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themagicwand wrote:But then I'm not a magician.
Part-Timer wrote:The tech savvy thread is not statistically significant. The people who have responded are a "self-selecting" group and I think that people who are comfortable dealing with formulae and understanding technical articles are more likely to reply than people who are not.
There have been only half a dozen responses to that thread, so I am going to put on my "real world" hat and suggest that this is might indicate that the magicians that come to this forum are often not from technical backgrounds (and/or can't be bothered to fill in such surveys). I thought about adding my answers, but weird things like medical skills being grouped with emotions and counselling, rather than science and logic, put me off. I also didn't understand the dividing lines between some of the possible replies. Hell, I didn't understand some of the questions - what is a "technical article" anyway? A doctor of medicine might struggle to follow a piece on how to construct a large hadron collider, for example.
Tomo wrote:I could enthuse about the cross pollination of ideas all day.![]()
History is littered with the evidence that the greatest innovations happen at the interface between disciplines. Progress in is evolutionary, not revolutionary, though it may look that way. For example, I went to a SciBar lecture recently where the lecturer, who discovered that some dinosaurs had stripes, told us us that he'd never have made the breakthrough unless he'd been working at Manchester Uni. That's because it's organised in a deliberately loose faculty structure, so if you're talking to someone about their work in another area and they have a technique you realise might be useful to you, you're encouraged to collaborate across disciplines. In his case palaeontology and trace metal detection, which in turn yields useful information about how to safely store nuclear waste for millions of years. Genius!
This is why I know that people who desperately want to keep the subtypes of magic separate are just plain wrong. the most satisfying entertainment is always a blend. Though people can come up with new directions alone, it's generally when they get together, chat, collaborate and innovate that wonderful new effects happen. It never happens when people desperately try to stop that cross pollination happening.
Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic.
TonyB wrote:. I always felt that magic attracted nerds, .
MiKo wrote:Summing up: don't think that "scientific people" are not creative, they just apply their creativity in a different way (and not all of them: I myself have been in a classical choir, taken choir directing classes, attended theatre courses, studied literature, write a blog...). And I can tell that what appeals to me of my job as a mathematician is exactly that creative process and the challenges that it poses to my mind. I mostly blame the schools and bad teachers for the image of aridness that mathematics have. And in my opinion the reason for which people with a scientific mindset are attracted to magic is their perpetual struggle to understand to which extent they can push the limits of what human being can do and what the human mind can know.
Science is a very human form of knowledge. We are always at the brink of the known. We always feel forward for what is to be hoped. Every judgement in science stands on the edge of error and it is personal. Science is a tribute to what we can know although we are fallible.
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