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Why is JK Rowling considered 'bad at math'?


Why doesn't Hogwarts have more teachers?Why don't wizards rob muggle banks to become rich?Why are there no battle tactics among groups of wizards or witches?During the events of the Harry Potter series what is the total population of Wizards/Witches globally?How had the Potters 'thrice defied him'?What age did Dumbledore live to?Why did Snape become a teacher?Do Hogwarts Houses have quotas?Are Ron's Quidditch points wrong?How old is quidditch?Was J.K. Rowling ever incorrect/misleading in her interviews/answers?Does J.K. Rowling Favor Halloween as a Date of Death?What scares J.K. Rowling (her boggart)?Why did JK Rowling choose the name 'Hogwarts'?How did JK Rowling imagine the voices of her characters?Is this JK Rowling “pocketeded” story true?Did Rowling ever say why more isn't said about Minerva McGonagall?What is JK Rowling “bad” at?JK Rowling and women's situation in magical societyDid J.K. Rowling name the 'movie only' spells?













100















An often repeated meme about Harry Potter is that JK Rowling is 'bad at math'.



I see this all over this site and the saying is probably used elsewhere.



The following is said, in the comments for the selected answer for "How had the Potters 'thrice defied him'?"




Hasn't it been mentioned before that JKR has said she is bad with
math? And here she says she counts. Almost scary.




And apparently JK Rowling agrees in another question "What is JK Rowling “bad” at?"




JKR: In the world? Oh, Emerson, my maths is so bad.




Are there any particular examples that drive this meme?



Why is JK Rowling considered so 'bad at math'?










share|improve this question




















  • 28





    Soooooooo many examples. At least a gazillion.

    – Valorum
    Oct 19 '16 at 0:00






  • 13





    She isn't considered bad, she has admitted herself that she is.....

    – Skooba
    Oct 19 '16 at 0:49






  • 2





    Even though it might have been stated by JKR herself, I suspect that the reason for these discrepancies is "does not care" rather than "can't count".

    – Edheldil
    Oct 19 '16 at 9:34






  • 6





    Perhaps that she never learnt "math". (In the U.K. it's "maths"...)

    – wizzwizz4
    Oct 20 '16 at 19:45
















100















An often repeated meme about Harry Potter is that JK Rowling is 'bad at math'.



I see this all over this site and the saying is probably used elsewhere.



The following is said, in the comments for the selected answer for "How had the Potters 'thrice defied him'?"




Hasn't it been mentioned before that JKR has said she is bad with
math? And here she says she counts. Almost scary.




And apparently JK Rowling agrees in another question "What is JK Rowling “bad” at?"




JKR: In the world? Oh, Emerson, my maths is so bad.




Are there any particular examples that drive this meme?



Why is JK Rowling considered so 'bad at math'?










share|improve this question




















  • 28





    Soooooooo many examples. At least a gazillion.

    – Valorum
    Oct 19 '16 at 0:00






  • 13





    She isn't considered bad, she has admitted herself that she is.....

    – Skooba
    Oct 19 '16 at 0:49






  • 2





    Even though it might have been stated by JKR herself, I suspect that the reason for these discrepancies is "does not care" rather than "can't count".

    – Edheldil
    Oct 19 '16 at 9:34






  • 6





    Perhaps that she never learnt "math". (In the U.K. it's "maths"...)

    – wizzwizz4
    Oct 20 '16 at 19:45














100












100








100


10






An often repeated meme about Harry Potter is that JK Rowling is 'bad at math'.



I see this all over this site and the saying is probably used elsewhere.



The following is said, in the comments for the selected answer for "How had the Potters 'thrice defied him'?"




Hasn't it been mentioned before that JKR has said she is bad with
math? And here she says she counts. Almost scary.




And apparently JK Rowling agrees in another question "What is JK Rowling “bad” at?"




JKR: In the world? Oh, Emerson, my maths is so bad.




Are there any particular examples that drive this meme?



Why is JK Rowling considered so 'bad at math'?










share|improve this question
















An often repeated meme about Harry Potter is that JK Rowling is 'bad at math'.



I see this all over this site and the saying is probably used elsewhere.



The following is said, in the comments for the selected answer for "How had the Potters 'thrice defied him'?"




Hasn't it been mentioned before that JKR has said she is bad with
math? And here she says she counts. Almost scary.




And apparently JK Rowling agrees in another question "What is JK Rowling “bad” at?"




JKR: In the world? Oh, Emerson, my maths is so bad.




Are there any particular examples that drive this meme?



Why is JK Rowling considered so 'bad at math'?







jk-rowling harry-potter






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Apr 6 '18 at 21:58









Rand al'Thor

98.1k44465654




98.1k44465654










asked Oct 18 '16 at 23:48









Mark RogersMark Rogers

15.1k1389142




15.1k1389142








  • 28





    Soooooooo many examples. At least a gazillion.

    – Valorum
    Oct 19 '16 at 0:00






  • 13





    She isn't considered bad, she has admitted herself that she is.....

    – Skooba
    Oct 19 '16 at 0:49






  • 2





    Even though it might have been stated by JKR herself, I suspect that the reason for these discrepancies is "does not care" rather than "can't count".

    – Edheldil
    Oct 19 '16 at 9:34






  • 6





    Perhaps that she never learnt "math". (In the U.K. it's "maths"...)

    – wizzwizz4
    Oct 20 '16 at 19:45














  • 28





    Soooooooo many examples. At least a gazillion.

    – Valorum
    Oct 19 '16 at 0:00






  • 13





    She isn't considered bad, she has admitted herself that she is.....

    – Skooba
    Oct 19 '16 at 0:49






  • 2





    Even though it might have been stated by JKR herself, I suspect that the reason for these discrepancies is "does not care" rather than "can't count".

    – Edheldil
    Oct 19 '16 at 9:34






  • 6





    Perhaps that she never learnt "math". (In the U.K. it's "maths"...)

    – wizzwizz4
    Oct 20 '16 at 19:45








28




28





Soooooooo many examples. At least a gazillion.

– Valorum
Oct 19 '16 at 0:00





Soooooooo many examples. At least a gazillion.

– Valorum
Oct 19 '16 at 0:00




13




13





She isn't considered bad, she has admitted herself that she is.....

