T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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316.1 | | CSSE32::PHILPOTT | The Colonel - [WRU #338] | Thu Mar 20 1986 11:01 | 14 |
| I suspect the key is in the word "sufficiently". As an engineer
you may meet artifacts that work, but by a mechanism not immediately
obvious to you. But at this moment there are no artifacts on this
planet (or are there?...) that are "sufficiently" advanced to be
mistaken for supernatural actions.
Now if you show a hovercraft to a stone age tribesman, how would
he interpret what he sees.
Or, assuming that a space drive is possible (but current physics
says it isn't), then show one to a NASA engineer. What would be
his reaction? or perhaps that is not sufficiently advanced?
/. Ian .\
|
316.2 | the null title | SIVA::PARODI | John H. Parodi | Thu Mar 20 1986 12:06 | 18 |
|
And the number of years that equates to "sufficiently" is dropping all
the time. Of all the John W. Campbell editorials in Analog, the one
I remember best was about this subject. Campbell asked what would happen
if the DoD's most advanced remotely-piloted-vehicle got tossed back
30 years in time as a result of, say, getting too close to a nuclear
weapons test. The editorial came out around 1970 and Campbell pointed
out that many of the components of such a vehicle would seem awfully
strange to a scientist from 1940 (though they probably wouldn't think
that magic was involved). My memory is a bit sketchy (perhaps someone
can dig up the reference? -- my own pile of Analogs has long since turned
to mold) but I recall that there would be radioactive isotopes of elements
that a 1940-era scientist would *know* had no radioactive isotopes. I
imagine that LSI technology would give them pause as well...
JP
|
316.3 | yes, but don't do it. | HYDRA::BARANSKI | How Far, is Too Far? | Thu Mar 20 1986 12:14 | 18 |
| I hope Earl Wajenberg shows up here...
I feel that Magic and Technology can be treated as equivilent, if you downplay
the differences. I also feel that *the* way, is to accentuate the differences
which exist. I do not enjoy a story with technology protrayed as magic,
as well as I enjoy a good clean Science fiction story.
The Technology has to be sufficiently advanced so that the observers of the
Technology have never even *thought* that this could be done, except, of
course, by magic. *We* have had quite a bit of practice of imagining things
that could be done with technology, so I suspect we would be quite hard to
trick.
Then again, I think some people are more likely to see something wierd, and
automatically think of it as magic, and other people would automatically
start looking for how the technology worked.
Jim.
|
316.4 | "Sufficiently advanced" is not even era specific | TLE::MOREAU | Ken Moreau | Thu Mar 20 1986 13:17 | 18 |
| Different people in the same culture may have different definitions of
"sufficiently". We work with high tech every day, so if we see something
we don't understand, our first thought is that it is "higher tech" than
we currently understand.
For example, think about showing a radio to Alexander Graham Bell or Thomas
Edison, vs showing that same radio to your random person off the street in
the same time frame. Bell or Edison will say "Neat, wow, how did you
accomplish this *technical* feat?" (and probably go insane trying to do it
themselves), but the guy off the street will probably say "Magic". Simply
because in the one case they knew that *something* like this might be dimly
imagined as an outcome of what they currently understood, where in the other
case it was totally outside of the world-map of the person off the street.
That is why I think that trying to get a NASA engineer to say "Magic" is much
harder than getting someone who reads the National Enquirer to say it.
-- Ken Moreau
|
316.5 | Exception | PEN::KALLIS | | Thu Mar 20 1986 14:23 | 15 |
| >I feel that magic and technology can be treated as equivalent, if
>you downplay
>the differences ...
I beleive you can treat _any_ two things as equivalent, if you downplay
the differences! :-)
>I do not enjoy a story with technology portrayed as magic,
>as well as I do a good clean Science fiction story.
Then you'll miss one of the _classic_ SF books, Fritz Leiber's
magnificent _Gather, Darkness!_
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
316.6 | Postscript | PEN::KALLIS | | Thu Mar 20 1986 15:35 | 15 |
| The John W. Campbell editorial about the unmanned probe thrown back
in time was titled "No Copying Allowed," and is in the book of
collected editorials.
Camopbell wrote it to stem a bunch of stories at the time about
people who are in a space war (or equivalent) who steal or otherwise
find an alien artifact and mass-produce it to Turn the Tide.
