Sean -
With the first part of what you said, I agree completely, of course.
With the second...
To reiterate: I will believe it when it becomes generally accepted scientific fact through repeated and repeatable testing, and not before. I don't understand it, myself, and so can't comment otherwise.
Aradia -
There is nothing that I currently consider magic. There are things that are unexplained, of course, but calling things unexplained and calling things magic are - to me - totally different.
There was a case several years ago that attracted a lot of attention in some circles; many people saw it as "proof" of the existence of god for some reason. There was a woman who could tell the color of a piece of paper with her eyes closed. A miracle! Magic! How amazing!
I wasn't particularly into the story, until I heard the ending, at which point I was fascinated: see, different colors have different wavelengths and therefore have ever-so-slightly different temperatures, and that lady had learned to distinguish between them. And other people could learn to do it, too! All of which, to me, is much more interesting than "magic" or "a miracle".
And yet, the attention and publicity that the case had generated vanished as soon as an explanation was discovered.
That's another part of why the stories of magic and religion hang around so long - there are so many people who prefer stories over the truth.
Blue
With the first part of what you said, I agree completely, of course.
With the second...
To reiterate: I will believe it when it becomes generally accepted scientific fact through repeated and repeatable testing, and not before. I don't understand it, myself, and so can't comment otherwise.
Aradia -
There is nothing that I currently consider magic. There are things that are unexplained, of course, but calling things unexplained and calling things magic are - to me - totally different.
There was a case several years ago that attracted a lot of attention in some circles; many people saw it as "proof" of the existence of god for some reason. There was a woman who could tell the color of a piece of paper with her eyes closed. A miracle! Magic! How amazing!
I wasn't particularly into the story, until I heard the ending, at which point I was fascinated: see, different colors have different wavelengths and therefore have ever-so-slightly different temperatures, and that lady had learned to distinguish between them. And other people could learn to do it, too! All of which, to me, is much more interesting than "magic" or "a miracle".
And yet, the attention and publicity that the case had generated vanished as soon as an explanation was discovered.
That's another part of why the stories of magic and religion hang around so long - there are so many people who prefer stories over the truth.
Blue

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