– Skooba
Oct 19 '16 at 0:49





She isn't considered bad, she has admitted herself that she is.....

– Skooba
Oct 19 '16 at 0:49




2




2





Even though it might have been stated by JKR herself, I suspect that the reason for these discrepancies is "does not care" rather than "can't count".

– Edheldil
Oct 19 '16 at 9:34





Even though it might have been stated by JKR herself, I suspect that the reason for these discrepancies is "does not care" rather than "can't count".

– Edheldil
Oct 19 '16 at 9:34




6




6





Perhaps that she never learnt "math". (In the U.K. it's "maths"...)

– wizzwizz4
Oct 20 '16 at 19:45





Perhaps that she never learnt "math". (In the U.K. it's "maths"...)

– wizzwizz4
Oct 20 '16 at 19:45










2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes


















180














Dates



From alexwlchan's excellent answer here (emphasis mine):




I know that Harry Potter Wikia isn’t usually considered canon, but they have a list of dating contradictions which looks fairly accurate. To me, most of this list can be written off as JK Rowling's dodgy maths, but I thought I'd pick on one example.



For example, in Goblet of Fire, we have Friday the 30th of October and Tuesday the 22nd of November. If you look at a calendar, you see that 22 Nov falls 23 days after 30 Oct, so the 22nd is a Sunday in the Gregorian calendar. There are many possibilities:




  1. Whoops, JK Rowling messed up.

  2. Their weekdays occur in a different order to ours.

  3. The magical calendar puts extra days at the end of October.

  4. There are some "glue" days between months to make up the difference.

  5. Unclear as to whether to start months from the 0th or the 1st day, they compromised and count November from the (-1)st.

  6. At some point, several days were dropped,1 but nobody thought this was remarkable or unusual.


I think the only plausible explanation is (1).




More details from that HP Wikia page on dating contradictions (emphasis mine):




Often when dates are given, they are given with a day of the week that does not match with that date as it in actual history. One such example occurs in Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban when Sybill Trelawney refers to 16 October as Friday, although 16 October 1993 was a Saturday. This is usually explained as artistic licence on the author's part.



There are also contradictions within the books in this area. For example, in Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire, both 1 September and 2 September are given as Mondays and, in Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban, Buckbeak's trial is set on 20 April, but careful parsing of the text reveals that it could have happened no later than February.




Also, if an anachronism counts as a dating error, then we have How could Dudley have wrecked his PlayStation if the PlayStation didn't exist yet?:




Harry was born in 1980. Therefore, the fourth book should be set in 1994. Yet, Harry mentions in his letter to Sirius that Dudley chucked his new PlayStation out of the window. The only problem is that the PlayStation wasn't on the market in Britain at that time.




Population statistics



From Slytherincess's excellent answer here:




I think we have to take the number of students at Hogwarts with a grain of salt. J.K. Rowling has discrepancies in her numbers, and she admits she is "horrible at maths," but at one point it was put forth that there are approximately 1000 students at Hogwarts, which would break down to approximately 250 students per house. There's a short article on how many students there are at Hogwarts here. The number of students in each house does indeed seem evenly distributed.




However, the answers to During the events of the Harry Potter series what is the total population of Wizards/Witches globally? contradict both this and each other. In particular, one of them mentions two very clearly contradictory statements from JKR:




Also, J. K. Rowling has stated that she imagines the wizarding population of the U.K. to be around 3,000. This estimate, although seemingly small, is understandable; a larger population would be far harder to hide from Muggles. However, she also stated that the number of students attending Hogwarts was around 1,000, which seems inconsistent with the population estimate.




Here are the words of JKR herself in the famous "Oh, Emerson, my maths is so bad" interview:




I sat down and I created 40 kids who enter Harry's year. [...] I never consciously thought, “That's it, that' s all the people in his year,” but that's kind of how it's worked out. Then I've been asked a few times how many people and because numbers are not my strong point, one part of my brain knew 40, and another part of my brain said, “Oh, about 600 sounds right.” Then people started working it out and saying, "Where are the other kids sleeping?" [...] But if you assume that all of the wizarding children are being sent to Hogwarts, then that's very few wizard-to-Muggle population, isn’t it? There will be the odd kid whose parents don't want them to go to Hogwarts, but 600 out of the whole of Britain is tiny.



Let's say three thousand [in Britain], actually, thinking about it, and then think of all the magical creatures, some of which appear human. [...] That's going to bump you up a bit as well, so it's a more sizable, total magical community that needs hiding, concealing, but don't hold me to these figures, because that's not how I think.




The problems with, and contradictions between, these figures have been much more extensively discussed in Shisa's excellent answer to Why is the intake of students for Hogwarts so small compared to the number of witches and wizards in Britain?. (As an amusing side-note, after the above-quoted paragraphs, the subject was quickly changed to lovey-dovey stuff, on which JKR was much happier to expound.)



Miscellaneous





  • How could Hermione have gotten more OWLs than classes? Apparently JKR originally wrote Hermione as having taken twelve OWLs, even though she was only taking ten classes from her fourth year onwards.


  • What age did Dumbledore live to? Slytherincess's answer here highlights contradictions between different JKR statements on Dumbledore's age.


  • Why doesn't Hogwarts have more teachers? The number of teachers and students at Hogwarts doesn't really work out to give every teacher a realistic workload. (Admittedly JKR is far from alone among authors of kids' school novels in making this sort of story-simplifying 'error'.)


  • The Weasleys' ages. (This link was actually mentioned by alexwlchan in the first answer quoted above, but I thought it was worth including as its own example.) JKR once messed up the numbers for the age difference between the Weasley boys, specifically Charlie and Percy.





Hat tip to DVK on meta and Valorum in a comment and alexwlchan in an answer for pointing me in the direction of some of these maths errors.




share|improve this answer





















  • 36





    @Au101 Oh dear lord, I'm not sure I realised what I was letting myself in for. Being a mathematician myself, I get particularly irritated by these kinds of mistakes. It's going to be a long and depressing slog ...

    – Rand al'Thor
    Oct 19 '16 at 0:52






  • 5





    I wish it was possible to star answers. The question is pretty innocuous, but this answer deserves way more than just a simple upvote. Fantastic work.

