The Ultimate Harry Potter and Philosophy: Hogwarts for Muggles

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The Ultimate Harry Potter and Philosophy: Hogwarts for Muggles Page 30

by William Irwin;Gregory Bassham


  love potions and

  Life after Life (Moody)

  Life and Lies of Albus Dumbledore, The

  life-source view, of soul

  Locke, John

  Lockhart, Gilderoy

  choice and

  education and

  Pensieve and

  soul and

  logos

  Longbottom, Neville

  destiny and

  libertarianism and

  Pensieve and

  self-understanding and

  Lord of the Rings, The (Tolkien)

  love

  love potions and

  radical feminism and

  redemption and

  Lovegood, Luna

  Lucretius

  Lupin, Remus

  destiny and

  education and

  identity and

  libertarianism and

  love and redemption

  moral regeneration and

  patriotism and

  radical feminism and

  soul and

  truth in fiction and

  Malfoy, Draco

  libertarianism and

  love potions and

  self-understanding and

  transformation and

  Marauder’s Map

  Marge, Aunt

  masculinity

  materialism

  maximal inclusiveness principle

  Maxime, Madame

  McGonagall, Minerva

  destiny and

  education and

  identity and

  love and redemption

  radical feminism and

  meaning, transformation and

  memory

  aids (See also Pensieve)

  memory theory of personal identity

  transformation and

  mentors

  metaphysics

  Mill, John Stuart

  mind

  brain vs.

  extended mind theory

  mind-body distinction and identity

  See also Pensieve

  Ministry of Magic

  libertarianism and

  power and

  radical feminism and

  Miracles (Lewis)

  Moaning Myrtle

  “model school,”

  Moody, Alastor “Mad-Eye”

  education and

  identity and

  Pensieve and

  reality and

  transformation and

  Moody, Raymond

  morality

  education and

  patriotism and

  self-understanding and See also ethics; moral regeneration; virtue

  moral regeneration

  fantasy and

  integrity of personal identity and

  Order of the Phoenix and

  remorse and death

  Voldemort and

  Morris, Tom

  mortality

  accepting death and

  destiny and

  repentance and

  “motive-choice,”

  Munaker, Sue

  Nagini

  near-death experiences (NDEs)

  Nearly Headless Nick

  Nicomachean Ethics (Aristotle)

  nonoccurrent beliefs

  Nussbaum, Martha

  Occlumency

  occurrent beliefs

  Oedipus (Oedipus)

  open future view

  Otto (extended mind theory example)

  Padfoot. See also Black, Sirius

  Pangle, Thomas

  Parseltongue

  Pascal, Blaine

  patriotism

  communitarianism and

  cosmopolitanism and

  dangers of

  discrimination and

  division and divisiveness

  global conflict and

  Patronus

  Harry Potter and

  James Potter and

  Nymphadora Tonks and

  Pensieve

  extended mind theory and

  materialism vs. dualism

  occurrent vs. nonoccurrent beliefs

  types of memory and

  “people,” radical feminism and

  personal identity. See identity

  personal liberty. See also libertarianism

  perspective, self-understanding and

  Pettigrew, Peter

  identity and

  Pensieve and

  radical feminism and

  self-understanding and See also Wormtail

  phenomenalism

  philia

  philosopher-rulers

  philosophy

  connection to Harry Potter

  death and

  Pince, Madame

  Plantinga, Alvin

  Plato

  allegory of the cave

  on death

  education and

  love and redemption

  on philosophy

  power and

  virtue and

  politics

  libertarianism and

  patriotism and

  power and

  Polyjuice Potion

  Potter, Albus Severus

  Potter, Harry

  destiny and

  education and

  identity and

  libertarianism and

  love and redemption

  love potions and

  moral regeneration and

  mortality and

  patriotism and

  Pensieve and

  power and

  radical feminism and

  reality and

  self-understanding and

  soul and

  transformation and

  virtue and

  Potter, James

  love and redemption

  moral regeneration and

  mortality and

  Pensieve and

  soul and

  truth in fiction and

  Potter, Lily

  destiny and

  love and redemption

  love potions and

  moral regeneration and

  power and

  self-understanding and

  soul and

  truth in fiction and

  virtue and

  Potterwatch

  power

  rulers and

  temptation and

  predeterminism

  prejudgment, transformation and

  primary truths

  Prinzi, Travis

  prophecy

  fallible

  self-fulfilling

  types of

  Psychology: Briefer Course (James)

  purebloods

  libertarianism and

  patriotism and

  racism and

  Quidditch, radical feminism and

  Quirrell, Professor

  race

  civil rights and

  racism and See also purebloods

  radical feminism

  Harry Potter (series) as sexist vs. progressive

  liberal feminism vs.

