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Scientific and Rational Thought: Harry Potter and the Methods of Rationality

Imagine if Harry Potter was a homeschooled science prodigy... we'll explore a fanfiction where he is and delve deeply into a ton of science along the way.
Lisa Fontaine-Rainen
Average rating:
4.9
Number of reviews:
(65)
Class

What's included

12 live meetings
15 in-class hours

Class Experience

Harry Potter and the Methods of Rationality is a fanfic that begins with the premise that Harry’s aunt Petunia marries an Oxford chemistry professor (rather than Vernon Dursley) and Harry is homeschooled – and has a particular talent for scientific thinking.  Thus the 2000 page fanfiction re-envisions the Harry Potter story through the lens of a child who engages in scientific and rational thinking.  

And here’s a bit of honesty.  I don’t read fanfic.  I don’t begrudge it for those who love it – I think it’s a great way to get writing or to explore ideas, but I generally don’t read it myself.  I don’t want to see changes to stories I love.  I had to be dragged into reading this one. 

And I don’t regret it one bit.  Even if you’re like me and not into fanfic, this one’s worth it.  This one makes me think.  It lets me move through the world I love, examine it through a different lens, laugh at its quirks, love it all the more, and become a better scientist.  Not only do I hope to share it with you, I hope to bring you deeper into the thinking, exploring the story and the premise fully to help you also think rationally, like this version of Harry. 

In this course, we will read the first  “book” of the work and explore the various scientific ideas introduced in the text.  We’ll talk about Harry’s approach to the world, and where it might get in his way.  Our course will weave literature and science, as they have been woven in this text.  We’ll also ask the question about the changes made from the original text – which were driven by an intent to steep the main character in scientific thought and which were not.  Thus, having at least some knowledge of the original Harry Potter texts, or at least the movies, is useful for this course. 

Some of the ideas presented in the text can be quite dark – much like the original books, but sometimes even more so.  Parents are encouraged to read chapter 1 to get a flavor for the text, and chapter 7 (starting around page 85) as it contains some of the most troubling material that we will address in this class.   Alternatively, feel free to e-mail me directly for excerpts to review, and I’m happy to discuss the content as well. 

Participants will have the opportunity to engage in a number of assignments that explore the ideas in the course.  These will be flexible and tailored to participants’ interests and abilities.  Other work will be primarily reading the book and supplementary material and participating in discussions in and out of class.  The book is available online for e-readers or to print and as podcasts, all at no cost. 

Science isn’t a set of facts, but instead a way of thinking.  Come explore the science and the magic of this world.

Work for this class includes weekly assignments that are largely about examining thinking or noticing things in the world around and developing theories about them, plus reading for the next week - usually 30-60 pages a week.  Additionally, there are three major assignments - an artistic assignment, an analytical assignment, and a rational fanfic assignment.  All are adaptable to different needs and level of time available.  The most important work to do is keep up with the reading.  No work is required before the first class.

For learners who are especially interested in going deeper, there are resource links sent home each week, citations for materials discussed in class, and extensions.  These are especially rich - students are not expected to accept scientific ideas without considering the original research that led to them.  That is key to scientific and rational thought.

Syllabus:

Day 1: Why do I believe what I believe?  
Introduction to Harry Potter and the Methods of Rationality (HPMOR), and the basic concept of a controlled experiment.   Discussion – how would the wizarding world yield to science?  

Ch. 1, in class

Day 2:  Cats are complicated!  or That’s the most Ravenclaw thing I have ever heard.
Sufficient Evidence, Conservation of Energy,  Bystander Effect, conscientious objectors, intro to logarithms.

Ch. 2, 3

Day 3: It’s a Mathematical Thing or Shaking Hands with a Bad Explanation
	Fermi estimation and money conversion, arbitrage, seigniorage, how to make money by buying and selling money, fiscal prudence, fundamental attribution error, Occam’s Razer, and what is that hilarious thing Draco and Harry are doing anyway?

Ch 4, 5

Day 4: Offering an alernative explanation or Trouble Trusting Adults
Experimentation, the Planning Fallacy, anecdotal evidence, Harry and psychology, scientifically investigating which sentences a human four year old can understand, lift, Baye’s Theorem, social roles of children and adults.

