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@Phoenks brought to my attention that the current definition we use for magic is "The ability to allow manipulating aspects of reality (or all of them), bypassing the known laws of physics."
Now, I think it's most people's understanding that magic is incredibly vague, and how it interacts with abstracts like laws and concepts depends heavily on the verse.
For that reason, I propose the small change of simply adding 'often' before the second part of the sentence, as well as changing the grammar to be a little smoother while we're here:
"The ability to manipulate certain aspects of reality (or all of them), often bypassing the known laws of physics."
I have problems with the definition in general too, but I'll save that for a different thread.
Updated Proposal:
"The ability to manipulate aspects of reality, bypassing real-life laws of physics, using a system reliably referred to as 'magic' or some synonym (e.g. witchcraft, sorcery)."
Now, I think it's most people's understanding that magic is incredibly vague, and how it interacts with abstracts like laws and concepts depends heavily on the verse.
"The ability to manipulate certain aspects of reality (or all of them), often bypassing the known laws of physics."
I have problems with the definition in general too, but I'll save that for a different thread.
Updated Proposal:
"The ability to manipulate aspects of reality, bypassing real-life laws of physics, using a system reliably referred to as 'magic' or some synonym (e.g. witchcraft, sorcery)."
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