It is all supernatural. It is all occultic. I believe you are deluding yourself. These are witches making potions and casting spells.
No, Mickey, it’s not, and I’ll try to explain why again:
As you know, real-world magic - real-world occult practices - require human beings to obtain power from some kind of supernatural being. Obviously we don’t have “magical” powers ourselves, so the Church forbids all occult practices of any kind
because they involve using abilities that human beings must get from elsewhere - and in this case, that “elsewhere” is demons.
Right?
Now, since
Harry Potter is of the fantasy genre, that means its author can and has
invented for her novels a structure that has no correlation to anything in the real world.
In this world, some human beings are actually born with purely natural abilities that regular humans do not have.
No invocation/sorcery
ever happens in the series, not even with the bad guys. Granted, there are morally nasty spells - mind control, torture, death-inflicting - but
even these evil abilities do not come from any higher power.
Furthermore, I’m telling you as one who has read the books that it is
plain as day that regular humans like you and I have
no chance whatsoever of having or using
any “magical” abilities in Rowling’s world.
In Rowling’s world, the minority of magical individuals call most of the human race “Muggles” - non-magical. The magical abilities in the books are innate, natural, and inborn - not learned, occultic, or invocational.
There are literally no exceptions.
And as I have pointed out…sometimes the line is blurred between “good” and “bad” cahracters. The occultic themes are projected by many of the characters. For example, in the “Prisoner of Azkaban” Harry is told in the classroom that “This year we are going to learn the basic methods of the divination.”****
And he and his friends quickly learn that such attempts at “divination” are either (a) a sham, or (b) counterproductive. As others have explained to you, the villain Voldemort ultimately seals his doom by listening to what he thinks he has learned through divination.
I think it’s telling that the only “magical” practice in the books that remotely resembles - though superficially and aesthetically only - any real-world practices, is also ridiculed and made to look useless, boring, and even dangerous.
I haven’t actually read any of the Harry Potter books so I’m relatively unbiased but for some crazy reason I’ve been lurking on this thread (yes, for the whole, 1000+ posts

) and before it gets shut down, I want to thank all the “potterites” for doing an excellent job of presenting logical arguments. It almost inspires to go out and read the whole series! What has been presented as “logic” from the anti-magic side has been incredibly unconvincing and ridiculously inconsistent.
Carry on!!
Kris
Thanks, Kris. I know our interlocutors mean well on every level, but I really am convinced that their concerns are 100% unjustified and that
Harry Potter is not only harmless but wholesome. I’m glad you’re convinced!
They’re also really fun and exciting books, in addition to being inspirational and sobering. If you get a chance, I highly recommend them.