by Mr_Grue » Feb 16th, '07, 18:01
One of the big ironies mentioned in Hiding The Elephant is the catch 22 that magicians find themselves in when staking a claim to originality. If they were working in any other field then they would trip merrily to the patent office and file for one, but patents are public documents, so if someone had a mind to steal an effect all they would have to do was make the necessary search at the office. I guess that's why the magicians' community is so important; offering a sort of peer review system that can (lightly) police claims of originality.
I'd have thought with card sleights especially people must spontaneously happen upon pre-existing methods all the time...
Oh, and sometimes erroneous claims of originality are made by third parties, such as the so called Kellar rope tie which he in fact learnt from the Davenport Brothers, who learnt it from their father, who (according to Barnum) learnt it off of an Amerindian. Ira Davenport Senior was a constable, though, so I suspect he may have learnt the escape from a convict. Conjecture, I assure you. I'm rambling...
Simon Scott
If the spectator doesn't engage in the effect,
then the only thing left is the method.
tiny.cc/Grue