Chapter Eighty-Nine: Perspective

As Dumbledore announced the start of the feast, a sumptuous meal immediately appeared on the table.

The little wizards cheered and began to feast. At the age when they can eat, they are already hungry.

The food was eaten, and soon there was an effect that the whole group came to life, and the little wizards talked and laughed, and the atmosphere in the auditorium became warm and cheerful.

Kane was dumbfounded, reminding himself that the next time he was going to do something, he could consider preparing a delicious meal for people to set the mood.

As the atmosphere eased, the young wizards began to discuss Kane's performance.

The brilliant display of magic was amazing, not to mention the great gifts.

Well, for the little wizards, the power to leverage the world or something is a bit far away, and the gift is the point that makes people feel intimate.

Having your own magical star, this gimmick alone feels even better than having your own Patronus, and some young wizards can't wait to dive into it.

Not only the young wizards, but also the professors were equally curious.

Sybil Trelawney, for example, the calm and crazy professor of divination has been holding his head and staring at the scene as if he had been petrified, without blinking for a long time.

It was Professor Pomona Sprout next to her who pulled her out of her state of concentration.

After a few bites of food in an absent-minded manner, Sybil continued to observe the stars. She had determined that the star was not visible anywhere on Earth, and that it was a field in the process of forming.

Sybil is a scholar of astrology, and a few years ago she was one of those who was alarmed and seriously concerned.

She noticed the apparent moon in Kane's dome just now, drawing energy from the Death Star, and almost immediately associated it with the 'change of the moon'.

Sybil felt that it was time to talk to Dumbledore, she didn't know what to call a person like Kane, a child of the starry sky, a star field agent, in short, this was an existence that could connect to an unknown chaotic star field and draw power from it.

This concept deduces three main points:

Not constrained by the world's declining magic. This represents power and danger.

Star field connection is not only a good thing, the window is open, and the fresh air is pouring in, and at the same time, there may be poisonous insects. And the creatures that can come through this way, whether they are intelligent or not, are not easy to provoke. Even a single seed can cause ecological disasters (similar to rabbit disasters, carp disasters, and lobster disasters).

This chaotic star field is evolving towards regularization and order, and if it can cope with this process, it will be very helpful for the participants to build their own magic system.

If Kane knew this, he would probably sigh at the awesomeness of this Sybil Trelawney. By the way, I'm afraid it will also be reminiscent of the embarrassment of the original history line Sybil being forced to resign and leave school by Umbridge from the Ministry of Magic.

Some wizards are not good at fighting, but that doesn't mean they're not important or sharp. Kane believes that a very important reason for Umbridge's rectification of Sybil is that he is worried that he will reveal his past, and those dirty little secrets will be ruined once they are revealed.

Compared to Sybil, Snape was a different story.

As a genius Slytherin, Snape is extremely proud, but he has to admit now, not to mention that at Kane's age, even now, he is afraid that he is not as good as Kane in terms of magic.

Snape is a very practical person, and he is also the most scientifically minded professor, after all, he is proficient in potions, which is to establish projects, experiments, and summarize experience again and again, although the system is still a little unclear, focusing on application and despising the fundamental principles, but at least it is more materialistic, it is made, not imagined.

As a result, Snape was interested in the notion that Kane had finally said that the magical star was a star-like host star with functions to be developed, rather than delving into the meaning behind macroscopic concepts such as star fields and astrological phenomena.

He pondered that since it was a star, it could have planets, and it could build a solar system.

So, what are planets made of?

Through previous observations, Snape believed that Kane was following the path of the ancient elemental wizards.

It's not that this world doesn't know how to fire, water, and wind.

In ancient times, elemental magic was a glorious period in the history of magic. Even the four branches of Hogwarts represent the four elements, Gryffindor is fire, Slytherin is water, Ravenclaw is wind, and Hufflepuff is earth.

However, by the time the four founders founded Hogwarts, elemental magic had faded into a state-of-the-art gadget that lacked utility.

It has to be said that in this regard, Snape's cognition and Kane's are highly overlapping.

In his view, the history of the development of human civilization is, from a certain point of view, a process of constantly adapting to and transforming the environment.

The history of the development of magic by wizards is similar, except that mankind has established a system of natural sciences based on materialism. Wizards, on the other hand, have always been more idealistic, so in terms of transforming the environment, the performance is very average, and even less and less, only adaptation remains.

Adapt to the new situation where the free mana is declining and getting thinner.

Instead of using tall elemental magic, a wand casts spells, the result of adapting to the environment. This is very similar to the situation when the Eastern Qi Practitioner found that the aura of heaven and earth was gradually decreasing, and there was no way to cultivate and become an immortal.

From big fish and big meat, eating husai in the sea, to thrifting and eating, planning and arrangement. This is the inevitability of change, evolution, and even the general trend of the universe moving towards heat death.

From this point of view, the two remarkable achievements of Hogwarts are, firstly, the establishment of a system and continuous improvement, and a better inheritance (including a good academic research atmosphere). The second is the more complete introduction of the wand casting system that wizards still use today.

Of course, they were not the first to play like this, but they have completed the sorting, compilation, printing, guidance, education, and dissemination, and this merit is worthy of recognition.

Ten years of trees, 100 years of people. From the perspective of the wizarding world, education first is the reason why they can still exist to this day, otherwise it would have been scattered a long time ago.

Relying only on those so-called family inheritances that are not in the climate, and everything else is scattered, then the wizards will either be fused or die sideways, and there will be no other result.

Just like the mutants in the Marvel multiverse, there is basically no 'we', but only 'me', Professor X and Magneto both use their own ideas to establish the concept of 'we' and want to reach a basic social consensus.

It's a pity that there is no such perfect system, and it has been exposed. Powerful and huddled mortals are not allowed to ride on their heads, whether it is playing magic or playing with abilities.

Therefore, the strong mutants are better than Voldemort, but this race has all kinds of sorrows, while the wizards of this world can still be in a corner of peace, show off their superiority in some aspects, and play with petty bourgeoisie.

Kane was able to think of this because he saw the world from the perspective of a time-traveler, which was close to a high-dimensional perspective.

Snape naturally didn't have such a conceptual cognition, what he saw was that Kane had brought back elemental magic, and it seemed that he was frying cold rice, but they were not bad at frying it, and they had stirred up magical stars.

He also knew that the moon revealed in the whirlpool of thunder was probably the key. It is likely that Kane drew his magic from the moon.

This idea is not new. The earth is thin in magic, and the moon is still there, so why is the moon called the demonic moon by dark creatures? That is, if you can get magic from the moon, then someone can better get magic from there, which is at least theoretically in the past.

However, Snape knew that it was Kane's core secret, and that he had created or obtained an efficient way to draw energy from the moon, and would not share it with others, not to mention selfishness or not.

So Snape wasn't greedy, didn't think about what he had and didn't, and first thought about playing Kane's allowed.

Magical stars, ancient elemental magic, the combination of the two, he thought of using the power of the elements to build the planet's electrons.

Speaking of which, he is not good at this, but the four elements have various derivation elements, and the so-called life magic used by him to strengthen the potion is actually derived from the earth, fire, and water.

So he used his spiritual power to attract his own magic star, which was a bright zero-magnitude star, a star of the level of the North Star......