Ch 6

Day 5:  Manipulating Reality or  the Trust, but Verify
Rules of game design, psychology of reciprocation, manipulation vs. influence, social structures around privilege, politics and the French Revolution, positive or confirmation bias, what does “smart” really mean, experimental design, bystander apathy, desensitisation therapy, consequentialism.

Ch. 7, 8

Day 6: Being Aware of my Own Awareness or What Happens if you Fail?
Reproductive isolation (with a  bit of Star Trek thrown in), sentience (with more Star Trek thrown in), the concept and challenge of sorting people (with a bit of Divergent thrown in), risk and failure, the problem of being placed on a pedastel, an examination of Dumbledore and Quirrel in this version of HP

Ch 9, 10, 11, Omake File 2
 
Day 7: A Metaphor for Human Existence or Ignorant About a Phenomenon
The Game, Escher (for the uninitiated), doing good things, bullying and psychology, apologizing, antimatter, Gutenberg, antrhopic principle, Turing machines, correlation vs causation 
Ch. 12,13

Day 8: An Unusually Pessimistic Imagination or Most Dangerous Student
Limits and dividing by zero, competition, safety and transfiguration, comparing coursework between this HP and the other HP, ideas about education and learning, being a creative thinker

Ch. 14,15

Day 9: Truly Brilliant Experimental Test or A Fashion Unbecoming a Hogwarts Professor
Paradoxes, prime numbers and enryption, P and NP, formulating a hypothesis, looking smart, authority, anger as a tool

Ch. 16,17


Day 10:Vitally Important Technique or Impulse to Kindness
How to lose vs. how to fail, representative heuristic, Bayes’s Theorem, Harry’s morality, approaching new ideas, pressure of consistency, Second Law of Thermodynamics, rationalization.

Ch. 18, 19, 20

Day 11: A Priceless Opportunity
Omake file 1 and 3, general discussion, touch on anything we haven’t gotten to yet, discussion of assignments so far. 

Day 12:  Oogely boogely! or Observation
Looking forward, Chapter 22 (or Book 2, chapter 1), the scientific method, N-Rays, Philip K. Dick, reality, Lake Wobegon effect, Socratic Method, Asch’s Conformity Experiment, heritability, Alfred Tarski, Eugene Gendlin, Sharing our own stuff.

Other Details

Supply List
The book can be accessed at www.hpmor.com in chapter links, full book pdf, e-book, or podcasts.  Students should not try to read ahead before the course begins, but may preview a few pages.
External Resources
Learners will not need to use any apps or websites beyond the standard Outschool tools.
Joined November, 2017
4.9
65reviews
Profile
Teacher expertise and credentials
Teaching and learning are passions - schooling is not.  I have worked in public schools for 13 years, and know the joys of having amazing students and the struggles of fitting systems that aren't designed to work for them (or me).  I teach nearly any subject, specializing in the particular needs of gifted students.  Children are people, and treating them any other way is wrong.

As I specialize in gifted students, I know that there are some students who are ready for and need what I am teaching, but are younger than my age range.  Just get in touch with me if you think your child belongs in one of my classes, but is too young.  I also provide a range of levels of challenge in the work we do, so more advanced students will always find something new to think about.

I hold a B.A. in English and an M.A. in Gifted Education, with a teaching certificate in elementary education and an endorsement for K-12 gifted students.  I have worked primarily at the middle school level in schools and tutored from ages 6 through adults.  While my degree is in English, I have spent most of my teaching career teaching primarily math, and in my core believe that math should be taught as a way of thinking, asking questions, posing problems, and exploring relationships rather than acquiring skills.  Teaching math as it is typically done is like teaching English by only teaching grammar.

I love to read, puzzle, explore ideas, and cause my young children to think about the world deeply.  I'm pretty sure I'm raising at least one scientist - and that science, like math, is not a set of facts but a way of thinking.

I also teach for Gifted Course Providers.  Feel free to contact me about courses I may offer elsewhere.

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Live Group Class
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$180

for 12 classes
1x per week, 12 weeks
75 min

Completed by 5 learners
Live video meetings
Ages: 13-18
3-12 learners per class

This class is no longer offered
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