by seige » Apr 22nd, '06, 14:54
Magic is an illusion.
A big misconception is: "That's impossible!" Which is a great reaction to get! However, is it? Are we performing the impossible, or are we performing an illusion... more at the end of my post.
Magicians are not liars. We simply omit the truth from our magic. It's not lying, it's a simple deception.
i.e. if you perform a coin vanish, you are simply decieving your audience into believing the coin has gone. It's an act, because you are in control of the deception. You act over the deception, which is, perhaps, that you've got the coin backpalmed. However, by omitting this information (the actual mechanics of the effect) you are'nt lying... you're simply not telling the whole truth.
Mindreading for me is a good example: again, depending on how you perform, this can be seen as a decption, or a lie, or both, or neither... example:
1. You ask the spectator to think of an object and write it down. You tell them you will, by the powers you've been given, replicate their drawing.
This is both a lie, and a deception... it's a lie because you CANNOT read their mind, and you have no special powers. It's a deception, because you are actually gaining knowledge about what they drew by untold and secret means.
Therefore, you are LYING by saying you have powers, and that you are extracting the info from them telepathically, and you are DECEIVING them by taking a peek, or using a stooge.
2. You perform the same effect, WITHOUT mentioning being a mindreader or somesuch empowered psychic. You never mention the method you are using, you just do it.
In this case, you are neither lying or deceiving... you are never saying you will do anything, and you're making no claims about methods.
So, in case two, because there is no lie or deception, does that qualify as magic?
I see the biggest misconception in magic as being that magician's have special powers. Now, I am not talking about people actually BELIEVING this (although in many cultures, magic IS believed to be performed by people with special powers). I am talking more about magicians who purport to HAVE special powers.
For me, it's all about illusion. Illusion is a much better word that deceive or lie.
Illusion is less of a negative word, and covers a myriad of magic (if not all). And taken in the context of "By putting apple juice in his whisky tumbler, he gave the ILLUSION that there was scotch in there" it is plain to see that all we as magicians are doing is creating a temporary illusion with whatever we do:
1. Card vanish—giving the ILLUSION that a card has disappeared
2. Needle thru arm—giving the ILLUSION that a needle penetrates flesh
3. Sponge ball multiplication—the ILLUSION that one ball becomes many
4. ESP—the ILLUSION that you are reading a spectators thoughts
5. Levitation—the ILLUSION of someone rising from the ground
6. Professor's nightmare—the ILLUSION of ropes changing length
and so on.
Therefore, my own view is that it's all covered by this one word.
Magicians are illusionists. The misconception of whether your public believe you are in possession of magic powers is their own, but if you keep it real and perform with the attitude that it's all an illusion, you are much more truthful.
Magicians are not the only illusionists. As mentioned, actors are illusionists, movies are illusions, salesmen (yes! they give you the illusion that what you are buying is worth the price!), and many other professions are the same.
Again, my old famous Sherlock Holmes quote helps me work out what is a good effect and what isn't:
"Eliminate the impossible, and whatever is left, no matter how improbable, is the truth"
Example: one of my favourite effects is a simple lit cigarette vanish into the spectators shirt/blouse/sweater/hanky. Now, the spectator has a lit cigarette pushed into the fabric of their clothes, and yet when you show your empty hands and an unburned garment, the reaction is 'that's impossible!'
But it isn't impossible at all. Because I've just done it. By performing the illusion, it's obviously not impossible because I've just MADE it possible.
Therefore, yes—it is improbable. It is improbable that I've made the cigarette vanish into thin air, granted.
So, eliminating the word 'impossible' the spectator knows that it's pure skill and sleight of hand which accomplishes the illusion.
By CLAIMING to do the impossible (which, by virtue of it's own dictionary definition, it is not possible to do!) I am lying.
Performing the impossible is simply not possible!
I believe, therefore, that a magician's role is to prove that things are NOT impossible! It's the art of the possible which we deal with here. Making impossible things possible is a magician's role.
So for me, the biggest lie in magic is magicians who CLAIM to do the impossible.
The lateral thinking, scientific spectator will know that you're simply not able to play with physics. A coin CANNOT physically penetrate a sheet of glass. That would be IMPOSSIBLE. However, by creating the ILLUSION of a coin passing through a sheet of glass is very possible.
Ergo, a MAGICIAN is an ILLUSIONIST who proves the IMPOSSIBLE is POSSIBLE.