He said it couldn't be done.
He ought to have known -- his characters did it themselves in several
of his space operas....
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
316.7 | | SIVA::PARODI | John H. Parodi | Thu Mar 20 1986 15:40 | 9 |
|
Thanks for the tip, Steve. Do you happen to know whether that book
is still in print? I can't recall ever seeing it on the SF shelves.
BTW, I agree with your comment about "Gather, Darkness." *Not* a book
to read late at night when you're all by your lonesome...
JP
|
316.8 | Look at it this way... | AKOV68::BOYAJIAN | I am not a man, I'm a free number! | Fri Mar 21 1986 02:16 | 11 |
| re:.0
Say you came across someone who performed some feat of magic before
your very eyes.
How would you be able to determine that it *wasn't* technology that
was advanced beyond your understanding?
I think that that is what Clarke had in mind.
--- jerry
|
316.9 | "Magic" is what we don't understand | ALGOL::BUTENHOF | Approachable Systems | Fri Mar 21 1986 06:25 | 23 |
| I've always preferred a paraphrase of the quote:
Any sufficiently advanced technology is
indistinguishable from a rigged demo.
But anyway... imagine taking a credit-card sized radio back,
say, 50 years. They knew all about radios, and there's stuff
being broadcast that you can pick up (the same radio wouldn't
be especially impressive 200 years ago). Now, here's this
little lump of plastic and rock (semiconductor) which is
physically incapable of doing *anything* but sitting there...
to their technology. And it's playing music. No tubes,
no nothing. The headphones a scientist might make sense
out of, though the speaker technology doesn't much resemble
anything they could do then. But the receiver itself? They
might not think of it as "magic", but it might as well be.
Now try bringing that same radio---maybe with a Mr.
Microphone---back to the stone age and see what reaction
you get. Or if you're really brave, try showing up in North
Eastern Mass. during the witch hunts...
/dave
|
316.10 | | BEING::POSTPISCHIL | Always mount a scratch monkey. | Fri Mar 21 1986 08:32 | 19 |
| Re .8:
> Say you came across someone who performed some feat of magic before
> your very eyes.
>
> How would you be able to determine that it *wasn't* technology that
> was advanced beyond your understanding?
I tape it with my VCR and watch it several times, using the frame advance
when appropriate. It worked wonders with David Copperfield's recent show.
:-)
(When he was making pearls appear, they were balanced on the back of his
thumb. When he made the woman's body disappear, the head was fake and she
was behind the back of the light, which folded down. For the walk through
the Great Wall, he left the booth via the roll-away stairs.)
-- edp
|
316.11 | Abraca...quantum? | PEN::KALLIS | | Fri Mar 21 1986 08:38 | 23 |
| Re .8:
Interesting you shopuld mention that, Jerry. As it happened, the
late-19th=early-th Century Robert Houdin (whom Erich Weiss took
his stage name, Harry Houdini, from) amazed the relatively uneducated
(what we'd call "Third World") peoples with "magic" built on the
technology of the time. Example: he had a metal object that he
put into a case, and told, say, an Arab chieftan to have tyhe strongest
member of his band try to lift. He would then speak a few appropriate
words and gesture, and the strongman would nearly rupture himself
trying -- unsuccessfully -- to get the thing out. Then Houdin would
gesture again and lift the object out effortlessly. Of course,
since the object was made out of iron, and the stand the case was
on contained a huge electromagnet, the trick isn't surprising.
Naturally, the audiences in question thought it _was_ magic.
Steve Kallis, Jr.
P.S.: Concerning whether _Gather, Darkness!_ is in print or not;
I'm not sure. I've had my copy since it first came out in hardcover.
-S
|
316.12 | Magic comes in many flavors. | PROSE::WAJENBERG | | Fri Mar 21 1986 10:06 | 84 |
| Re .3: A word of explanation: Jim Baranski probably hoped I would join this
note because he once played in a science fiction role playing game that I ran.
In it, my magic was indistinguishable from technology. It was set in the 25th
century and I proposed that psychic phenomena are real and, with the proper
scientific understanding and technical assistance, can be made reliable. So I
had a world where about one third of the population was at least a little
psychic.
To distinguish magic from technology, you must first define both. In
particular, you would have to define "magic," and probably the words "natural"
and "supernatural."
