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Warrior-like battlemages? Calm females? Based on the, what, three times we see anyone from these schools that isn't Krum or Delacore? Based on the exactly zero times anyone who goes to these schools other than the aforementioned two becomes important enough to be named? Really?Vanguard wrote:Remember the 4th book? You saw samples of two other magic schools. One russian school with warrior-like battlemages and a French one, with several calm females. Both have uniforms. Both have a style. Their leaders might be lunatics but the actual students show so much more competance than Hogwarts.
I forgot their school names, but I can recall the fact they sounded a lot more respectable than fucking "HOG. WARTS". Ugh.
About years 2 and 4: they're not as good as Voldemort. Because no one is. If Harry was in another school, they would've looked just as incompetent when you compare them with the greatest wizard ever. About year 1: they would have handled that troll, but three idiot students got to it first. About year 3, someone else will have to answer, as I do not remember the book very well, but hey: isn't the school allowed to be incompetent every once in a while? No one was hurt, after allVanguard wrote:Pretty much everything about Hogwarts is hilarious incompetant in both forms of HP. In year 1, they had a troll in their bathrooms. In year 2, they had a basilisk nearly murder several people (and a cat). In year 3, a runaway "murderer" torments the school for a while. In year 4, someone hacks the tournament and shoves Harry into it.
It just gets messier and messier.
Now, this is not to say the other schools don't have yearly drama and problems but holy shit. Hogwarts should have shut down several years ago.
The phrases are just the magic system in the books. Everyone uses them. Much like wands. Durmstrang students do not use staffs, by the way, because Krum does not and staffs are mentioned nowhere in the books. Haven't seen the movie, but I assume they just leant on them, to complement the "we're dressed for North Pole weather" feeling which the heavy clothes caused. As for the Nonverbal thing: it's difficult. Like calculus. Would you teach 10 or 12 year olds calculus?Vanguard wrote:But for some reason, they are kept isolated and ignorant to possibly more efficient forms of magic. They use wands, which Ron Weasly proves that can break easily. (The Russian school used Staffs, but that could have just been the introduction display). They use Latin-esque phrases an don't get taught Nonverbal commands until year 5-6, which I find a little inefficient.
That's really not very different from the way pretty much every group functions. Leaders disclose to followers only what they believe the followers should know or what followers have, through rebellion or strike or whatever, proved that they have the right to know: this is usually less than the leaders' knowledge.Vanguard wrote:The isolation keeps all forms of intelligence and culture from entering their grounds. To the teacher's credit, most of them seem to know what the hell is going on outside, they STILL choose to keep it hush-hush, despite the fact that it would help in the longrun.
Two words: black people. There's still racism today, and they are way less different from whites than Muggles from wizards. People are more stupid than you give them credit for.Vanguard wrote:Remember Hermione? From what I understand, she led a life semi-similarly to Harry, with two muggle/human parents. And with that, she was the top student every single year. Hell, even Harry wasn't that good, having relied on help and luck every step of the way. And he even DID get killed eventually, it just didn't take.
Due to this, I find it amazing that the wizards in this world can think so low of humans that they generally top them in every way. Wizard's racism towards non-magic users goes so deep, is they cannot recognize that humans have formed efficient ways for everything.
No one uses technology. It's against tradition. It might also be against some kind of unwritten wizard Geneva convention, because... imagine a wizard Apparating in your shelter while levitating a Tzar bomb and maybe you'll know what I mean. Also, ALL the bad guys get knocked out in the end. The good guys won, remember? Also also, some 150 or more fully trained and rather powerful wizards against... what? 50 fully trained and rather powerful wizards plus an undetermined number of CHILDREN? Yeah. Of course the children-side should win easily. Of course.Vanguard wrote:So much could have been solved for either side of the wizard war if they had just imbued some of their magic with some technology as well. But forsaking it, just makes Hogwarts incredibly weak. For those who read the seventh book, they get their shit FUCKED. UP. Where several important characters get knocked off and very little of the bad guys. And only luck takes them to victory, and the professors have to drag the useless students around all over the place.
They'd get themselves together anyway, and besides, the idea of the Slytherin house is NOT to put people who are homicidal maniacs together (I'm leaving the "potential" out because everyone is a potential everything). The idea is to put ambitious and unscrupulous people together. That failed in the books because the books tell of a strange time: a time where there is a BIG DARK WIZARD on the horizon. That tends to change stuff.Vanguard wrote:But the Slytherin house has a much darker and violent root to it, than just innocent "Let's have our team Hurricane beat team Tsunami at Dodgeball today!" Instead of remedying this, they actually PREFER to match all the potential homicidal maniacs on one side... and they still get surprised when they side with the BigBad at the end of the day. You morons.