    – Plutor
    Oct 19 '16 at 12:52






  • 14





    @Jim August 15, 2015 to August 15, 2016 is 366 days. :)

    – 8bittree
    Oct 19 '16 at 14:06






  • 10





    I think people should remember that while today it's very easy to work out the time between two dates using a computer, whether by looking up how to do it, or just asking some website, or whatever, in the mid 1990s even people that had the internet didn't immediately think 'I'll look it up on the internet' in response to every thought they might have. She'd have probably had to go to the library to find old calendars. It just wasn't important enough.

    – Miles Rout
    Oct 19 '16 at 23:26






  • 10





    @Plutor You can't star answers, but you can award bounties to them ;-)

    – Rand al'Thor
    Oct 20 '16 at 0:11



















0














SHES NOT ACTUALLY BAD AT MATH



The multiverse is a hypothetical group of multiple universes including the universe in which we live. Together, these universes comprise everything that exists: the entirety of space, time, matter, energy, and the physical laws and constants that describe them. The different universes within the multiverse are called "parallel universes", "other universes", or "alternate universes".
Multiple universes have been hypothesized in cosmology, physics, astronomy, religion, philosophy, transpersonal psychology, and literature, particularly in science fiction and fantasy. In these contexts, parallel universes are also called "alternate universes", "quantum universes", "interpenetrating dimensions", "parallel dimensions", "parallel worlds", "parallel realities", "quantum realities", "alternate realities", "alternate timelines", "alternate dimensions" and "dimensional planes".



The physics community has debated the various multiverse theories over time. Prominent physicists are divided about whether any other universes exist outside of our own.



Some physicists say the multiverse is not a legitimate topic of scientific inquiry. Concerns have been raised about whether attempts to exempt the multiverse from experimental verification could erode public confidence in science and ultimately damage the study of fundamental physics. Some have argued that the multiverse is a philosophical rather than a scientific hypothesis because it cannot be empirically falsified. The ability to disprove a theory by means of scientific experiment has always been part of the accepted scientific method. Paul Steinhardt has famously argued that no experiment can rule out a theory if the theory provides for all possible outcomes.



In 2007, Nobel laureate Steven Weinberg suggested that if the multiverse existed, "the hope of finding a rational explanation for the precise values of quark masses and other constants of the standard model that we observe in our Big Bang is doomed, for their values would be an accident of the particular part of the multiverse in which we live.





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    2 Answers
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    2 Answers
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    180














    Dates



    From alexwlchan's excellent answer here (emphasis mine):




    I know that Harry Potter Wikia isn’t usually considered canon, but they have a list of dating contradictions which looks fairly accurate. To me, most of this list can be written off as JK Rowling's dodgy maths, but I thought I'd pick on one example.



    For example, in Goblet of Fire, we have Friday the 30th of October and Tuesday the 22nd of November. If you look at a calendar, you see that 22 Nov falls 23 days after 30 Oct, so the 22nd is a Sunday in the Gregorian calendar. There are many possibilities:




    1. Whoops, JK Rowling messed up.

    2. Their weekdays occur in a different order to ours.

    3. The magical calendar puts extra days at the end of October.

    4. There are some "glue" days between months to make up the difference.

    5. Unclear as to whether to start months from the 0th or the 1st day, they compromised and count November from the (-1)st.

    6. At some point, several days were dropped,1 but nobody thought this was remarkable or unusual.


    I think the only plausible explanation is (1).




    More details from that HP Wikia page on dating contradictions (emphasis mine):




    Often when dates are given, they are given with a day of the week that does not match with that date as it in actual history. One such example occurs in Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban when Sybill Trelawney refers to 16 October as Friday, although 16 October 1993 was a Saturday. This is usually explained as artistic licence on the author's part.



    There are also contradictions within the books in this area. For example, in Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire, both 1 September and 2 September are given as Mondays and, in Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban, Buckbeak's trial is set on 20 April, but careful parsing of the text reveals that it could have happened no later than February.




    Also, if an anachronism counts as a dating error, then we have How could Dudley have wrecked his PlayStation if the PlayStation didn't exist yet?:




    Harry was born in 1980. Therefore, the fourth book should be set in 1994. Yet, Harry mentions in his letter to Sirius that Dudley chucked his new PlayStation out of the window. The only problem is that the PlayStation wasn't on the market in Britain at that time.




    Population statistics



    From Slytherincess's excellent answer here:




    I think we have to take the number of students at Hogwarts with a grain of salt. J.K. Rowling has discrepancies in her numbers, and she admits she is "horrible at maths," but at one point it was put forth that there are approximately 1000 students at Hogwarts, which would break down to approximately 250 students per house. There's a short article on how many students there are at Hogwarts here. The number of students in each house does indeed seem evenly distributed.




    However, the answers to During the events of the Harry Potter series what is the total population of Wizards/Witches globally? contradict both this and each other. In particular, one of them mentions two very clearly contradictory statements from JKR:




    Also, J. K. Rowling has stated that she imagines the wizarding population of the U.K. to be around 3,000. This estimate, although seemingly small, is understandable; a larger population would be far harder to hide from Muggles. However, she also stated that the number of students attending Hogwarts was around 1,000, which seems inconsistent with the population estimate.




    Here are the words of JKR herself in the famous "Oh, Emerson, my maths is so bad" interview:




    I sat down and I created 40 kids who enter Harry's year. [...] I never consciously thought, “That's it, that' s all the people in his year,” but that's kind of how it's worked out. Then I've been asked a few times how many people and because numbers are not my strong point, one part of my brain knew 40, and another part of my brain said, “Oh, about 600 sounds right.” Then people started working it out and saying, "Where are the other kids sleeping?" [...] But if you assume that all of the wizarding children are being sent to Hogwarts, then that's very few wizard-to-Muggle population, isn’t it? There will be the odd kid whose parents don't want them to go to Hogwarts, but 600 out of the whole of Britain is tiny.



    Let's say three thousand [in Britain], actually, thinking about it, and then think of all the magical creatures, some of which appear human. [...] That's going to bump you up a bit as well, so it's a more sizable, total magical community that needs hiding, concealing, but don't hold me to these figures, because that's not how I think.