As a quick first try, let me define "natural" as meaning, "producible by the
system of bodies in space and time that we observe around us." Thus if our
minds are the products of our brains, our minds are natural. If not, our
minds are supernatural ("souls"). If there is a God that produced the
universe, then He is supernatural, unless you think that causality can run in
a circle.
Which brings up the next point. If magic is defined as a supernatural
operation, a given operation will be supernatural or not depending on what you
think nature can produce.
A stone-age shaman does not, in this sense, believe in "magic." He has
probably never entertained a definition of "natural" like the one I proposed.
He thinks it is quite "in the nature of things" that trees and streams and
stones are aware and volitional creatures, and that you can persuade or coerce
them by various traditional means. When we would say he is working "magic,"
he might describe his operations as engineering or politics.
A Renaissance ceremonial wizard, however, DOES consciously believe he is
performing magic, since he seeks to contact and bargain with or control a
spirit which he believes to be formally, strictly supernatural and separate
from the material world.
Now let's look at magic as it appears in literature. Renaissance-style
"Spirit Masters" who make pacts with demons or serve gods are common enough.
James Blish did the masterpiece of that line in "Black Easter." The mortal
magicians in Poul Anderson's "Three Hearts and Three Lions" seem to work that
way, too.
Also common are people with "The Gift," a magical power that either crops up
randomly or runs in families or races. The wizards of Ursula LeGuin's
Earthsea triology are such folk. So are Katherine Kurtz's Deryni. Tolkien's
elves are so riddled with it, they do magic without even noticing. To them,
it isn't magic, but nature; they live in a larger world than we do.
Then there are wizards who depend on "Secret Lore" that seems to have nothing
to do with spirits or innate powers. Harold Shea, the "Incompleat Enchanter"
invented by Pratt and deCamp, is the best example. He discovered a way to get
to other universes, where "magic" works according to laws that he knows and
the inhabitants don't.
T. H. White's Merlin, in "The Sword in the Stone," used all three methods.
He had a natural gift of prophecy and clairvoyance, he had been given a
familiar and charged by Heaven or Fate or someone with the powers necessary to
transform Arthur and do the other more spectacular tricks, and, because of his
gift of prophecy, he had a lot of hi-tech trinkets which Arthur thought
magical, but which the reader recognizes as household items of the 19th and
20th centuries.
The Spirit Masters do what I think any of us would call magic, because the
spirits they call on are so strictly supernatural.
Those with The Gift, if they appeared among us, would certainly remind us of
magic, but the cooler temperments among us might decide that psychic powers
are real and these are just unusually gifted psychics, a hitherto undiscovered
part of nature. They might hope that, with enough research, we could build
machines that would let anyone do what the Gifted do by themselves. The
Gifted are less emphatically magical.
Those with Secret Lore look even less magical. It's the secrecy. The
implication is that anyone who discovers those secrets can do the same tricks.
In fact, if you have ever conceived of science or technology, you would soon
decide that their "magic" was just special effects we haven't yet figured out.
In fact, this is exactly Clarke's "sufficiently advanced technology."
So I would say that the appearance of magic derives from the appearance of
inaccessibility. If the magic power comes from the gods, that is about as
inaccessible as it gets. If the magic power comes from study and skill, I
have only to invest the same amount of study and skill (or maybe just a little
effort at espionage) to have the power myself.
Earl Wajenberg
|
316.13 | But, gee... | SUBA::WALL | Formerly {DRZEUS,INANNA}::WALL | Fri Mar 21 1986 11:28 | 11 |
| re: .10
Television hardly qualifies as before your very eyes. :-)
How'd he end up behind the curtain hanging in front of the staircase
on the other side?
And I'd still like to know how he managed to get rid of the Statue
of Liberty and a 747. :-)
Dave W.
|
316.14 | "Magic" and "Technology" are both nouns... | GLIVET::BUFORD | | Fri Mar 21 1986 11:41 | 8 |
| Re .10: Oooh, that takes all the fun out of it! :-)
Re .4: A recent article in _Science News_ reports that the National
Science Foundation surveyed 2000 persons by telephone: only one in five
claimed to know how the telephone works...
