I've spoilered this because I'm really talking to myself.This truly begs the question of Harry's ethical position vis a vis the Reds, upon who he committed genocide. As a sentient being being eaten isn't really on my agenda, and anything that tries, will pay if I can arrange it. In a real sense evil is meaningless in that context.
I've been saying that there is no such thing as evil, good, bad, or otherwise *objectively* for a bit now and even said I don't think free will as we typically think of it even exists.
Of course, the subjective experience is something different, though only "real" in the same way that the sociological phenomenon of "definition of situation" is real (where you, for example, see someone wearing a lab coat and decide they have medical authority and so grant them that authority even if they don't have any medical training). It's not the true situation, but, for one acting under that thought process, it becomes the true situation.
Further, I'd say that sentience is not a hard line binary; either you're exactly like us or you're not sentient. I'd express it's more of a slope and we're only at the top of it because we've created the measurements. However, even by our own measurements, all other mammals, birds, even fish share the same biological structures. We all evolved from the same sources, after all and, the closer another animal is to us, the closer they are to us on our self-determined scale. Of course, it's easier to see everything as binary as that removes all pesky complications like thinking about how we, as a species, interact with other species.
It's a good question about the genocide. You should start a discussion about the ethicalness (is that a word?) of said action.
Harry's world has a very Christian ethic, evidenced by this passage from the fight at the pyramid at Chichen ItzaObviously God has a point of view, the Red's were evil, and they had to pay when the check was presented.
But, all characters in the books have a point of view. Each one is just expressing their nature or desires through thought and action (or inaction). To say that, because one of the faeries or magic beings proclaimed something makes it the dominant viewpoint might be going a bit far. Mab takes plenty of action, judges and so in the books. It doesn't follow that the world they live in therefore has a Mab ethic. Neither does it follow that it has a christian ethic because of the pronouncements of those characters. It only demonstrates their particular point of view.
The difference between Thomas and Lara is that Thomas cares and struggles against what he is. It's a narrow hair and JB splits it.
I'd say there is no difference in the end. And, why would one struggle against being who they are? That's a common theme in literature to be certain, but, in practice, it's just self-torture. And, if a society imposes that struggle, then one might even say that it's cruelty.
I had three lovely cats and they drove me crazy in a very fun way. I miss them.
Aww. We lost two cats within a month of each other a few years ago. It was really terrible. You ever think about getting a new kitty?