct.
“Harry, how could Voldemort have survived the death of his body if he did not have a soul?”
[...]
“Good question,” Harry said, after some internal debate about how to proceed. “Maybe he found some way of duplicating the power of the Resurrection Stone, only he loaded it in advance with a complete copy of his brain state. Or something like that.”
If he didn’t die at Godric’s Hollow, perhaps he rescued Bellatrix to create a flesh and blood copy of himself from one of his horcruxes, and we really will be treated to the sight of two Voldemorts betraying each other. I’d like that.
Interestingly, the copy of Voldemort we get to see in canon is very much a static copy. He comes back fifty years later with the exact same plan that he abandoned before. It’s not even a good plan; his older self abandoned it since it would arouse suspicion and wouldn’t particularly help him in his goals. Hell, diary-riddle could have just not written on the walls in blood and succeeded easily. It’s like that instance of him had not only failed to grow at all since he created the diary horcrux, but it was perpetually fixated on the state of mind it’s creator had at the exact moment of creation.
Obviously HPMoR is different from canon, but it seems like an interesting parallel.
‘HPMOR Voldemort’ - you mean the original taking-over-England-and-meeting-an-unexplained-fate-at-the-Potters’ Voldemort? That’s odd… but why would Tom Riddle let one of his Horcruxes go wild like that, and whose body did it steal?
I don’t think I have enough info to generate good hypotheses yet, but it seems odd that the original would be intellectually more degraded than, e.g. Quirrelmort (unless the Quirrel himself has/had a formidable brain already). The “pretending to be brutish and lose” plan is also improbable because it violates Malfoy’s Rule of Three. (OTOH Lucius, while clever, is not the smartest plotter around, and knows this, so perhaps the rule doesn’t apply to truly superior plotters.)
The original might not necessarily be ‘degraded’ compared to Quirrel—he had different strategies, yes, but Quirrel has observed a lot of things since ‘his’ defeat. Those could explain his change in strategy.
old, old tales of wizards possessed, doing mad deeds, claiming the names of Dark Lords thought defeated; and there is usually a device, of that Dark Lord, which they wield
So the mind-state-thing is backed up to some kind of sustained magic on an object. And then whoever possesses that object is possessed by the mind-state-thing.
Yes, I’ve suggested that myself elsewhere in the thread. I was pointing out here that if it’s possessing Quirrell, not overwriting him, it can’t be a static copy. A Voldemort emulation has to be running on either the horcrux or Quirrell.
I think it’s more likely that the Horcruxes are static copies, like system backups, and Quirrel’s zombie periods are because the original Quirrel is, in fact, still present in some lobotomized form, and Voldemort is merely imposing his soul / brain state onto the tissue by force of magic. While he can maintain it, it is costly, and he conserves strength by letting the damaged brain run the body most of the time. It might also be the case that this is to preserve the livespan of the possession, since Voldemort’s presence in Quirrel’s body appears to be slowly killing him.
A static copy couldn’t learn, think, or experience time. A static copy is inert. I could imagine horcrux-magic automatically overwriting the brains of people who come into contact with them, so that Quirrell would become Voldemort, but the horcrux can’t be static if Quirrell is still present in lobotomized form. In that scenario, neither one is a running copy of Voldemort.
But the idea of horcruxes as copies may be correct.
If he didn’t die at Godric’s Hollow, perhaps he rescued Bellatrix to create a flesh and blood copy of himself from one of his horcruxes, and we really will be treated to the sight of two Voldemorts betraying each other. I’d like that.
Interestingly, the copy of Voldemort we get to see in canon is very much a static copy. He comes back fifty years later with the exact same plan that he abandoned before. It’s not even a good plan; his older self abandoned it since it would arouse suspicion and wouldn’t particularly help him in his goals. Hell, diary-riddle could have just not written on the walls in blood and succeeded easily. It’s like that instance of him had not only failed to grow at all since he created the diary horcrux, but it was perpetually fixated on the state of mind it’s creator had at the exact moment of creation.
Obviously HPMoR is different from canon, but it seems like an interesting parallel.
Now I’m wondering whether the HPMOR Voldemort is not the original Tom Riddle, but just another Horcrux, and a rather degraded one, at that.
‘HPMOR Voldemort’ - you mean the original taking-over-England-and-meeting-an-unexplained-fate-at-the-Potters’ Voldemort? That’s odd… but why would Tom Riddle let one of his Horcruxes go wild like that, and whose body did it steal?
I don’t think I have enough info to generate good hypotheses yet, but it seems odd that the original would be intellectually more degraded than, e.g. Quirrelmort (unless the Quirrel himself has/had a formidable brain already). The “pretending to be brutish and lose” plan is also improbable because it violates Malfoy’s Rule of Three. (OTOH Lucius, while clever, is not the smartest plotter around, and knows this, so perhaps the rule doesn’t apply to truly superior plotters.)
The original might not necessarily be ‘degraded’ compared to Quirrel—he had different strategies, yes, but Quirrel has observed a lot of things since ‘his’ defeat. Those could explain his change in strategy.
From chapter 79:
So the mind-state-thing is backed up to some kind of sustained magic on an object. And then whoever possesses that object is possessed by the mind-state-thing.
Yes, I’ve suggested that myself elsewhere in the thread. I was pointing out here that if it’s possessing Quirrell, not overwriting him, it can’t be a static copy. A Voldemort emulation has to be running on either the horcrux or Quirrell.
To clarify, by ‘static copy’ I didn’t mean permanently static, I meant ‘inert until activated.’
Though I guess there’s no evidence that they aren’t alive (in a ghostly, and mostly useless state) at all times.
EDIT: Actually, thinking of canon, the horcruxes did seem decently alive. Enough so to mess with Ginny Weasely a lot.