alt_padma: (profile)
has a tonne of stuff on time travel.

Haruman took me yesterday as he had a day off from St Mungo's. Anyway, I found the section on time travel and it's got loads of books about why it's a bad idea. They mentioned your great-uncle Darby (or however many times great he was) a lot. There's something called the 1st Parkinsonian Principle of Time Travel. It's all about the limitation on how far back you can go. There's also a 2nd Parkinsonian Principle, about how you can't go back in ways that create paradoxical situations, like how he went back before he was born.

I guess before he made his trip people were still trying to see how far back one could go, and his first tries weren't even the furthest. (Some people in went back decades and got stuck there and had to send messages to their families and put ads in the Prophet to be placed twenty years in their own futures. Like, 'Stuck in 1949, love to the kids, come see me at Sunset Acres' and things like that.) But then he tried to go back a whole century like that, and BOOM. The explosion made the Ministry reconsider time as a restricted subject and put it firmly under the Department of Mysteries. And that's when all the regulations started. They eventually outlawed nearly anything to do with time research.

There's this one case, Ministry v Cooper, where Cooper was accused of selling unauthorised devices to send people back in time. Only he hadn't made them right and people didn't go back as far as they thought. So they were planning to go back, say, three hours and instead they went back two and a half, and appeared in the middle of their own baths or something. So they wanted Cooper held responsible. And there's another, Ministry v Whitby. In that one, Whitby was found guilty of sending people back when they caught him stealing, or whatever. And he had a turner concealed on him somehow, and the guards left him alone and he turned himself to a point when his cell wasn't locked and tried to escape! But they caught him on his way out because someone realised he was supposed to be in a meeting. Isn't that snitch?

Oh, and there's a book called Sands through the Hourglass which first I thought was sort of instructions on making time-travelling devices, but it's not. (I guess the DoM went about collecting all the information on time-travelling devices that it could get, so people can't make them whenever they please.) Anyway, this book it's really an historical novel about the very first time-turner. It's by Evangelista Nettle. I'm in the third chapter now and already I'm pretty certain Clive will get together with Marlena (I mean, it's rather obvious she's in love with him, anyway). There's not too much about the theory, but I'll bring it to the YPL, shall I, and you can read if it you like?
alt_padma: (Hm)
and it's sort of hard to think that it's been that long. It doesn't feel that long at all.

Our birthday is coming up next week, but now all I can think of is it'll be a month after. I guess it'll always feel like that, now. A little. My aunt says her grandfather died on her mum's birthday, and ever since her mum could never be one hundred percent happy about her birthday, because she had to think about her father, too.

Lav, I know what you mean about things changing. But I guess that's what things do. And it'll be all right, you'll see. Trust me, you don't know her well because she's not in your common room all the time, but Lovegood's not that much bother. No one pays her much mind in Ravenclaw, that's for certain.

The Model Wizengamot is really interesting, though. And what's really amazing is, I think they had planned that we'd be doing it basically on our own, you know, because of the quarantine. But since it's been lifted they told us that some real Interrogators are going to watch later this week and tell us what they thought of how we did the job. Yesterday was opening statements (each side gets to make a speech). Today we're hearing testimony from the witnesses - and the Interrogators get to try to poke holes in their stories or make them remember details that help prove guilt. The defenders also have time to try, but they don't have the same kind of latitude that the Interrogators have. I know that in the model, we're switching sides - I mean, there are two cases, so in the next case, the people being Interrogators will be the defenders - but I think it's much better to be an Interrogator than a defender no matter what the case is. It just seems like most people who face Wizengamot charges are guilty, anyway.

Though there are different kinds of cases, of course. This one's a pretty simple one.

It's based on the trial of a wizard named Stalk who was found guilty of imbe embezl embezzling a lot of gold from the Daily Prophet in the 1850's. And it was really clear that he did it, once he got caught.

But the case we're starting tomorrow is a little more complicated. It's about a witch who used to lure muggles to her cottage and then made them work for her. And when she was done, she used them for potions ingredients and things. And when she was caught by a bunch of muggles, they wanted to burn her, but she got away, but then the Aurors told her she had to stop because it was making all the muggles hunt for the rest of us. Well, obviously, that part's not a problem anymore. But then this all happened for real in 1690, so we've updated the case a little. Now she's stealing muggles from the camps, you see, and there's a part of the case where - well, I don't want to give it away. You'll have to come on Thursday and see.

Meanwhile, Ravenclaw Corner is mostly back. There aren't many fifth-years and the ones who do go there have been keeping themselves scarce this week, with OWLs. I guess Sandoval feels pretty good about her NEWTs, though, but she's probably just more relieved that it's over. Johns says she never wants to go through that again.

Oh, and Orion Sandoval says he's heard that they are allowing the Apparition instructors from the Ministry to come up next week, after the Wizengamot is over, to teach the sixth-years who are eligible for their tests. Troy says he reckons Sandoval's worried he'll splinch himself, but Dames thinks he's just excited.

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Padma Patil

September 2015

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