    The problems with, and contradictions between, these figures have been much more extensively discussed in Shisa's excellent answer to Why is the intake of students for Hogwarts so small compared to the number of witches and wizards in Britain?. (As an amusing side-note, after the above-quoted paragraphs, the subject was quickly changed to lovey-dovey stuff, on which JKR was much happier to expound.)



    Miscellaneous





    • How could Hermione have gotten more OWLs than classes? Apparently JKR originally wrote Hermione as having taken twelve OWLs, even though she was only taking ten classes from her fourth year onwards.


    • What age did Dumbledore live to? Slytherincess's answer here highlights contradictions between different JKR statements on Dumbledore's age.


    • Why doesn't Hogwarts have more teachers? The number of teachers and students at Hogwarts doesn't really work out to give every teacher a realistic workload. (Admittedly JKR is far from alone among authors of kids' school novels in making this sort of story-simplifying 'error'.)


    • The Weasleys' ages. (This link was actually mentioned by alexwlchan in the first answer quoted above, but I thought it was worth including as its own example.) JKR once messed up the numbers for the age difference between the Weasley boys, specifically Charlie and Percy.





    Hat tip to DVK on meta and Valorum in a comment and alexwlchan in an answer for pointing me in the direction of some of these maths errors.




    share|improve this answer





















    • 36





      @Au101 Oh dear lord, I'm not sure I realised what I was letting myself in for. Being a mathematician myself, I get particularly irritated by these kinds of mistakes. It's going to be a long and depressing slog ...

      – Rand al'Thor
      Oct 19 '16 at 0:52






    • 5





      I wish it was possible to star answers. The question is pretty innocuous, but this answer deserves way more than just a simple upvote. Fantastic work.

      – Plutor
      Oct 19 '16 at 12:52






    • 14





      @Jim August 15, 2015 to August 15, 2016 is 366 days. :)

      – 8bittree
      Oct 19 '16 at 14:06






    • 10





      I think people should remember that while today it's very easy to work out the time between two dates using a computer, whether by looking up how to do it, or just asking some website, or whatever, in the mid 1990s even people that had the internet didn't immediately think 'I'll look it up on the internet' in response to every thought they might have. She'd have probably had to go to the library to find old calendars. It just wasn't important enough.

      – Miles Rout
      Oct 19 '16 at 23:26






    • 10





      @Plutor You can't star answers, but you can award bounties to them ;-)

      – Rand al'Thor
      Oct 20 '16 at 0:11
















    180














    Dates



    From alexwlchan's excellent answer here (emphasis mine):




    I know that Harry Potter Wikia isn’t usually considered canon, but they have a list of dating contradictions which looks fairly accurate. To me, most of this list can be written off as JK Rowling's dodgy maths, but I thought I'd pick on one example.



    For example, in Goblet of Fire, we have Friday the 30th of October and Tuesday the 22nd of November. If you look at a calendar, you see that 22 Nov falls 23 days after 30 Oct, so the 22nd is a Sunday in the Gregorian calendar. There are many possibilities:




    1. Whoops, JK Rowling messed up.

    2. Their weekdays occur in a different order to ours.

    3. The magical calendar puts extra days at the end of October.

    4. There are some "glue" days between months to make up the difference.

    5. Unclear as to whether to start months from the 0th or the 1st day, they compromised and count November from the (-1)st.

    6. At some point, several days were dropped,1 but nobody thought this was remarkable or unusual.


    I think the only plausible explanation is (1).




    More details from that HP Wikia page on dating contradictions (emphasis mine):




    Often when dates are given, they are given with a day of the week that does not match with that date as it in actual history. One such example occurs in Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban when Sybill Trelawney refers to 16 October as Friday, although 16 October 1993 was a Saturday. This is usually explained as artistic licence on the author's part.



    There are also contradictions within the books in this area. For example, in Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire, both 1 September and 2 September are given as Mondays and, in Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban, Buckbeak's trial is set on 20 April, but careful parsing of the text reveals that it could have happened no later than February.




    Also, if an anachronism counts as a dating error, then we have How could Dudley have wrecked his PlayStation if the PlayStation didn't exist yet?:




    Harry was born in 1980. Therefore, the fourth book should be set in 1994. Yet, Harry mentions in his letter to Sirius that Dudley chucked his new PlayStation out of the window. The only problem is that the PlayStation wasn't on the market in Britain at that time.




    Population statistics



    From Slytherincess's excellent answer here:




    I think we have to take the number of students at Hogwarts with a grain of salt. J.K. Rowling has discrepancies in her numbers, and she admits she is "horrible at maths," but at one point it was put forth that there are approximately 1000 students at Hogwarts, which would break down to approximately 250 students per house. There's a short article on how many students there are at Hogwarts here. The number of students in each house does indeed seem evenly distributed.




    However, the answers to During the events of the Harry Potter series what is the total population of Wizards/Witches globally? contradict both this and each other. In particular, one of them mentions two very clearly contradictory statements from JKR:




    Also, J. K. Rowling has stated that she imagines the wizarding population of the U.K. to be around 3,000. This estimate, although seemingly small, is understandable; a larger population would be far harder to hide from Muggles. However, she also stated that the number of students attending Hogwarts was around 1,000, which seems inconsistent with the population estimate.




    Here are the words of JKR herself in the famous "Oh, Emerson, my maths is so bad" interview:




    I sat down and I created 40 kids who enter Harry's year. [...] I never consciously thought, “That's it, that' s all the people in his year,” but that's kind of how it's worked out. Then I've been asked a few times how many people and because numbers are not my strong point, one part of my brain knew 40, and another part of my brain said, “Oh, about 600 sounds right.” Then people started working it out and saying, "Where are the other kids sleeping?" [...] But if you assume that all of the wizarding children are being sent to Hogwarts, then that's very few wizard-to-Muggle population, isn’t it? There will be the odd kid whose parents don't want them to go to Hogwarts, but 600 out of the whole of Britain is tiny.



    Let's say three thousand [in Britain], actually, thinking about it, and then think of all the magical creatures, some of which appear human. [...] That's going to bump you up a bit as well, so it's a more sizable, total magical community that needs hiding, concealing, but don't hold me to these figures, because that's not how I think.




