Nightmask wrote:eliakon wrote:Nightmask wrote:eliakon wrote:Only if you choose to interpret magic as working that way. Which is to say you argue that magic = physics (which the books say is not true)
The books don't say that.
That is what the statement "incomprehensible to science means'
It is, well incomprehensible. Physics is comprehensible to science. Chemistry is comprehensible. Magic though....it is incomprehensible.
It doesn't get much clearer than that
That doesn't equate to 'magic violates physics', you may need it to mean that to support your end goal but that's not what it actually means.
Actually it pretty much does mean that
If it follows the laws of science, then it would be, by definition 'comprehensible to science' The only way that it can NOT be comprehensible to science is if it doesn't follow the same laws.
Nightmask wrote:eliakon wrote:Nightmask wrote:eliakon wrote:Nightmask wrote:There is nothing one can point to and say that the magic isn't actually being used up and converted into the desired result
You mean other than the fact that there is not a single line of text anywhere that says that magic energy is transformed into the end product
Because there's no need for such a redundant statement, PPE (magical energy) is spent, i.e. used the only logical conclusion is the magical energy is used up in producing the end result.
That is not how logic works though.
Logic does not say "well there isn't anything that says what I want to support. But since it is one of many plausible outcome, then we will just say its the only one."
As I have said there are other options on how it works. If there are other options provided, then it is, by definition, not 'the only logical conclusion'
Also please note that 'used up in producing the end result' =/= 'is transformed into the output'
No, logic says when you have something and one outcome requires more assumptions than another then it's generally wrong, as the better explanation covers more of the facts given. You've not provided other equally logical conclusions because you've not provided conclusions that require no assumptions or gimmicking with things to support.
Except that your not providing an outcome with less assumptions. Your providing an outcome with the same number of assumptions.
I have 2 assumptions magic =/= science (supported), and ppe =/= transformed into energy
you have 2: magic=/= science, ppe is transformed
hmmmm, looks like they have the same number of assumptions there....
Nightmask wrote:Also note that yes, without evidence otherwise, 'used up in producing end result' does mean 'transformed into the output'.
No it doesn't. Things can be used up in producing end result that are not transformed into the end result.
That this is possible (my coal example) proves that these are separate concepts. You can not prove one and then claim that its proof of the other. You need to prove each one separately
Nightmask wrote:eliakon wrote:Nightmask wrote:eliakon wrote:Nightmask wrote:certainly one can't expect to play with semantics and go 'well they used the word 'create' so it can only mean it's violating the law of conservation of matter and energy and adding new matter and energy to the universe' and expect it to be taken seriously.
When the book says that it creates something
AND when the book says that it defies science
Then the logic is that the book is right. It is up to YOU to prove that the book is wrong. (simply saying "I don't like what is written, so I will change it to say something else that means what I want it to" is not a logicial argument)
Except for the small problem that your claim that the book says magic creates energy from nothing and is not used up or converted into other energies is that the book doesn't even remotely say that. The FACT is the book doesn't say that magical energy isn't used up and doesn't get converted into the energy it brings about nor does it say that the spells that create things are violating the physical laws in that regard either. That's YOU saying that's what you THINK the books are saying because you've an end result of 'magic is special, so special it's a finite and immutable energy that can do things but never be used up'.
*Sigh*
1) the book does say that it creates things. As I have said the book says 'creates' The burden of proof is on you to prove that the words the book use (Creates) do not in fact mean create, but instead really mean transform.
2)the book does not say that magic is used up either. Thus a contention that PPE is used up is an affirmative contention, and requires proof to support it.
3) Simply saying "no" is not a logical rebuttal.
1) Again, no. The book does not say creates means 'violates the laws of conservation of matter and energy', that's you saying it means that. No one hearing you say you created something would arrive at such a conclusion, being magic doesn't mean it carries that as a inherent condition either.
2) Of course it does, it says 'you expend X amount of PPE to generate Y effect'. YOU are the one using the affirmative contention, saying 'well PPE isn't being used up' in direct contraction of what's actually written.
3) Good thing I haven't simply been saying 'no' then, I've been saying 'No, you don't get to change the meanings of things to suit your desired outcome and have to use the actual meanings of them.'
