> Eva wrote [reformatted to look nice on my screen as I type]:
> > Well, I don't know about David L.'s pet math system, but his 
> > inclusion of magic within science is in line with a goodly num- 
> > ber of writers on the topic (magic).  Aleister Crowley defines 
> > magic as the art of causing change in accordance with Will, and 
> > thus subsumes under its heading all conscious action, but not 
> > habitual, random, instinctive, or otherwise unconscious action.  
> > I have been doing a lot of thinking about magic recently, which 
> > is how I ended up on this list, as well as how I ended up in the 
> > UU church and reading books on myth, satire, and mental illness 
> > (my idea of studying magic is only getting broader as I go).  
> > I have concluded that a successful magician is a person whose 
> > conscious and unconscious desires are in tune with one another, 
> > so that eir efforts are directed toward eir goals, rather than 
> > engaged in intrapersonal conflict.  I think this may be the 
> > same thing as being Level 3.  
> >
> > On the other hand, most writers treat magic as a kind of activity 
> > or belief system, usually distinct from religion but analogous to 
> > it in some important ways, such as involving 'the supernatural'.  
> > Frazer (_Golden Bough_) set up the canonical distinction, which 
> > I've now seen quoted elsewhere several times: in Religion, the 
> > individual is petitioning a deity for something; in Magic, e 
> > is attempting to make it happen emself by effectively using 
> > materials and forces available.  Writers attempting to define 
> > what magic is generally get bogged down in distinguishing it 
> > not only from religion, but also from Science, which similarly 
> > works with forces at hand in the individual and the universe, 
> > disregarding divine intervention.  Another mode of thought/
> > activity that crops up in such discussions is Art.  Different 
> > writers define them all differently with regard to one another.  
> > Perhaps the major difficulty is that each of the four is not 
> > one thing itself--each is a cluster of attitudes, beliefs, 
> > behaviours, and produced works, and an individual object, 
> > procedure, or text may have aspects of all four.
> 
> Having thought some more on it, here is the difference between 
> science and magic, as I see it: 
> 
> - Science shows us "how to do it", then talks about theories of 
>   "why it worked", none of which are to be taken very seriously, 
>   since all that really matters is: "we know how to do it".
> - Magic explains to us "why it will work", then talks about 
>   theories of "how to do it", none of which are to be taken
>   very seriously, since all that really matters is: "we know 
>   why it will work."
> 
> Open question: is that a fundamentally wrong way of looking at it, 
> and if so, then is there any literature available which actually 
> shows the reader "how to do magic", and doesn't frog around with 
> discussing the "why" until afterword?
1) The first recorded hint of a distinction in writing is in the 4th 
century BC, Greece [Aristotle, Archimedes, Ptolemy, et.al.]  Many 
religious rightists find this threatening to their worldview.
2) Operationally, [I am loosely imitating someone Polish from an anthology I 
own on this subject]:
    Procedures used in Science try to work with/blend in with Nature.
    Procedures used in Magic try to defy Nature.  This is necessarily a 
more difficult task, and usually needs liberal use of the Observer Effect.
    I think Science [in the above sense] got into full gear sometime 
between 1500 and 1550,
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/   Kenneth Boyd
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