Science is the refutation of magic. It is entirely wrongheaded to think of magic in terms of scientific laws and properties.
Incorrect, it is not. Magic is, at least anthropologically, a system of explaining events or an alternative involving spirits. Even the reverse you stated, "magic is the refutation of science" is false. But I really do not want to get into a thermodynamic and metaphysics argument on here. I merely ask that you take into account not everyone believes science negates magic and vice versa.
Perhaps my phrasing was unclear. I should have said that magic is the refutation of science.
I don't give two half damns about your definition of science or your classes on magic, I am talking about the mythos here and you should be too. This is a collection of works - video games, text documents, visual art - which represent a "fictional universe" and very intentionally do so in a manner which is inconsistent within itself and impossible to codify into any sort of rules. You simply cannot attempt to apply science to this mythos because it is the explicit intention of its authors that science be inapplicable.
Magic is not alternative physics. Maybe you know other definitions of "magic," but when I say "magic" I mean that which cannot be systematized.
Perhaps you should care, because to do otherwise is ignorant. You're expecting us to swallow your definition. And honestly, you're turning this thread into something it wasn't intended to. I set specific guidelines, and you may be talking about the mythos, which is related, but not in a way that is relevant. And don't you think it a little silly not to attempt to look at it in a different way?
It is a fictional universe. No one is denying that. But you can apply some science to explain things unless otherwise stated or expressed to behave differently. Yes, "it's magic" is more than enough an answer. But what if it doesn't explain it? I seriously fail to see why you're so infuriatingly eager, pompously, why you cannot see it is actually rather understandable and perfectly fine to apply what we know works to what we don't know how it works. No one is trying to ruin anything in the TES universe. And some things have already been proven to work exactly like they do in our world. When someone comes up with a theory of something somewhat unknown or even majorly unknown regarding TES Lore, they do so in a manner that is familiar to them and what makes sense -- what works. It is precisely why I made the extraneous comment regarding life inhabiting other planets.
And yes, magic is an alternative physics, lol. And you can even judge magic by science in our world. People already have. People explain it by altering everything magic and giving it a physics equivalent. They're not trying to separate magic, but explain how it could work.
Well you can't do that either. I mean, things fall down, right? But that's not because of gravity, that's because the reader expects things to fall down.
Things fall down, except when they don't. That's why science doesn't apply.
Obviously, TES has an equivalent of gravity. It may not be gravity, but it is an equivalent. This is how we understand things fall down in TES. And no, things don't always fall. This is where magic comes in.
I really ask that you just please calm down and understand that we.. We... Darnit, I yawned and forgot everything I was going to say. And it was so perfect, too. Anyways... I ask that you stop thinking about how wrong something may seem and try understanding all it may be is changing things, whether names or how they work. I am not going to use science to explain the stars in TES. To be honest, I don't know much about them. Now, could I attempt, should I learn about them, to give a rational explanation? Sure. Does it change anything or make it any less fiction if I try to use science to break it down? Not in my opinion. It's like trying to explain how magic works in TES, like a flame touch, or whatever else.
To be honest, I failed quite well in explaining all of this. I am almost 48 hours without sleep, I've been quite sick, class, work, headaches, etc.... The point is, I'm normally a lot better, lol.
What Quimper is trying to say, I think, is that magic should be magical and fantasy fantastical. Normalizing fantasy and explaining magic sorta kills the poin
I think to the contrary, normalizing it makes it even more exciting to me, as well as more magical. It doesn't take away from the magic, but gives into the wonders that it is.