1a) Then cite proof, in the books, that creation does not mean creation.
1b) yes, yes it does say that it violates the laws of physics. If it violates the laws of physics, then the presumption is not that it follows them...
2) The PPE is expended, that is not in doubt. What is in doubt is what that means, specifically
3) Except that's not what your doing. Your saying "No I don't like that the book actually says magic is not science. So I am ignoring that. Then because I ignore that I can go on and say that magic is science. Oh and while I am on it I can say that the book used the wrong word for something (create) and it really meant to say 'transforms'" YOUR the one that is changing the meaning of words (create means transform. Used up means transform....)
Nightmask wrote:eliakon wrote:Nightmask wrote:eliakon wrote:Nightmask wrote:We can see magic go in and energy come out, what we don't see is PPE go in, the same PPE come out AND energy on top of that.
Half right. We see
usable PPE expended to perform/power magic effects, and those magic effects have something happen. We do not know what happens to the PPE after word. It could be converted, or it could be dispersed back to the 'cosmic pool' or maybe it travels to the nearest ley line to gather up and be recycled.....
But the point is that there is not enough information to KNOW. (And there is not one WORD that says that it is converted into its effects)
You're resorting to word games and fallacies there. A spell is cast, PPE is used up, and without anything to support the implausible things you keep suggesting we must go with the simplest and most reasonable conclusion, since by observation we see PPE used up and spell effects happen then the PPE is converted into whatever energies or work the spell outputs. Otherwise you might as well argue magical undetectable pixies just happen to come along when a spell is cast and rush about doing all the work with the PPE as payment because it's as equally unprovable and unsupported by what we do so.
Claiming that "well this one option that I like is obviously correct because I like it better than any other" is logical is a fallacy.
The only thing that the books support is that PPE is used to produce magical effects.
It is YOUR personal contention that it works a specific way. The fact is that there are other ways that it could work. That means that you will need to support your contention.
And the most important thing here is to note that you are coflating two different claims
Except I haven't been making such a claim, YOU have. You're claiming, without any evidence to support it and contrary to the actual evidence that your claim that somehow there's an ambiguity that isn't actually there is somehow equally valid. It's not. Prove to me that unseen magical fairies actually steal photons of light and are really the cause of solar cells working. You can't because it's not possible. You can't prove that your 'magic isn't really used up in a spell' contention has any actual validity to it because there's nothing to support the magical fairies you're making up to try and create an ambiguity.
Your attempting to use a red herring (photocells, which are not the same thing, they are totally different) to prove a different concept
The case at hand is not a question of how photocells work (we know that through science) but how spells work (for that we need to look at magic) your trying to apply the rules of science to a scientific process and then generalize it as proof that magic rules in magical processes are identical.
eliakon wrote:Nightmask wrote:But as we've noted before we're not going to agree on this, since you can't meet the minimum burden of proof necessary to support your claims and try to argue things that aren't in evidence as if they are. If you ever do though I will certainly consider it but nothing so far qualifies.
I don't think you understand what the word 'burden of proof' means.
I have shown
1) that the books say magic violates the laws of physics
2) that magic is explicatly said to create things
3) that magic is not said to be transformed into energy
4) with page citations
That is the burden of proof. I have defended my presumptive claim. To argue that you need to then provide your own proof. Proof is evidence not "well I don't like that" or "I don't agree" or "that's not true" You have to actually be able to point to a book and say "No here in book x on page y it says this and that counters your claim of z"
When you can do that we can have a logical debate. Until then its just you dismissing all evidence that is contrary to your stance as 'nuh uh'
(just to be clear the statement
Nightmask wrote:You say all that as if it means anything when it doesn't.
is not proof that a statement is wrong.....)
Nightmask wrote:[quote=eliakon"]
Nightmask wrote:1) The books don't say magic violates the laws of conversation of matter and energy.
False. The books explicitly say that magic is incomprehensible to science. The books explicity say that magic can create things. Thus magic is not only not bound to the laws of physics but demonstrably violates it.