    The problems with, and contradictions between, these figures have been much more extensively discussed in Shisa's excellent answer to Why is the intake of students for Hogwarts so small compared to the number of witches and wizards in Britain?. (As an amusing side-note, after the above-quoted paragraphs, the subject was quickly changed to lovey-dovey stuff, on which JKR was much happier to expound.)



    Miscellaneous





    • How could Hermione have gotten more OWLs than classes? Apparently JKR originally wrote Hermione as having taken twelve OWLs, even though she was only taking ten classes from her fourth year onwards.


    • What age did Dumbledore live to? Slytherincess's answer here highlights contradictions between different JKR statements on Dumbledore's age.


    • Why doesn't Hogwarts have more teachers? The number of teachers and students at Hogwarts doesn't really work out to give every teacher a realistic workload. (Admittedly JKR is far from alone among authors of kids' school novels in making this sort of story-simplifying 'error'.)


    • The Weasleys' ages. (This link was actually mentioned by alexwlchan in the first answer quoted above, but I thought it was worth including as its own example.) JKR once messed up the numbers for the age difference between the Weasley boys, specifically Charlie and Percy.





    Hat tip to DVK on meta and Valorum in a comment and alexwlchan in an answer for pointing me in the direction of some of these maths errors.




    share|improve this answer





















    • 36





      @Au101 Oh dear lord, I'm not sure I realised what I was letting myself in for. Being a mathematician myself, I get particularly irritated by these kinds of mistakes. It's going to be a long and depressing slog ...

      – Rand al'Thor
      Oct 19 '16 at 0:52






    • 5





      I wish it was possible to star answers. The question is pretty innocuous, but this answer deserves way more than just a simple upvote. Fantastic work.

      – Plutor
      Oct 19 '16 at 12:52






    • 14





      @Jim August 15, 2015 to August 15, 2016 is 366 days. :)

      – 8bittree
      Oct 19 '16 at 14:06






    • 10





      I think people should remember that while today it's very easy to work out the time between two dates using a computer, whether by looking up how to do it, or just asking some website, or whatever, in the mid 1990s even people that had the internet didn't immediately think 'I'll look it up on the internet' in response to every thought they might have. She'd have probably had to go to the library to find old calendars. It just wasn't important enough.

      – Miles Rout
      Oct 19 '16 at 23:26






    • 10





      @Plutor You can't star answers, but you can award bounties to them ;-)

      – Rand al'Thor
      Oct 20 '16 at 0:11














    180












    180








    180







    Dates



    From alexwlchan's excellent answer here (emphasis mine):




    I know that Harry Potter Wikia isn’t usually considered canon, but they have a list of dating contradictions which looks fairly accurate. To me, most of this list can be written off as JK Rowling's dodgy maths, but I thought I'd pick on one example.



    For example, in Goblet of Fire, we have Friday the 30th of October and Tuesday the 22nd of November. If you look at a calendar, you see that 22 Nov falls 23 days after 30 Oct, so the 22nd is a Sunday in the Gregorian calendar. There are many possibilities:




    1. Whoops, JK Rowling messed up.

    2. Their weekdays occur in a different order to ours.

    3. The magical calendar puts extra days at the end of October.

    4. There are some "glue" days between months to make up the difference.

    5. Unclear as to whether to start months from the 0th or the 1st day, they compromised and count November from the (-1)st.

    6. At some point, several days were dropped,1 but nobody thought this was remarkable or unusual.


    I think the only plausible explanation is (1).




    More details from that HP Wikia page on dating contradictions (emphasis mine):




    Often when dates are given, they are given with a day of the week that does not match with that date as it in actual history. One such example occurs in Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban when Sybill Trelawney refers to 16 October as Friday, although 16 October 1993 was a Saturday. This is usually explained as artistic licence on the author's part.



    There are also contradictions within the books in this area. For example, in Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire, both 1 September and 2 September are given as Mondays and, in Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban, Buckbeak's trial is set on 20 April, but careful parsing of the text reveals that it could have happened no later than February.




    Also, if an anachronism counts as a dating error, then we have How could Dudley have wrecked his PlayStation if the PlayStation didn't exist yet?:




    Harry was born in 1980. Therefore, the fourth book should be set in 1994. Yet, Harry mentions in his letter to Sirius that Dudley chucked his new PlayStation out of the window. The only problem is that the PlayStation wasn't on the market in Britain at that time.




    Population statistics



    From Slytherincess's excellent answer here:




    I think we have to take the number of students at Hogwarts with a grain of salt. J.K. Rowling has discrepancies in her numbers, and she admits she is "horrible at maths," but at one point it was put forth that there are approximately 1000 students at Hogwarts, which would break down to approximately 250 students per house. There's a short article on how many students there are at Hogwarts here. The number of students in each house does indeed seem evenly distributed.




    However, the answers to During the events of the Harry Potter series what is the total population of Wizards/Witches globally? contradict both this and each other. In particular, one of them mentions two very clearly contradictory statements from JKR:




    Also, J. K. Rowling has stated that she imagines the wizarding population of the U.K. to be around 3,000. This estimate, although seemingly small, is understandable; a larger population would be far harder to hide from Muggles. However, she also stated that the number of students attending Hogwarts was around 1,000, which seems inconsistent with the population estimate.




    Here are the words of JKR herself in the famous "Oh, Emerson, my maths is so bad" interview:




    I sat down and I created 40 kids who enter Harry's year. [...] I never consciously thought, “That's it, that' s all the people in his year,” but that's kind of how it's worked out. Then I've been asked a few times how many people and because numbers are not my strong point, one part of my brain knew 40, and another part of my brain said, “Oh, about 600 sounds right.” Then people started working it out and saying, "Where are the other kids sleeping?" [...] But if you assume that all of the wizarding children are being sent to Hogwarts, then that's very few wizard-to-Muggle population, isn’t it? There will be the odd kid whose parents don't want them to go to Hogwarts, but 600 out of the whole of Britain is tiny.



    Let's say three thousand [in Britain], actually, thinking about it, and then think of all the magical creatures, some of which appear human. [...] That's going to bump you up a bit as well, so it's a more sizable, total magical community that needs hiding, concealing, but don't hold me to these figures, because that's not how I think.




