What kind of magic are you talking about? Do you mean making something appear from out of nothing or are you speaking of magic to protect or influence or draw something to you? the general thinking is that magic is using the power of your will to manifest a need or desire. Most magic practitioners adhere to the Rule of Three which states that any energy positive or negative will come back to you 3 times over.
I know the whole hormone thing about love, too! But do you really think about love that way? If you see a girl ( I assume you're male) and your heart starts to beat faster - do you say to yourself "Oh, my hormones react on her pheromones"? Don't you rather say "I like her"?I think you have to adjust your thinking if you are ever to understand what magic is. Look on it as science not yet explained. Take hypnosis as example. It was considered magic (and bogus) until someone actually put up a plausible theory on how it works. Now it's considered a scientific method. And many modern medicines are based on old herbal lore, the usage of which where once considered magic knowledge.Most magical methods are worked out by "trial and error" - a method often used by modern day scientists as well.The difference between the modern day scientist and the magic-worker is that the scientist have this burning urge to explain everything, while the magic-worker usually is content with knowing that the result is the desired. To the magic-worker it's the goal that's important. The scientist put so much of importance in the road he walks that he often forget what the goal actually is.
Quote from: Ladygriffin on January 28, 2010, 06:34:25 AMI know the whole hormone thing about love, too! But do you really think about love that way? If you see a girl ( I assume you're male) and your heart starts to beat faster - do you say to yourself "Oh, my hormones react on her pheromones"? Don't you rather say "I like her"?I think you have to adjust your thinking if you are ever to understand what magic is. Look on it as science not yet explained. Take hypnosis as example. It was considered magic (and bogus) until someone actually put up a plausible theory on how it works. Now it's considered a scientific method. And many modern medicines are based on old herbal lore, the usage of which where once considered magic knowledge.Most magical methods are worked out by "trial and error" - a method often used by modern day scientists as well.The difference between the modern day scientist and the magic-worker is that the scientist have this burning urge to explain everything, while the magic-worker usually is content with knowing that the result is the desired. To the magic-worker it's the goal that's important. The scientist put so much of importance in the road he walks that he often forget what the goal actually is.Sorry, I'm going to have to disagree.Firstly, the whole "Don't you rather say "I like her"?" What's that meant to mean? Yes, I would say that, but that doesn't make love any less psychological and primal. It is a result of hormones and pheromones and similar things, just because you don't use those words doesn't lend any credibility to your claim that it's magic. Just like how stacking some boxes on top of each other isn't magic just because you don't say "I manipulated the boxes into a position which allowed the earth's gravitational pull to force them together".Love is only magical in the most metaphorical sense possible. Surely you don't actually believe it's literally supernatural, like a ghost or a wizard?And honestly, science not yet explained? I'm not quite sure what sort of things you would consider magic, but I definitely don't like that definition. The difference between science and magic is that science is an attempt to determine truth in a way that removes the various logical fallacies inherent to human thought. Magic is not, and is therefore just as likely to be superstitious bollocks as not-yet-proven truth. This means that while science must work for it to be considered science, magic must only appear to work. Sometimes this turns out to be because it legitimately does work (like medicines or hypnotism, as you mentioned), in which case it stops being magic and becomes scientific fact. Other times it doesn't work at all, and only looks like it does to our fallible animal brains.You say scientists don't consider the consequences of their actions, to which I can only say what the s**t are you talking about. Seriously, please explain this, I'm fairly sure most scientists do. I mean occasionally you find some nutter who says he's going to blow up the world, but they're just looking for publicity. As evidenced by the fact that the world hasn't yet blown up.And finally, that bit about a "burning urge to explain everything" - I'm not sure that's entirely accurate. Or at least, it's a very negative way of describing what I think is the better option. Scientists simply seek knowledge. Often they don't have a specific goal, and that's not because they're too obsessed with the road they walk on - that's because they don't yet know what will happen, otherwise there'd be no need to experiment. Most technological and scientific advances come from scientists messing about and discovering things, and then realising "s**t, I didn't know that would happen - maybe we could use that knowledge to cure this disease, or build this sort of machine". And I think that's far better than relying on something which by definition is unproven.
I'm not worked up, and never have been as a result of any posts on a forum. Just because I swear a bit doesn't mean I'm angry, please try not to read my posts in an angry voice.And I think if we relied on "magic" rather than science, I just think less would be accomplished. I think if magic works, it's not anything supernatural, it's because someone has accidentally made a discovery, and due to not understanding it has attributed it to something unexplainable. So while this would in all probability mean no weapons of mass destruction or pollution, it would also mean largely ineffective medicine, shorter lifespans, food being harder to grow - basically, we'd be in the dark ages. You could argue we'd be better that way, but I wouldn't.Although, that's with my own understanding of magic - basically, that it's misunderstood science at best, and pure superstition at worst. A believer in it would have a very different view, I think.
So in a nutshell, magic is but the drawingup of willful power from within the user, aided by outside factors such as symbols and ingredients... I've read of such things, but most of them seemed too fanciful to me and in no means were they conclusive... I had hoped that I could shavee away the embelishments surrounding it and 'get into the gutter' as one would put it... Trivially, I'd also hoped to someday be able wield it and I'd like to ask if it is mandatory to be birthed with such a gift or is it already within all of us and simply waiting to be accessed?
Science knows exactly the ways in which the human brain is fallable