John B.
|
316.15 | | AKOV68::BOYAJIAN | I am not a man, I'm a free number! | Sat Mar 22 1986 01:10 | 9 |
| re:.10
I guesses the pearl and the disappearing woman bits without resorting
to slomo (I have the show on tape, too), but hadn't figured out
how he walked through the Great Wall. I knew it had something to
do with making the audience believe he had left the platform without
his actually having done so, but I disn't figure out the specifics.
--- jerry
|
316.16 | magic thrives on secrecy | JEREMY::REDFORD | John Redford | Sun Mar 23 1986 12:14 | 41 |
| re: .12
Good exposition! Splitting magic up into spirit control, paranormal
powers, and secret lore makes the whole issue much clearer. I doubt
if anyone would mistake spirit control for technology, although
Maxwell had a dandy demon-powered refrigerator. Paranormal powers
are under active (if ill-respected) scientific investigation
(even hard-heads like John W. Campbell fell for them), and secret
lore is definitely on the border.
A word more about this last point. One of the distinguishing
features of people who are trying to actually do something is how
open they are about what's going on. Science and technology thrive
when everyone shares information. On the other hand, people who are
just trying to impress do their best to keep everything secret. If
your special knowledge is the source of your power/influence/income,
then you'll do everything possible to keep it to yourself. Magic spells
don't get put into the public library.
A good example of how harmful that can be is the Chinese water clock.
In the tenth century a Chinese inventor built the world's most
accurate clock for the emperor. It could regulate the flow of water
so carefully that it could keep time to within a minute per day. It
was an enormous mechanism, several stories high, and was quite
complex mechanically. And yet, when the inventor died, the clock
fell into disrepair. No others were built in its place. It remained
for the monks in backwards medieval Europe to discover the escapement
mechanism, the fundamental basis of mechanical clocks to this day.
The Chinese were way ahead of the monks in mechanical sophistication,
but they never made the breakthrough. Why not? Because their work
was kept secret by the emperor. When the inventor died, his
knowledge died with him. Each new inventor had to start from scratch.
The emperor kept it secret for a curious reason: clocks were used for
tracking the stars, which were used for astrology, which was the sole
perogative of the emperor. If everybody had a clock, anybody could
predict the future, and the monarch would be another one of the masses.
The emperor held on to his magic powers by suppressing his
subordinates' technologies! Sounds like certain managers.
/jlr
|
316.17 | cargo cults | JEREMY::REDFORD | John Redford | Sun Mar 23 1986 12:22 | 16 |
| Actually, I can think of one case where magic and technology were
pretty clearly confused: the cargo cults. During WW II, the US set up
air bases in parts of the South Pacific that were so remote that their
inhabitants had hardly ever seen Westerners before. The Americans
gave freely from their advanced technology: food that stayed fresh
until you opened the can, pieces of cloth that fit snugly around the
body but still let you move freely, and knives that never seemed to
lose their sharpness. I mean, these people COULD FLY THROUGH THE AIR,
and they never seemed to run out of their wonderful supplies. The
Americans left after the war, but the natives hoped and prayed for
them to come back. They built bamboo models of airplanes to bring
back the great god of Cargo. They would carry pointed sticks like
rifles and march in drill formations. This persisted even into the
1970s. Kind of pathetic really.
/jlr
|
316.18 | demonic relics | JEREMY::REDFORD | John Redford | Sun Mar 23 1986 12:48 | 23 |
| Something that irritates me about the magic/technology business is
how many times post-holocaust barbarians come across some functioning
piece of ancient machinery which they treat as a god or weapon.
Look, I'm lucky if my computer stays up for a couple of months, never
mind a couple of centuries. Imagine trying to keep a VAX running for
even ten years unattended. The first thing to go would be the disks;
the bearings would start to wear, the platters would start to wobble,
and then boom! Head crash and no more mass storage. The machine
keeps running on main memory for a while until soft errors from alpha
particles (no shortage of them after WW III) wipe out key sections.
It could still execute out of ROM, but eventually enough dust accumulates
(the filters clogged up long ago) to start shorting out pins. Even
if the machine stays clean and dry and cool, the chips themselves will
eventually fail because of trace contaminants in the packages or in
the silicon.
VAXes aren't designed to run for decades, nor is much else. About
the only things that are really designed to last for centuries are dams.