    The problems with, and contradictions between, these figures have been much more extensively discussed in Shisa's excellent answer to Why is the intake of students for Hogwarts so small compared to the number of witches and wizards in Britain?. (As an amusing side-note, after the above-quoted paragraphs, the subject was quickly changed to lovey-dovey stuff, on which JKR was much happier to expound.)



    Miscellaneous





    • How could Hermione have gotten more OWLs than classes? Apparently JKR originally wrote Hermione as having taken twelve OWLs, even though she was only taking ten classes from her fourth year onwards.


    • What age did Dumbledore live to? Slytherincess's answer here highlights contradictions between different JKR statements on Dumbledore's age.


    • Why doesn't Hogwarts have more teachers? The number of teachers and students at Hogwarts doesn't really work out to give every teacher a realistic workload. (Admittedly JKR is far from alone among authors of kids' school novels in making this sort of story-simplifying 'error'.)


    • The Weasleys' ages. (This link was actually mentioned by alexwlchan in the first answer quoted above, but I thought it was worth including as its own example.) JKR once messed up the numbers for the age difference between the Weasley boys, specifically Charlie and Percy.





    Hat tip to DVK on meta and Valorum in a comment and alexwlchan in an answer for pointing me in the direction of some of these maths errors.




    share|improve this answer















    Dates



    From alexwlchan's excellent answer here (emphasis mine):




    I know that Harry Potter Wikia isn’t usually considered canon, but they have a list of dating contradictions which looks fairly accurate. To me, most of this list can be written off as JK Rowling's dodgy maths, but I thought I'd pick on one example.



    For example, in Goblet of Fire, we have Friday the 30th of October and Tuesday the 22nd of November. If you look at a calendar, you see that 22 Nov falls 23 days after 30 Oct, so the 22nd is a Sunday in the Gregorian calendar. There are many possibilities:




    1. Whoops, JK Rowling messed up.

    2. Their weekdays occur in a different order to ours.

    3. The magical calendar puts extra days at the end of October.

    4. There are some "glue" days between months to make up the difference.

    5. Unclear as to whether to start months from the 0th or the 1st day, they compromised and count November from the (-1)st.

    6. At some point, several days were dropped,1 but nobody thought this was remarkable or unusual.


    I think the only plausible explanation is (1).




    More details from that HP Wikia page on dating contradictions (emphasis mine):




    Often when dates are given, they are given with a day of the week that does not match with that date as it in actual history. One such example occurs in Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban when Sybill Trelawney refers to 16 October as Friday, although 16 October 1993 was a Saturday. This is usually explained as artistic licence on the author's part.



    There are also contradictions within the books in this area. For example, in Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire, both 1 September and 2 September are given as Mondays and, in Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban, Buckbeak's trial is set on 20 April, but careful parsing of the text reveals that it could have happened no later than February.




    Also, if an anachronism counts as a dating error, then we have How could Dudley have wrecked his PlayStation if the PlayStation didn't exist yet?:




    Harry was born in 1980. Therefore, the fourth book should be set in 1994. Yet, Harry mentions in his letter to Sirius that Dudley chucked his new PlayStation out of the window. The only problem is that the PlayStation wasn't on the market in Britain at that time.




    Population statistics



    From Slytherincess's excellent answer here:




    I think we have to take the number of students at Hogwarts with a grain of salt. J.K. Rowling has discrepancies in her numbers, and she admits she is "horrible at maths," but at one point it was put forth that there are approximately 1000 students at Hogwarts, which would break down to approximately 250 students per house. There's a short article on how many students there are at Hogwarts here. The number of students in each house does indeed seem evenly distributed.




    However, the answers to During the events of the Harry Potter series what is the total population of Wizards/Witches globally? contradict both this and each other. In particular, one of them mentions two very clearly contradictory statements from JKR:




    Also, J. K. Rowling has stated that she imagines the wizarding population of the U.K. to be around 3,000. This estimate, although seemingly small, is understandable; a larger population would be far harder to hide from Muggles. However, she also stated that the number of students attending Hogwarts was around 1,000, which seems inconsistent with the population estimate.




    Here are the words of JKR herself in the famous "Oh, Emerson, my maths is so bad" interview:




    I sat down and I created 40 kids who enter Harry's year. [...] I never consciously thought, “That's it, that' s all the people in his year,” but that's kind of how it's worked out. Then I've been asked a few times how many people and because numbers are not my strong point, one part of my brain knew 40, and another part of my brain said, “Oh, about 600 sounds right.” Then people started working it out and saying, "Where are the other kids sleeping?" [...] But if you assume that all of the wizarding children are being sent to Hogwarts, then that's very few wizard-to-Muggle population, isn’t it? There will be the odd kid whose parents don't want them to go to Hogwarts, but 600 out of the whole of Britain is tiny.



    Let's say three thousand [in Britain], actually, thinking about it, and then think of all the magical creatures, some of which appear human. [...] That's going to bump you up a bit as well, so it's a more sizable, total magical community that needs hiding, concealing, but don't hold me to these figures, because that's not how I think.




    The problems with, and contradictions between, these figures have been much more extensively discussed in Shisa's excellent answer to Why is the intake of students for Hogwarts so small compared to the number of witches and wizards in Britain?. (As an amusing side-note, after the above-quoted paragraphs, the subject was quickly changed to lovey-dovey stuff, on which JKR was much happier to expound.)



    Miscellaneous





    • How could Hermione have gotten more OWLs than classes? Apparently JKR originally wrote Hermione as having taken twelve OWLs, even though she was only taking ten classes from her fourth year onwards.


    • What age did Dumbledore live to? Slytherincess's answer here highlights contradictions between different JKR statements on Dumbledore's age.


    • Why doesn't Hogwarts have more teachers? The number of teachers and students at Hogwarts doesn't really work out to give every teacher a realistic workload. (Admittedly JKR is far from alone among authors of kids' school novels in making this sort of story-simplifying 'error'.)


    • The Weasleys' ages. (This link was actually mentioned by alexwlchan in the first answer quoted above, but I thought it was worth including as its own example.) JKR once messed up the numbers for the age difference between the Weasley boys, specifically Charlie and Percy.





