When you concentrate you also ignore stuff.

(we all concentrate, for work, play, reading, studying, school … we practice it in school … people who are good at it are “good workers”…)

But you call it CONCENTRATION instead of IGNORING because the stuff you concentrate on gets easy-to-see but the stuff you ignore sorta fades away (and then you stop thinking about it, and then it disappears).

The stuff you concentrate on is relatively small. A book. An idea. A game. An attractive girl’s butt. A plan for the future. A tv show.

And that stuff getting ignored is relatively HUGE. Like a whole invisible universe there.

It’s spooky when you think of it. Like a little bit of DIY brain surgery that everybody does but nobody talks about. Like we’re all a bunch of Harry Potters casting obliviate upon ourselves.

And then we forgot that we cast it, because it’s obliviate.

So tell me what you think.

  • bionicjoey
    link
    fedilink
    arrow-up
    1
    ·
    10 months ago

    Personally I would define magic as “physical phenomena which cannot be explained by science”.

    I like this definition because it doesn’t exclude things we have simply not yet been able to explain with science. In other words, nothing. There are no physical phenomena in the universe which science is not equipped to explain. Magic isn’t real.

    • Dr_Satan@lemm.eeOP
      link
      fedilink
      arrow-up
      2
      arrow-down
      4
      ·
      10 months ago

      Assuming that any real phenomenon can be rendered by my (scientific etc) model, any phenomenon that cannot be thus rendered must be unreal.

      Hmm?

      • bionicjoey
        link
        fedilink
        arrow-up
        2
        ·
        10 months ago

        Is there a question here? If so, you need to ask it in a more coherent way.

        Also I’m pretty sure you’re using the word “rendered” wrong. I’ve never seen it used to mean “explained”