Talk:Bezoar
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[edit] Harry Potter
Bezoars are given a passing mention in the Harry Potter books. The Potions Master, Severus Snape, tests Harry's knowledge in order to humiliate him on his first day at Hogwarts. The knowledge comes in useful, however in order to impress Horace Slughorn, and to save his friend Ron Weasley's life when he is poisoned.
Is this particularly noteworthy or relevant? Seems to me it should be deleted. Bezoars are mentioned in plenty of literature, we're not about to start listing them all. Ethan0 09:23, 25 July 2005 (UTC)
Ethan is a party pooper. Harry Potter apparently has a certain amount of modern cultural relevance, possibly more then many of the other bezoar-laden works. By citing this text as containing "bezoar" it could provide some context for those completely unfamiliar with the entity. Maybe if Ethan is such a bezoar scholar he can give us some other examples of prominent literary works with bezoar references (either explicit or implied).--69.137.157.233 01:26, 22 September 2005 (UTC)
- I can think of, offhand, only The Sandman: Dream Country. I know I've seen them in other works as well; if I think of or happen across more I shall mention them. -Ethan (talk) • 2006-02-28 19:52 (UTC)
[edit] effectiveness?
Is there any evidence on the effects (or lack thereof) of bezoar on poison?
[edit] Hair?
I was trying to disprove what I thought to be an Urban Legend, wherin you could die or get digestion problems from ingesting your own hair, but I find I cannot conclusivly do so. Do human beings also get bezoars or are they limited to calcium?
The museum link seems to be conclusive, but wouldn't the few strands of hair ingested pass though? I believe snopes listed it once, but I cannot locate it. Sim 05:12, 2 May 2006 (UTC)
- Fixed it in the article.