    Hat tip to DVK on meta and Valorum in a comment and alexwlchan in an answer for pointing me in the direction of some of these maths errors.





    share|improve this answer














    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer








    edited Apr 13 '17 at 12:43









    Community

    1




    1










    answered Oct 19 '16 at 0:07









    Rand al'ThorRand al'Thor

    98.1k44465654




    98.1k44465654








    • 36





      @Au101 Oh dear lord, I'm not sure I realised what I was letting myself in for. Being a mathematician myself, I get particularly irritated by these kinds of mistakes. It's going to be a long and depressing slog ...

      – Rand al'Thor
      Oct 19 '16 at 0:52






    • 5





      I wish it was possible to star answers. The question is pretty innocuous, but this answer deserves way more than just a simple upvote. Fantastic work.

      – Plutor
      Oct 19 '16 at 12:52






    • 14





      @Jim August 15, 2015 to August 15, 2016 is 366 days. :)

      – 8bittree
      Oct 19 '16 at 14:06






    • 10





      I think people should remember that while today it's very easy to work out the time between two dates using a computer, whether by looking up how to do it, or just asking some website, or whatever, in the mid 1990s even people that had the internet didn't immediately think 'I'll look it up on the internet' in response to every thought they might have. She'd have probably had to go to the library to find old calendars. It just wasn't important enough.

      – Miles Rout
      Oct 19 '16 at 23:26






    • 10





      @Plutor You can't star answers, but you can award bounties to them ;-)

      – Rand al'Thor
      Oct 20 '16 at 0:11














    • 36





      @Au101 Oh dear lord, I'm not sure I realised what I was letting myself in for. Being a mathematician myself, I get particularly irritated by these kinds of mistakes. It's going to be a long and depressing slog ...

      – Rand al'Thor
      Oct 19 '16 at 0:52






    • 5





      I wish it was possible to star answers. The question is pretty innocuous, but this answer deserves way more than just a simple upvote. Fantastic work.

      – Plutor
      Oct 19 '16 at 12:52






    • 14





      @Jim August 15, 2015 to August 15, 2016 is 366 days. :)

      – 8bittree
      Oct 19 '16 at 14:06






    • 10





      I think people should remember that while today it's very easy to work out the time between two dates using a computer, whether by looking up how to do it, or just asking some website, or whatever, in the mid 1990s even people that had the internet didn't immediately think 'I'll look it up on the internet' in response to every thought they might have. She'd have probably had to go to the library to find old calendars. It just wasn't important enough.

      – Miles Rout
      Oct 19 '16 at 23:26






    • 10





      @Plutor You can't star answers, but you can award bounties to them ;-)

      – Rand al'Thor
      Oct 20 '16 at 0:11








    36




    36





    @Au101 Oh dear lord, I'm not sure I realised what I was letting myself in for. Being a mathematician myself, I get particularly irritated by these kinds of mistakes. It's going to be a long and depressing slog ...

    – Rand al'Thor
    Oct 19 '16 at 0:52





    @Au101 Oh dear lord, I'm not sure I realised what I was letting myself in for. Being a mathematician myself, I get particularly irritated by these kinds of mistakes. It's going to be a long and depressing slog ...

    – Rand al'Thor
    Oct 19 '16 at 0:52




    5




    5





    I wish it was possible to star answers. The question is pretty innocuous, but this answer deserves way more than just a simple upvote. Fantastic work.

    – Plutor
    Oct 19 '16 at 12:52





    I wish it was possible to star answers. The question is pretty innocuous, but this answer deserves way more than just a simple upvote. Fantastic work.

    – Plutor
    Oct 19 '16 at 12:52




    14




    14





    @Jim August 15, 2015 to August 15, 2016 is 366 days. :)

    – 8bittree
    Oct 19 '16 at 14:06





    @Jim August 15, 2015 to August 15, 2016 is 366 days. :)

    – 8bittree
    Oct 19 '16 at 14:06




    10




    10





    I think people should remember that while today it's very easy to work out the time between two dates using a computer, whether by looking up how to do it, or just asking some website, or whatever, in the mid 1990s even people that had the internet didn't immediately think 'I'll look it up on the internet' in response to every thought they might have. She'd have probably had to go to the library to find old calendars. It just wasn't important enough.

    – Miles Rout
    Oct 19 '16 at 23:26





    I think people should remember that while today it's very easy to work out the time between two dates using a computer, whether by looking up how to do it, or just asking some website, or whatever, in the mid 1990s even people that had the internet didn't immediately think 'I'll look it up on the internet' in response to every thought they might have. She'd have probably had to go to the library to find old calendars. It just wasn't important enough.

    – Miles Rout
    Oct 19 '16 at 23:26




    10




    10





    @Plutor You can't star answers, but you can award bounties to them ;-)

    – Rand al'Thor
    Oct 20 '16 at 0:11





    @Plutor You can't star answers, but you can award bounties to them ;-)

    – Rand al'Thor
    Oct 20 '16 at 0:11













    0














    SHES NOT ACTUALLY BAD AT MATH



    The multiverse is a hypothetical group of multiple universes including the universe in which we live. Together, these universes comprise everything that exists: the entirety of space, time, matter, energy, and the physical laws and constants that describe them. The different universes within the multiverse are called "parallel universes", "other universes", or "alternate universes".
    Multiple universes have been hypothesized in cosmology, physics, astronomy, religion, philosophy, transpersonal psychology, and literature, particularly in science fiction and fantasy. In these contexts, parallel universes are also called "alternate universes", "quantum universes", "interpenetrating dimensions", "parallel dimensions", "parallel worlds", "parallel realities", "quantum realities", "alternate realities", "alternate timelines", "alternate dimensions" and "dimensional planes".



    The physics community has debated the various multiverse theories over time. Prominent physicists are divided about whether any other universes exist outside of our own.



    Some physicists say the multiverse is not a legitimate topic of scientific inquiry. Concerns have been raised about whether attempts to exempt the multiverse from experimental verification could erode public confidence in science and ultimately damage the study of fundamental physics. Some have argued that the multiverse is a philosophical rather than a scientific hypothesis because it cannot be empirically falsified. The ability to disprove a theory by means of scientific experiment has always been part of the accepted scientific method. Paul Steinhardt has famously argued that no experiment can rule out a theory if the theory provides for all possible outcomes.