rat4000 wrote:No one uses technology. It's against tradition. It might also be against some kind of unwritten wizard Geneva convention, because... imagine a wizard Apparating in your shelter while levitating a Tzar bomb and maybe you'll know what I mean. Also, ALL the bad guys get knocked out in the end. The good guys won, remember? Also also, some 150 or more fully trained and rather powerful wizards against... what? 50 fully trained and rather powerful wizards plus an undetermined number of CHILDREN? Yeah. Of course the children-side should win easily. Of course.Vanguard wrote:So much could have been solved for either side of the wizard war if they had just imbued some of their magic with some technology as well. But forsaking it, just makes Hogwarts incredibly weak. For those who read the seventh book, they get their shit FUCKED. UP. Where several important characters get knocked off and very little of the bad guys. And only luck takes them to victory, and the professors have to drag the useless students around all over the place.
I don't remember that. Examples? Also, Krum at least uses Crucio, in the one example I can remember of us hearing a spell cast by a non-English wizard.Rinsaikeru wrote:The other schools just had different regional methods in use for teaching/using magic. If you remember the Goblet of Fire during the Quidditch Word Cup--witches and wizards from different areas used different methods and had different ideas about magic. The latin words used by the British wizards are likely held over from the very latinate Victorian era that the British witches and wizards seem to favour.

Actually, we don't really know about that. While they certainly developed them, we can't even be sure that Fred and George actually make every single one of the products that they sell.Rinsaikeru wrote:produce all the goods sold in stores
One could indeed argue that prejudice runs deep throughout the wizarding world. Remember that Hermione is the only one who recognizes the plight of the house elves and seeks to do anything about it, and that from what little we see of wizarding history, there have been many long and violent problems with goblins and centaurs.Vanguard wrote:The isolation keeps all forms of intelligence and culture from entering their grounds. To the teacher's credit, most of them seem to know what the hell is going on outside, they STILL choose to keep it hush-hush, despite the fact that it would help in the longrun.
Remember Hermione? From what I understand, she led a life semi-similarly to Harry, with two muggle/human parents. And with that, she was the top student every single year. Hell, even Harry wasn't that good, having relied on help and luck every step of the way. And he even DID get killed eventually, it just didn't take.
Due to this, I find it amazing that the wizards in this world can think so low of humans that they generally top them in every way. Wizard's racism towards non-magic users goes so deep, is they cannot recognize that humans have formed efficient ways for everything.
rat4000 wrote:About years 2 and 4: they're not as good as Voldemort. Because no one is. If Harry was in another school, they would've looked just as incompetent when you compare them with the greatest wizard ever. About year 1: they would have handled that troll, but three idiot students got to it first. About year 3, someone else will have to answer, as I do not remember the book very well, but hey: isn't the school allowed to be incompetent every once in a while? No one was hurt, after allVanguard wrote:Pretty much everything about Hogwarts is hilarious incompetant in both forms of HP. In year 1, they had a troll in their bathrooms. In year 2, they had a basilisk nearly murder several people (and a cat). In year 3, a runaway "murderer" torments the school for a while. In year 4, someone hacks the tournament and shoves Harry into it.
It just gets messier and messier.
Now, this is not to say the other schools don't have yearly drama and problems but holy shit. Hogwarts should have shut down several years ago.![]()
Vanguard wrote:Remember the 4th book? You saw samples of two other magic schools. One russian school with warrior-like battlemages and a French one, with several calm females. Both have uniforms. Both have a style. Their leaders might be lunatics but the actual students show so much more competance than Hogwarts.
I forgot their school names, but I can recall the fact they sounded a lot more respectable than fucking "HOG. WARTS". Ugh.
Vanguard wrote:The students are hilariously incompetant. And I know the reason for this.
The whole series takes place in the 2000-2010 area, so you KNOW they're in the modern world.
But for some reason, they are kept isolated and ignorant to possibly more efficient forms of magic. They use wands, which Ron Weasly proves that can break easily. (The Russian school used Staffs, but that could have just been the introduction display). They use Latin-esque phrases an don't get taught Nonverbal commands until year 5-6, which I find a little inefficient.
PAstrychef wrote:Not to mention that those basic classes, like algebra and world history seem to missing from the curriculum too. It can't hurt anyone trying herbology to know some basic plant science, nor anyone who uses astronomy for any purpose to know some physics. I mean, even in the wizarding world objects follow the Newtonian laws for the most part. Magic allows you to bend some of those rules but you can't escape them altogether.
sje46 wrote:PAstrychef wrote:Not to mention that those basic classes, like algebra and world history seem to missing from the curriculum too. It can't hurt anyone trying herbology to know some basic plant science, nor anyone who uses astronomy for any purpose to know some physics. I mean, even in the wizarding world objects follow the Newtonian laws for the most part. Magic allows you to bend some of those rules but you can't escape them altogether.