Not many moving parts in them. Barbarians might be impressed by
them, but are no more likely to worship them than people worshipped
Roman aqueducts in the Dark Ages.
/jlr
|
316.19 | Well, then again | PEN::KALLIS | | Wed Mar 26 1986 15:52 | 16 |
| Re .18:
Though I also looathe these post-holocaust stories about neobarbarians
worshipping technology, I could imagine a scenario where it might
work:
If WWIII holds off long enough, it'll all be in silicon. No moving
parts.
----------------------------------------------
Another possibility was spelled out chillingly in Leiber's _Gather,
Darkness_: the priests knew better (save perhaps the Fanatics),
but the (effectively Medieval) laity didn't.
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
316.20 | All in the mind | FSTVAX::OBERLIN | | Thu Apr 10 1986 18:51 | 45 |
| It's all in the mind
>To distinguish magic from technology, you must first define both. In
>particular, you would have to define "magic," and probably the words "natural"
>and "supernatural."
Clarke's idea that technology can be easily confused with magic
is indisputable. Given what 'inquiring minds want to know' in a culture
that sends men into space it should not be difficult to find someone to
convince that electricity is mearly channeled Salamanders or some such rot.
The problem with his statement, and what makes it so popular with
fictional authors, is that it suggests that 'magic' is a phenomenon.
It clearly is not. Magic does not exist, and cannot exist without such
restrictive definitions as to entirely loose its fictional character.
David Humes's remarks concerning miracles apply to magic as well.
A miracle or magical event must occur in the natural world, or we will
not observe it. Anything which occurs in the natural world, no matter
how improbable, or how contrary to 'natural law' is a natural event.
The fact that the 'impossible' happens - that objects start floating
towards the heavens for instance - does not mean that something
'supra' natural has occured, but rather that we have encountered an event
whose causes we do not understand. Only if we rigorously understood
ALL 'natural' phenonema could we distinguish the 'supra' natural.
I hardly believe that manipulating demons could qualify as
'supernatural' - if it could be done. In that case demons would exist
in nature. If a strict system of formal rules for demon control could
be developed, and if they had a high degree of reliability, I would
have no greater difficulty in believing in demon technology than that
matter is somehow composed of charming quarks. We take so many things
for granted that we do not observe and can barely comprehend that the
only clear distiction between 'natural' and 'supernatural' that makes
sense is that 'natural' is what happens and 'supernatural' is what
we read about in fantasy and science fiction and does not happen.
Magic is properly understood as an attitude towards an event which
is not explainable. It is an attitude which will rarely, if ever, be found
in people with even a rudement of scientific training - because the thought
processes of those with such training are largely incompatable with the
awe and mystery that surround 'magic'. If we encounter unexplainable
phenomena, we seek an explanation.
|
316.21 | Who's The Master Here? Me or The Word? | PEN::KALLIS | | Fri Apr 11 1986 12:16 | 22 |
| re .20:
Here we are with definitional problems again.
Let's take a good science-fictional example (the best, in fact),
the Lord D'Arcy series.
Here we have practicing magicians ("Sorcerers"). Tghe stuff they
call "magic" _is_ a science, using symbol manipulation, etc., to
work. It can be called something else, but the practitioners call
it "magic." Those who study "magic" seriously (e.g., certain
occultists) indicate they believe it is based on rigorous laws (keeping
"natural" out of it for the moment [:-)]).
"Magic" as outside-natural-laws is something a primitive might believe
in; we use "magic" as a term in that context for "miraculous."
And a sufficiently advanced technology _will_ be indistinguishable
to us from "magic," as just defined.
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
316.22 | tautologies and definitions | PROSE::WAJENBERG | | Fri Apr 11 1986 12:30 | 24 |
| Re .20
I don't understand your statement that magic "cannot exit without
such restrictive definitions as to lose its fictional character."
Please elucidate.
We are all free to frame our own definitions, of course, but you
have defined "nature" as "everything," and that doesn't seem useful
to me. At least, that is what I infer from "Anything which occurs
in the natural world is a natural event," and "the only clear
distinction between `natural' and `supernatural' that makes sense
is that `natural' is what happens and `supernatural' is what we
read about in fantasy and science fiction and does not happen."