    In 2007, Nobel laureate Steven Weinberg suggested that if the multiverse existed, "the hope of finding a rational explanation for the precise values of quark masses and other constants of the standard model that we observe in our Big Bang is doomed, for their values would be an accident of the particular part of the multiverse in which we live.





    share








    New contributor




    Ravenclawed to life is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
    Check out our Code of Conduct.

























      0














      SHES NOT ACTUALLY BAD AT MATH



      The multiverse is a hypothetical group of multiple universes including the universe in which we live. Together, these universes comprise everything that exists: the entirety of space, time, matter, energy, and the physical laws and constants that describe them. The different universes within the multiverse are called "parallel universes", "other universes", or "alternate universes".
      Multiple universes have been hypothesized in cosmology, physics, astronomy, religion, philosophy, transpersonal psychology, and literature, particularly in science fiction and fantasy. In these contexts, parallel universes are also called "alternate universes", "quantum universes", "interpenetrating dimensions", "parallel dimensions", "parallel worlds", "parallel realities", "quantum realities", "alternate realities", "alternate timelines", "alternate dimensions" and "dimensional planes".



      The physics community has debated the various multiverse theories over time. Prominent physicists are divided about whether any other universes exist outside of our own.



      Some physicists say the multiverse is not a legitimate topic of scientific inquiry. Concerns have been raised about whether attempts to exempt the multiverse from experimental verification could erode public confidence in science and ultimately damage the study of fundamental physics. Some have argued that the multiverse is a philosophical rather than a scientific hypothesis because it cannot be empirically falsified. The ability to disprove a theory by means of scientific experiment has always been part of the accepted scientific method. Paul Steinhardt has famously argued that no experiment can rule out a theory if the theory provides for all possible outcomes.



      In 2007, Nobel laureate Steven Weinberg suggested that if the multiverse existed, "the hope of finding a rational explanation for the precise values of quark masses and other constants of the standard model that we observe in our Big Bang is doomed, for their values would be an accident of the particular part of the multiverse in which we live.





      share








      New contributor




      Ravenclawed to life is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
      Check out our Code of Conduct.























        0












        0








        0







        SHES NOT ACTUALLY BAD AT MATH



        The multiverse is a hypothetical group of multiple universes including the universe in which we live. Together, these universes comprise everything that exists: the entirety of space, time, matter, energy, and the physical laws and constants that describe them. The different universes within the multiverse are called "parallel universes", "other universes", or "alternate universes".
        Multiple universes have been hypothesized in cosmology, physics, astronomy, religion, philosophy, transpersonal psychology, and literature, particularly in science fiction and fantasy. In these contexts, parallel universes are also called "alternate universes", "quantum universes", "interpenetrating dimensions", "parallel dimensions", "parallel worlds", "parallel realities", "quantum realities", "alternate realities", "alternate timelines", "alternate dimensions" and "dimensional planes".



        The physics community has debated the various multiverse theories over time. Prominent physicists are divided about whether any other universes exist outside of our own.



        Some physicists say the multiverse is not a legitimate topic of scientific inquiry. Concerns have been raised about whether attempts to exempt the multiverse from experimental verification could erode public confidence in science and ultimately damage the study of fundamental physics. Some have argued that the multiverse is a philosophical rather than a scientific hypothesis because it cannot be empirically falsified. The ability to disprove a theory by means of scientific experiment has always been part of the accepted scientific method. Paul Steinhardt has famously argued that no experiment can rule out a theory if the theory provides for all possible outcomes.



        In 2007, Nobel laureate Steven Weinberg suggested that if the multiverse existed, "the hope of finding a rational explanation for the precise values of quark masses and other constants of the standard model that we observe in our Big Bang is doomed, for their values would be an accident of the particular part of the multiverse in which we live.





        share








        New contributor




        Ravenclawed to life is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
        Check out our Code of Conduct.










        SHES NOT ACTUALLY BAD AT MATH



        The multiverse is a hypothetical group of multiple universes including the universe in which we live. Together, these universes comprise everything that exists: the entirety of space, time, matter, energy, and the physical laws and constants that describe them. The different universes within the multiverse are called "parallel universes", "other universes", or "alternate universes".
        Multiple universes have been hypothesized in cosmology, physics, astronomy, religion, philosophy, transpersonal psychology, and literature, particularly in science fiction and fantasy. In these contexts, parallel universes are also called "alternate universes", "quantum universes", "interpenetrating dimensions", "parallel dimensions", "parallel worlds", "parallel realities", "quantum realities", "alternate realities", "alternate timelines", "alternate dimensions" and "dimensional planes".



        The physics community has debated the various multiverse theories over time. Prominent physicists are divided about whether any other universes exist outside of our own.



        Some physicists say the multiverse is not a legitimate topic of scientific inquiry. Concerns have been raised about whether attempts to exempt the multiverse from experimental verification could erode public confidence in science and ultimately damage the study of fundamental physics. Some have argued that the multiverse is a philosophical rather than a scientific hypothesis because it cannot be empirically falsified. The ability to disprove a theory by means of scientific experiment has always been part of the accepted scientific method. Paul Steinhardt has famously argued that no experiment can rule out a theory if the theory provides for all possible outcomes.



        In 2007, Nobel laureate Steven Weinberg suggested that if the multiverse existed, "the hope of finding a rational explanation for the precise values of quark masses and other constants of the standard model that we observe in our Big Bang is doomed, for their values would be an accident of the particular part of the multiverse in which we live.






        share








        New contributor




        Ravenclawed to life is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
        Check out our Code of Conduct.








        share


        share






        New contributor




        Ravenclawed to life is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
        Check out our Code of Conduct.









        answered 3 mins ago









        Ravenclawed to lifeRavenclawed to life

        1




        1




        New contributor




        Ravenclawed to life is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
        Check out our Code of Conduct.





        New contributor





        Ravenclawed to life is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
        Check out our Code of Conduct.






        Ravenclawed to life is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
        Check out our Code of Conduct.






























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