  love and

  “rational animals,”

  rational choice

  rationalism, self-understanding and

  reader response, truth in fiction and

  reality

  argument from reason and

  metaphysics and

  moral regeneration and

  near-death experiences (NDEs) and

  perception of

  reason

  identity and

  reality and

  redemption

  choice and

  good vs. evil

  love potions and

  transformation and

  types of love and

  regret

  religion

  love and redemption

  moral regeneration and

  mortality and

  predeterminism and

  reality and

  remorse, death and

&
nbsp; Republic (Plato)

  Resurrection Stone

  Riddle, Tom

  moral regeneration and

  patriotism and

  Pensieve and

  power and

  soul and

  transformation and See also Voldemort

  Riddle, Tom, Sr.

  Ring of Gyges

  Rousseau, Jean-Jacques

  Rowling, J. K.

  on destiny

  on libertarianism

  on moral regeneration

  on Pensieve

  on power

  on reality

  on self-understanding

  on soul

  truth in fiction and

  Runcorn, Albert

  Sauron (The Lord of the Rings)

  Schoefer, Christine

  “school of virtue,”

  Scrimgeour, Rufus

  secondary truths

  “second self,”

  “second wave feminism,”

  Secrets of the Darkest Art

  Seers

  self

  identity and (See also identity)

  soul and

  self-examination

  self-fulfilling prophecy

  self-knowledge

  self-love

  self-reliance, libertarianism and

  self-sacrifice

  self-understanding

  ability and

  challenging oneself and

  choice and

  perspective and

  rationalism and

  self-examination and

  sentience

  sentimental conception, of soul

  “Seventh Letter” (Plato)

  sexism

  Shacklebolt, Kingsley

  Skeeter, Rita

  Slughorn, Horace

  destiny and

  love potions and

  Pensieve and

  soul and

  Slytherin, Salazar

  Slytherin House

  Harry Potter and

  love and redemption

  patriotism and

  racism and

  Smith, C. Jason

  Smith, Hepzibah

  Snape, Severus

  destiny and

  libertarianism and

  love potions and

  moral regeneration and

  Pensieve and

  power and

  radical feminism and

  self-understanding and

  transformation and

  virtue and

  Society for the Promotion of Elfish Welfare (S.P.E.W.)

  Socrates

  Sophists

  Sorcerer’s Stone

  Sorting Hat

  soul

  defeating death and

  moral regeneration and

  philosophical conceptions of

  self and

  sentimental conception of

  as surviving bodily death

  virtue and

  Sprout, Pomona

  Stevenson, Adlai

  Sword of Gryffindor

  Symposium (Plato)

  teachers, education and

  Thicknesse, Pius

  “Thirty,”

  Thomas, Dean

  Thrasymachus

  Tolkien, J. R. R.

  Tolstoy, Leo

  Tonks, Nymphadora

  “tradition,”

  transformation

  bias and

  identity and

  memory and meaning

  prejudgment and

  redemption and

  Trelawney, Sybill

  destiny and

  education and

  libertarianism and

  Triwizard Tournament

  trust

  destiny and

  love and redemption

  truth in fiction

  authorial intent and

  defined

  genre constraints and

  reader response and

  textual evidence and

  Umbridge, Dolores

  education and

  libertarianism and

  power and

  radical feminism and

  transformation and

  utilitarianism

  Vane, Romilda

  vice, patriotism and

  virtue

  common good vs. greater good

  fulfillment and

  justice and

  patriotism and

  power and See also ethics; morality

  Voldemort

  destiny and

  education and

  libertarianism and

  love and redemption

  love potions and

  moral regeneration and

  mortality and

  patriotism and

  Pensieve and

  power and

  radical feminism and

  self-understanding and

  soul and

  transformation and

  virtue and See also Riddle, Tom

  Waldron, Jeremy

  Watson, Emma. See also Granger, Hermione

  Weasley, Arthur

  identity and

  libertarianism and

  self-understanding and

  truth in fiction and

  “Weasley, Barny,”

 

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