It seems to me much more useful to define nature as a system and
so defining supernatural as the quality of things and events
interupting that system from outside. Of course, we don't know
exactly where the limits of that system are, which is what prompts
Clarke's aphorism. Also, many people feel that this system of material
bodies in space-time IS all that exists, but that is usually taken
as a matter of experimental fact, not of definitions and first
principles.
Earl Wajenberg
|
316.23 | | BEING::POSTPISCHIL | Always mount a scratch monkey. | Fri Apr 11 1986 13:46 | 16 |
| Re .22:
If you define nature as a system, what system are you going to define
it as? If you define it as everything we can see or touch or that
affects or is affected by what we can see or touch or might see or
might touch (i.e., the universe and its laws), then there will be no
magic. If you define nature as anything else (e.g., the objects and
laws we think we know now) and eventually find something outside
nature, the line you have drawn between nature and whatever else is
artificial; there is no more reason for the stuff outside your nature
to be called magic than there is to draw a circle around your house and
call everything outside of it magic. Of what use is an artificial
definition?
-- edp
|
316.24 | Wot! She turned me into a *newt*! | TROLL::RUDMAN | | Fri Apr 11 1986 14:29 | 28 |
| re: .21/.22 in re .20:
Gee. You 2 said almost everything I was gonna, and more.
"Magic does not exist..." Please show data.
Magic in D'arcy's world is "properly understood" technology. They
do not think of it as "magic", even though that's the label. Magic
has its own laws (thank you, Mr. Kallis) which do not adhere to our
Laws (yet?).
Our history is full of Magic. Like UFOs (which don't exist either),
there is so much "data" logic indicates the "where there's smoke.."
rule. True, many myths (past & present) were discovered to have
basis in fact.
Is identifying the location of a speed trap before you get to it
magic? I know 2 people who can do it. Do they detect the radar
(natural) or sense (magic) the cop/car being there?
How about saying that Magic is a technology using a different set
of natural laws? We call it "magic" because these laws are not
understood. Come to think of it, that's how "technology" historically
works!
Now, what was the original question again?
Don
|
316.25 | You're Welcome | PEN::KALLIS | | Fri Apr 11 1986 14:46 | 29 |
| re .24:
"Magic has its own laws ... that do not adhere to our laws (yet?)."
Actually, some of the "laws" of magic are very straightforward and
indeed were touched upon in the Lord D'Arcy continuum. One of these
is the "law of similarity." In it, it's said that "similar actions
produce similar results." Primitive tribes, for instance, may sprinkle
water on the ground to induce rain: a primitive form of an application
of the law of similarity.
In our known world, we employ a special-case version of that law:
the law of identicality: identical actions produce identical results.
It is that law (unrecognized by most) that allows us to repeat
experiments and achieve consistent results.
If magic works, and the law of similarity works, then the law of
identicality would be a special case of it, just as the Pythagorean
Theorem is a special case of thwe Law of Cosines. If the law of
similarity _doesn't_ work, it's like trying to extrapolate beyond
the accuracy of some figures.
I have an open mind on the _possibility_ of some form of symbolic
technology that would fit the classic description by occultists
(as opposed to fairy-tale tellers) as magic, but if it reallyy exists,
it's in a very rudimentary form, to be sure!
Styeve Kallis, Jr.
|
316.26 | Sometimes words are king | FSTVAX::OBERLIN | | Fri Apr 11 1986 14:49 | 59 |
| > I don't understand your statement that magic "cannot exist without
> such restrictive definitions as to lose its fictional character."
> We are all free to frame our own definitions, of course, but you
> have defined "nature" as "everything," and that doesn't seem useful
> to me.
> It seems to me much more useful to define nature as a system and
> so defining supernatural as the quality of things and events
> interupting that system from outside. Of course, we don't know
> exactly where the limits of that system are, which is what prompts
> Clarke's aphorism.
Let me make it perfectly clear that I am not an anti-magician. I
enjoy reading and speculation about magic.
However, the entire point of Clarke's aphorism is that the dictinction
between 'magic' and 'technology' is relative, that it rests on perception and
attitude. I doubt that Clarke ( who is hardly known for his fantasy novels )
is suggesting that there actually exists something called 'magic' which
could be confounded with an advanced technology. Rather he is suggesting that
when explanations are absent, or understanding limited, people are apt to
attribute phenomena to the supernatural. He could easily have substituted
miracles for magic and the aphorism would be unchanged.
