That's a good way to think about it actually. I guess what I'm suggesting is that magic is real, it's just all "hard magic," and is thus explainable. — MrLiminal
But here's the problem. "Hard magic" is a term that people from the world of Fantasy literature just made up, on the fly, as the "Fantasy equivalent" to Hard Science Fiction. Because there are two basic kinds of Sci-Fi literature, as far as I'm concerned (I could be wrong, though): Hard Sci-Fi and Soft Sci-Fi. I'm not a Science Fiction person myself, so I wouldn't know how to "best" explain that difference. But, what I do understand, is that authors of Fantasy literature wanted to sort of capitalize on that distinction (and mediatic debate) to advance their own "cause", which is the improvement of sales of Fantasy books. Because Fantasy as a literary genre competes with Science Fiction, it always has, and probably always will (well I'm being really reckless with my language in those last sentences, but you get my point in general)
Once we properly understand it, it ceases to be magic — MrLiminal
Exactly, it ceases to be Hard Magic and instead it turns into Hard Sci-Fi. Which I, as an amateur Fantasy author, is something that I have to reject on principle, because it could affect my earnings. That being said, there's a hybrid genre called Science Fantasy, or Fantasy Science, but it's just not my thing.
magic only exists in ignorance. — MrLiminal
And that is the sad truth. Ignorance is something that should be "solved" through education, which means that if you're a Fantasy author, there is magic in your world, even if you write in the Hard Fantasy subgenre. But that means, by the rules of Hard Fantasy, that in your world, most people are ignorant. Now, are they existentially ignorant? If so, then in those worlds there is room for fantasy religions, as in, made up religions, with made up gods. Think of it like Hesiod's Theogony.
What frustrates me is the way science and religion so often approach similar truths but refuse to work together because of their ideological differences. — MrLiminal
Yes, I know what you mean. I never had that problem myself, I'm 100% on the science team. But what you describe is an experience (since you actually feel it, if it's literally a frustration) sounds like the experience that William James had when he was attempting to reconcile his beliefs as a scientist with his beliefs as a spiritualist. The solution is, from my personal POV, to abandon spiritualism and become a literalist. That's what I am, a literalist instead of a spiritualist. Think of it like the difference between the Letter of the Law and the Spirit of the Law. Which team sounds more "legit", from your personal POV? (Don't take my word for it, though, I could be wrong about this)
We're learning now that the alchemists were right about an awful lot if you actually bother to follow their instructions, they were just wrong about the reasons why, as it turns out. — MrLiminal
Yes, Alchemy was never a pseudo-science. It was a proto-science. You have three basic
scientia or
episteme, if you will: science, proto-science, and pseudo-science. The difference between the latter two is that proto-sciences can eventually become sciences, and this is by definition, while pseudo-sciences can never become sciences, and this is also by definition. Alchemy turned into chemistry. It's not a case of a pseudo-science becoming a science (that's impossible), it's a case of a proto-science turning into a science. Those who practiced alchemy in the Middle Ages came predominantly from the Muslim world. They did not see their own practice, -alchemy-, as magic. They saw it as
scientia, as
episteme. In simple terms, they never saw their own craft as Witch-craft. They saw it as similar to what the ancient Greek scientists were doing, think Archimedes or Euclid.
On the topic of wolves: I agree. Wolves should not be demonized. No animal should be demonized. Animals are not demons. To demonize animals is to commit a moral crime as a person. I would go as far as to phrase it in those terms, but I'm passionate about Nature, so maybe I'm going too far here.