I seem to recall Hermoine taking algebra in one of the earlier books (I only read the first four).
++?????++ Out of Cheese Error. Redo From Start.clockworkmonk wrote:The thing that always bothered me was the lack of a Magical computer.
PAstrychef wrote:Not to mention that those basic classes, like algebra and world history seem to missing from the curriculum too. It can't hurt anyone trying herbology to know some basic plant science, nor anyone who uses astronomy for any purpose to know some physics. I mean, even in the wizarding world objects follow the Newtonian laws for the most part. Magic allows you to bend some of those rules but you can't escape them altogether.
Nay, the word is arithmancy. Although that is apparently an actual Greek thing, the exact nature of the course is not discussed in the books. (Kind of unfortunate, really. I like to think it would have been quite different from numerology, which is icky, as you suggest.)PatrickRsGhost wrote:I think she actually took Numerology, which deals with how certain numbers affect a person's personality, health, wealth, and other astrology crap. The irony here is that while she dissed Divination, Numerology is a sort of divination.sje46 wrote:I seem to recall Hermoine taking algebra in one of the earlier books (I only read the first four).PAstrychef wrote:Not to mention that those basic classes, like algebra and world history seem to missing from the curriculum too. It can't hurt anyone trying herbology to know some basic plant science, nor anyone who uses astronomy for any purpose to know some physics. I mean, even in the wizarding world objects follow the Newtonian laws for the most part. Magic allows you to bend some of those rules but you can't escape them altogether.
Well, it's not mentioned in http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hogwarts_subjects .animeHrmIne wrote:but after she dropped some classes, she ended up taking Numerology for the rest of the years. At least, that's what I remember.
It seems like the Wizarding World is extremely resistant to change. Combined with their paranoia and ... bloodism? Caste-ism? And racist on top of that.. you pretty much end up with a culture operating under "If we didn't think of it, it's crap" mentality. They didn't think of using simple spells working together in a complex way to make a magical computer first, so computers are stupid and it's better to do it by hand or however the hell they do it.animeHrmIne wrote:Also, it wasn't technology in general that didn't work, it was specifically electronics. Thus why Harry's watch worked in the first books, but they couldn't "bug" Rita Skeeter. Which always brought something to mind for me: Why didn't muggleborns from the 70s onward bring things like typewriters to school? Or do things in pencil with sharpeners? That was the first thing I thought of when we got that piece of information, why weren't Hermione and Lily typing their papers, or at least writing them with erasable material? That's what I'd do -- buy an old typewriter and type my papers out, much easier.
SexyTalon wrote:It seems like the Wizarding World is extremely resistant to change. Combined with their paranoia and ... bloodism? Caste-ism? And racist on top of that.. you pretty much end up with a culture operating under "If we didn't think of it, it's crap" mentality. They didn't think of using simple spells working together in a complex way to make a magical computer first, so computers are stupid and it's better to do it by hand or however the hell they do it.

Sure, but the system itself still considers them to be lessers, so it's possible they never get the funding necessary to build magicomputers or whatever. And while they may not be raised from birth in the system, they do seem to spend their formative years in the system, which probably leaves them with incredible self-esteem problems and so on.clockworkmonk wrote:While true, it does not take into account the constant influx of people who were not raised in that system. There are plenty of Muggle-borns, some of which might be more willing to break the trend then those who were raised in it.SexyTalon wrote:It seems like the Wizarding World is extremely resistant to change. Combined with their paranoia and ... bloodism? Caste-ism? And racist on top of that.. you pretty much end up with a culture operating under "If we didn't think of it, it's crap" mentality. They didn't think of using simple spells working together in a complex way to make a magical computer first, so computers are stupid and it's better to do it by hand or however the hell they do it.
Of course he wouldn't. They hadn't even arrived at school yet, Harry wouldn't know how to cast a spell if his wand was animated and sentientIzawwlgood wrote:Because you know, naturally Harry wouldn't have thought of using a spell that repairs minor breaks on something like his glasses.
GhostWolfe wrote:Of course he wouldn't. They hadn't even arrived at school yet, Harry wouldn't know how to cast a spell if his wand was animated and sentientIzawwlgood wrote:Because you know, naturally Harry wouldn't have thought of using a spell that repairs minor breaks on something like his glasses.
Rinsaikeru wrote:He does passably well in his subjects and excels in Defence Against the Dark Arts and flying. He'd do better at potions without the constant goading from Snape. How good does he have to be at school exactly for him to be worthy of being a hero? Even then, a Hero story doesn't require that the hero be spectacular at everything--it's usually better when they aren't. Luck, a bit of skill and good friends are much better than a character who is just good at everything naturally.
GhostWolfe wrote:Of course he wouldn't. They hadn't even arrived at school yet, Harry wouldn't know how to cast a spell if his wand was animated and sentient
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