Now, as to the problems with definition. 'Nature' can take on a
variety of meanings depending on the context. However, when the context is
that of what is 'in nature' vs what is 'not in nature' we are dealing
with metaphysics. In this context I believe the term should be construed to
mean 'everything in the observable or inferential universe'. This may not
be useful for a given point-of-view say that of defining something as
being 'unnatural' or 'super natural' but alternatives have problems too.
To define nature as a system is nice and reassuring, but I think
the boundry problems are rather severe. That is, to suggest something is
a system you need to identify components, identify relationships, and
particularly identify what is external to the system. Now when the
system you attempt to limit is 'nature' or the 'universe' you run into
some pretty thorny problems. I rather tend towards the views of Duns Scotas
the medievalist who suggested that it is rather arrogant of us to go
around describing the attributes of God. In the same way I don't see how
empiricism or the scientific method or any epistemological system is
going to enable us to say with confidence 'This is what is or can be' and
anything else must be super natural.
Does that mean that we cannot construct definitions of magic that
are sufficient, consistent, and useful. Obvoiusly not. But any such
definition is going to ruin the aphorism. Certainly we can call
innate 'powers' such as ESP or Telekinesis 'magic' and have the sanction
of history. Clearly manipulating Symbols or creatures to achieve our
ends can be seen as 'magic'. But, if we define what magic is - then when
confonted with a new technology we are unlikely to accept it as 'magic'
unless we are led to do so by charlatans. And of course, all of this
requires that we believe that our definitions actually have some reality.
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316.27 | the supernatural in FICTION | PROSE::WAJENBERG | | Fri Apr 11 1986 18:18 | 51 |
| I disagree about the inutility of defining nature as a system, but
that is pretty remote from the topic. It is certainly true that
Clarke's aphorism is only concerned with appearances.
However, within the realm of appearance, magic in fiction or fake-
magic in fiction is often portrayed as an interuption from outside
the normal world, if not from outside a metaphysically defined
"nature."
This is always the case, I think, with the Spirit Master kind of
magic, whether it is presented as real or presented as fake. The
spirit is a stranger in the mundane world and, in that sense at least,
an interuption.
The Secret Lore kind of magic is NOT presented to the reader as
an interuption from outside, of course, and may not appear so to
the other characters. The mythical and fictional figures that Harold
Shea encounters in the "Incompleat Enchanter" stories vary in their
reactions. There's the "Magic? Oh, sure, magic. I (do it myself)
/ (don't do it myself but see it all the time)." In which case
they really regard magic as we regard technology, but call it "magic"
because that's the traditional word for that sort of thing.
But others regard Shea as having Arcane Powers or as being a Spirit Master.
The Arcane Powers kind of magic is the most ambiguous. In "God
Stalk" by Hodgell, the people with the powers are the Kencyr. They
have arcane powers because God gave them long ago in another continuum.
The Kencyr are definitely magic from outside the world.
On the other hand, the witches in James Schimdt's "Witches of Karres"
have as their arcane power the ability to manipulate "klatha"
( = numen or mana), which is a naturally-occuring form of energy
unknown to most people except the witches and some of their contacts.
We have here a mingling of the Arcane Power and Secret Lore kinds of
magic. Klatha technology is Secret Lore but knowing the secret is
only of academic interest if you don't have the Arcane Power necessary
to sense and manipulate klatha.
On the other hand, the witches must cope with the Worm World and
with "vatches," both aliens to our own universe. If these things
are not strictly supernatural demons, they are certainly meant to
suggest them. In fact, this may be Clarke's Law coming in at two
levels and in two directions. Schmidt suggests demons while giving
them a scientific tinge as "aliens from another dimension" (Clarke's
Law in reverse, practiced on the reader), while within the book
most of the galaxy regards the Worm Worlders as genuine demons,
while the witches know the "demons" are just aliens from another
dimension (Clarke's Law straight, applied to the population of the
galaxy).
Earl Wajenberg
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316.28 | soul rider | CACHE::MARSHALL | beware the fractal dragon | Thu Jul 10 1986 11:25 | 6 |
| sorry to be so late...
Anybody read Chalker's SOUL RIDER series. This is a good example
of where Magic and Technology get confused (as well as SF vs F)?
sm
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