I don’t see a particular advantage to those things. Quirrel doesn’t fear a single nuclear weapon—Voldemort can survive such a thing—he fears nuclear annihilation or MAD, which is a separate matter and not much overlapped with an individual bomb. Muggle weapons are useful and a matter that might require someone to go outside of the country to get… but even a firearm requires training that Harry doesn’t have, and can not kill a Dementor or a Troll. Where firearms could threaten the average unaware Wizard, we’ve seen that most major players are aware of firearms (including McGonagall, Dumbledore, and Snape, see chapter 61), and thus it would not likely fall under things that a Muggle Expert’s sons would not recognize.
And the set of things that Rationalist!Harry knows can resurrect someone is very, very small, and not much overlapped with the Muggle world. Most rituals and potions require ingredients that already have significant magical power.
The “things that Fred and George can’t recognize” is an interesting set. Canon!ArthurWeasley isn’t very knowledgeable, but he at least had an interesting in electrical power, heavy-than-air non-magical flight, and chemical fueled engines. I think we can expect him to be of similar intelligence or smarter in MoR. It’s possible that he’s better at hiding his interest in Muggle technology or that Rationalist!Harry intentionally wrote non-standard descriptions for the items, but that seems unlikely. ((We’re also taking 1990-ish tech, so some ‘obvious’ stuff from today either didn’t exist or would exceed his budget.))
The first thought is dry ice, and the tools necessary to maintain it. Rationalist!Harry has broken several rules of transfiguration, including “don’t burn anything”, but the ability to transfigure CO2 is probably the easiest way to ‘safely’ violate that rule, not terribly expensive, but not within his normal abilities to easily produce otherwise.
Canon!ArthurWeasley isn’t very knowledgeable, but he at least had an interesting in electrical power, heavy-than-air non-magical flight, and chemical fueled engines. I think we can expect him to be of similar intelligence or smarter in MoR.
I don’t think so, per chapter 61:
Madam Bones’s voice continued. “We brought in Arthur Weasley from Misuse of Muggle Artifacts—he knows more about Muggle artifacts than any wizard alive—and gave him the descriptions from the Aurors on the scene, and he cracked it. It was a Muggle artifact called a rocker, and they call it that because you’d have to be off your rocker to ride one. Just six years ago one of their rockers blew up, killed hundreds of Muggles in a flash and almost set fire to the Moon. Weasley says that rockers use a special kind of science called opposite reaction, so the plan is to develop a jinx which will prevent that science from working around Azkaban.”
...
“Severus?” the old wizard said. “What was it actually?”
“A rocket,” said the half-blood Potions Master, who had grown up in the Muggle town of Spinner’s End. “One of the most impressive Muggle technologies.”
It seems pretty clear from chapter 61 that MOR!ArthurWeasley knows precious little about the muggle world.
It seems pretty clear from chapter 61 that MOR!ArthurWeasley knows precious little about the muggle world.
When it comes to wizards who lack recent Muggle ancestry, Arthur may well be the most knowledgeable expert regarding these matters. Considering the racism of even well-meaning wizards, this likely gives Arthur a certain degree of clout in certain circles.
I don’t see a particular advantage to those things. Quirrel doesn’t fear a single nuclear weapon—Voldemort can survive such a thing—he fears nuclear annihilation or MAD, which is a separate matter and not much overlapped with an individual bomb. Muggle weapons are useful and a matter that might require someone to go outside of the country to get… but even a firearm requires training that Harry doesn’t have, and can not kill a Dementor or a Troll. Where firearms could threaten the average unaware Wizard, we’ve seen that most major players are aware of firearms (including McGonagall, Dumbledore, and Snape, see chapter 61), and thus it would not likely fall under things that a Muggle Expert’s sons would not recognize.
And the set of things that Rationalist!Harry knows can resurrect someone is very, very small, and not much overlapped with the Muggle world. Most rituals and potions require ingredients that already have significant magical power.
The “things that Fred and George can’t recognize” is an interesting set. Canon!ArthurWeasley isn’t very knowledgeable, but he at least had an interesting in electrical power, heavy-than-air non-magical flight, and chemical fueled engines. I think we can expect him to be of similar intelligence or smarter in MoR. It’s possible that he’s better at hiding his interest in Muggle technology or that Rationalist!Harry intentionally wrote non-standard descriptions for the items, but that seems unlikely. ((We’re also taking 1990-ish tech, so some ‘obvious’ stuff from today either didn’t exist or would exceed his budget.))
The first thought is dry ice, and the tools necessary to maintain it. Rationalist!Harry has broken several rules of transfiguration, including “don’t burn anything”, but the ability to transfigure CO2 is probably the easiest way to ‘safely’ violate that rule, not terribly expensive, but not within his normal abilities to easily produce otherwise.
I don’t think so, per chapter 61:
It seems pretty clear from chapter 61 that MOR!ArthurWeasley knows precious little about the muggle world.
On a side note, I’d like to see the spell-research attempts at preventing “opposite reaction” from working.
I mean, I’m sure they’ll get it eventually, but they’re going to get some rather hilarious results in the meantime...
So would I, and I wouldn’t mind writing some, but posting such snippets here has been previously discouraged.
Hmm.. I guess this is what ff.net is for, at that. I’ll send you a link if I end up writing it.
I’d like to see it to, and probably so would many reading this.
When it comes to wizards who lack recent Muggle ancestry, Arthur may well be the most knowledgeable expert regarding these matters. Considering the racism of even well-meaning wizards, this likely gives Arthur a certain degree of clout in certain circles.
Detonating a single nuclear bomb in Washington or Russia would have triggered nuclear attacks in 1993 where the events of this story take place.
The story is currently in April 1992.