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Harry Potter: The Wizard Who Came in from the Cold

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James Murtagh
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Spoiler alert- Consider seeing the movie and reading the entire Harry Potter series before reading this Op Ed .
When we last left Harry Potter, Hogwart's cauldron boiled over. Tranquil old button-down school days were over, and Orwellian evil broke out. Harry and his friends took up against Big Brother to defend free thought.
Be aware: the newest movie "The Half Blood Prince," sharply departs from the book. It had to, as the book was a whopping 652 pages, densely packed, and could not be fully captured on screen. The book and movie are in fact two different universes, the movie offering but a small taste of the full Potter philosophy of good and evil- and the necessity needed to defeat evil. As Winston Churchill might say, to "Never give in. Never, never, never, never give in... except to convictions of honor."
The book is both more intense and more covert. Harry battles masters of deception, including double and triple agents. Lives are sacrificed as pawns for ultimate good. Deep philosophy echoes in the deceptive children's story.
John Le Carre' and Shakespeare are the real unseen ghosts in cold war Hogwarts. Like Potter, Hamlet featured basically a spy-versus-spy plot, with a deeply undercover prince who discovers through over-hearing and guile. Hamlet and Harry both are "the chosen ones," that rue they were ever born to set a kingdom right.
Harry and Hamlet covertly seek their opponent's weakness. They'd like a direct approach to take arms against a sea of troubles, but know direct action would breed disaster. Claudius and Voltemort both have almost unlimited resources. Both Harry and Hamlet must lie low, and let opponents think they are paralyzed by indecision, then boldly strike. They both fool even the reviewers of their books- even brilliant men through the ages mistake Hamlet as a dreamer, not a doer. Hamlet in fact achieved all his objectives by waiting- all were brought to justice, and Hamlet himself escaped into felicity, though not by his own hand, just as he wished.
Le Carre' brilliantly showed spies are best when not told their own mission. If the master deceives his spy, the spy is most effective. Who is the spy really working for? Really good double agents don't even know. Hamlet's divided double-agent consciousness was so complete he sometimes thought himself mad. But, when the wind blew from north to northeast, he knew a hawk from a handsaw. So complete the deception, we all continue to debate today exactly what Hamlet knew, and when did he know it. As JK Rowling writes: "Death is but crossing the world, as friends do the seas; they live in one another still."
Dumbledore, similar to Le Carre', must insert a double agent mole deep into Voldemort's command center. To make the deception complete, he can't even tell Harry his plan. Who is the Half Blood's prince's ultimate master? Does Snape work for good or evil?
Ingeniously, Dumbledore works out a startling plan: he orders Snape to kill Dumbledore! What better way to convince Voldemort! What a set up! Ten times better than the Trojan horse!
Harry has no idea the man he hates most, Snape, is actually Harry's best ally! Snape quickly takes over Hogwarts and becomes Voldermort's trusted agent. From there, Snape can help Harry unseen and unsuspected.
Whoa! Shades of Darth Vader revealing he is Luke's father! Luke kept miraculously escaping from Vader against impossible odds because his father is the man behind the curtain! Harry escapes from duels because Snape is the hidden mole protecting Harry!
Harry Potter meets the bad, the good, and the ugly, encountering philosophies of Hegel, Kant, John Stuart Mills, Nietsche. Dumbledore even drinks the Socratic Hemlock. "The Lightning-Struck Tower" comes right from a pack of tarot cards that might have been dealt to T.S. Elliot in the Wasteland. Insidiously, Rowling weaves in advanced philosophy, human freedom, religion, and end-of-life ethics. Did Dumbledore have the right to sacrifice his own life? Was he dying anyway and asking to go to felicity? Heavy stuff for young viewers. Even better, youngsters are discussing and debating these ideas with their friends, in a whole new domino effect. Rowling's dazzling spoon-full-of-sugar has helped the philosophical medicine go down. Who knows? Many of the youngsters may reach for Shakespeare next.
Rowling's spell over young movie goers is: "Distrust authority- all authority."
Harry Potter strikes a Churchillian stance and realizes:
Something slouches toward Hogwarts waiting to be born. Tune in to the final chapter.
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James J. Murtagh, Jr. is a doctor of pulmonary, critical care and sleep medicine, and the Medical Director of several sleep laboratories in Southern Ohio. Dr. Murtagh extensively writes on medical ethics. Dr. Murtagh is the founder of a new (more...)
 
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