Proseksword wrote:Killer Cyborg wrote:So what's "Intellect"?
http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/Intellectthe power or faculty of the mind by which one knows or understands, as distinguished from that by which one feels and that by which one wills; the understanding; the faculty of thinking and acquiring knowledge.
Read the passage you quote yourself. The power or faculty of the mind. The mind is the brain, there, boy-o. ".....one knows or understands..." hmm, sounds a lot like memorizing & learning, doesn't it?
Sure.
Now read the other part:
" as distinguished from that by which one feels and that by which one wills"
Magic is more of an art than a science
Sure, you can learn and memorize stuff, but the magic itself is primarily a manifestation of the mage's will.
Which is why some people take to it naturally, and others never will no matter how much they study.
That's also why the most important aspects of magic are Belief and Conviction, not Reading and Writing.
Yes, you have to train yourself to use magic (usually).
But you also have to train yourself to ride a bicycle.
That may or may not make it an intellectual act, but even if it is, reading is in no way required, and isn't necessarily even helpful.
Magic is about Will more than it's about knowing and/or understanding.
May well be, but you obviously have to
learn the spell if you are a Ley Line Walker. Whilst the first two steps to learning magic given in RUE are Belief and Conviction, the fifth is understanding, which means to know and comprehend, both intellectual activities.
The actual casting of the spell is purely an act of the mind.
The hand gestures and speech components of the spells are only there to help the mage with his own belief and focus.
You don't have to learn them correctly, you just have to believe that you have learned them correctly.
I see you quoted the part about 70% of spellcasters being illiterate from RUE, but is that really what the section says?
Actually, I was quoting the original Rifts book, and yes that's what it says.
I'll quote it exactly for you:
Rifts, p. 165
"Magic scrolls are extremely uncommon for two reasons. 1) A good many practitioners of magic are illiterate (about 70%). 2) Few are willing to write a spell incantation down for fear the other mages will learn the spell from the scroll."
[quote RIFTs Ultimate Edition, pg.191]
One reason is that most people, including many practitioners of magic, are illiterate (about 70%).
That statement is inclusory, which is to say it is referring to all people, including practitioners of magic, so 70% of all people are illiterate, not mages.[/quote]
Yup, apparently they changed the wording in RUE.
In fact, the Ley Line Walker O.C.C. describes many LLWs as Literate and students of the sciences, hardly the description of someone getting by on force of will alone.
Already addressed.
I pointed out that while
many LLWs are literate, many
mages are not LLWs.
And I went on to point out that many Mystics believe that too much education blocks them from the world around them.
It also references mages being less than willing to write down Spell Scrolls because they are afraid of other magic users learning the spell from it,
Yes.
Which would also apply to spell books in general.
but since the purpose of a Spell Scroll is to allow a non-magic user the ability to cast a spell, it's easy to see why they wouldn't be all that common in the first place, and with the added danger of leaking information, you'd refuse to produce them.
Where does it say that?
On the other hand, it talks about how one of the main selling points of Magic Guilds is Mystic Books one can have access to if one joins up.
Yup.
Because they're rare.
It's a perk, but only for literate mages who are the guild-joining type.
That's a real-world I.Q. of 100.
Which means you can be a professional mage without a lot of intellect.
For that matter, Mystics only need a 9, which is a real-world I.Q. of 90, which is pretty darn dull.
People in the I.Q. 90-100 range generally aren't big readers.
On the other hand, I would say that the majority of the worlds people with a 100+ I.Q. are literate, also, this is a minimun requirement, not an average by any means. All it is saying is that Ley Line Walkers can't be stupid. Why? Because it's an
intellectual pursuit.
Hey, as I've said, if you stretch the definition to "anything that involves learning", then there's precious little that' NOT "an intellectual pursuit".
So if you're going by that definition, then yeah, magic can be considered an intellectual pursuit, but that doesn't really mean much, certainly not that mages need to be literate.
Mages are a lot like the Coalition that way; they want to hold onto their power, not share it.
Actually, the description of Tolkeen in Coalition War Campaign 6 lists no less than ten Magic Universities, the largest structure in the City of Lazlo is a Magic University, and Dweomer likewise has it's magic academies. I'd say that it's pretty obvious that the most prosperous magic Kingdoms are those who share their knowledge.
The Tolkeen books are messed up ten ways to Tuesday, and unless the population of Tolkeen is freakin' HUGE, then having ten universities makes no kind of sense.
Or unless any group of mages who want to teach count as a "university", which would mean that they have 10 glorifited covens.
As for Lazlo.. meh.
Chi-Town has a university too.
Does that mean most of the population is likely to be literate?
Let me know if you find it.
Couldn't find it, but looked only briefly, I'd think it would have to be higher than Manistique, which has a literacy rating of 74% (if I remember correctly). If 34% of Tolkeen's populace is listed as "Scholars, Scientists & Educators", then that's 34% of the population right there, and if you have educators, then you have education, and generally speaking, that means literacy.
If 34% of the population are scholars, scientists, and educators, then yeah... you're likely to have
abnormally high literacy rates among the mages in that area.