True. Magic being incomprehensible by current science doesn't equate to 'magic violate the physical laws of the universe including the law of Conservation of Energy and Matter'. The book saying magic can create things does not say it does so by violating said law either. Since neither A nor B are true neither can be used as proof of C. Even if magic demonstrably violated Physical Law X that doesn't mean it violates Physical Law Y, particularly unrelated physical laws. You can't point to anything that says magic explicitly violates the Conservation Law, all you can do is point to things and go "I take that to mean it does', you taking it to mean it does doesn't make it so.[/quote]
Um yes it does. It quite literally does.
If it followed the laws of physics, if it followed the same rules. Then it would be comprehensible by science (note it says by science, not by current science, but by science period dot end of story)
Nightmask wrote:eliakon wrote:Nightmask wrote:2) The books again don't say magic violates the laws of conservation of matter and energy when it creates things, you assemble a clock from a collection of parts you've created a clock but at no point did you violate the laws of conservation of matter and energy to create said clock.
Then it is up to you to prove that this is how it works. The books say it creates something. Some of them describe how that creation works. Some of them do not have any description other than 'create'
No, you have to prove that create means 'violates the law of conservation of matter and energy'. Since the law actually is a law you have to provide actual proof that something violates it, and your 'well I think that's what 'create' means' doesn't qualify.
My proof is simple
If magic follows the laws of science Then magic would be comprehensible to science
Magic is Not comprehensible to science
Therefore magic does not follow the laws of physics
Corallary
If magic does not follow the laws of physics then Magic is not required to follow the law of conservation of energy
Magic does not follow the laws of physics
Therefore: magic is not required to follow the law of conservation of energy
Nightmask wrote:eliakon wrote:Nightmask wrote:3) It doesn't have to be said, that's explicitly obvious when you cast a spell and energy is the result.
False. If you want the PPE to be
transformedinto energy you will need some support for that. Otherwise all we know is that you cast a spell and you get energy. But we do not know HOW that is done. And it is false to claim otherwise.
True. If you want PPE to NOT be transformed into energy you need support for that. Logically when presented with 'Energy is Spent, work comes out' we conclude that the energy is transformed into the work that comes out including other energy. It is not logical to say 'well energy went in, work came out, but we don't know that anything happened with that energy it's likely it still exists unchanged and unused'.
You are changing the terms again
PPE used up to provide an effect is not proof that the PPE is turned directly into that effect
This goes back to my analogy of coal and electricity. Coal is not directly turned into electricity. If it is therefore possible for some things to power other things with out them being directly turned into the end product then it is not mandatory that such transformation be a necessary end state of any such event.
It then requires proof positive from the claimant that such is the case.
Nightmask wrote:eliakon wrote:Nightmask wrote:4)Which were meaningless since none of those citations actually say anything that actually supports what you claim.
As I have said repeatedly simply saying "no I don't like that" is not proof of a failure of my evidence
To counter my claims you will need to actually provide evidence that counters my evidence. That's how it works.
Except I'm not saying 'No I don't like that', I'm saying 'No, those don't support your claims and don't mean what you insist they mean'. See, first you actually have to provide evidence that doesn't require you creating your own special meaning for it to validate your claim, you are creating your own special meaning the moment you say things like 'it says magic is incomprehensible to science so that means
to me that it must violate all physical laws in particular the law of Conservation of Matter and Energy'.
I am not making any special meanings here I am using the basic definitions of the words
The only way that magic could not be comprehensible to science is if it does not follow the same rules. Because if it did use the same rules it would have to be comprehensible.
One of those rules in the law of conservation. Thus there is no proof that magic follows the law of conservation because we can prove that magic does not have to follow that law. This means that claims that magic DOES follow this law require affirmative proof.
Nightmask wrote:eliakon wrote:Nightmask wrote:And the burden you've failed to meet. You've provided no proof that magic is not used up and converted into other energies when a spell is cast
That's not how it works though.
1) the burden of proof is on you to prove that your affirmative claim (Magic is used up and
transformed into other energies)
I do not have to prove your claim false you have to prove your claim true. (you have yet to do this)
2) I have provided support for my contention that magic is NOT converted into other energies, but instead those energies are created on the spot. Simply ignoring my claim does not mean that my claim is not there.
1) That's not an affirmative claim, you've got the affirmative claim.
No, your saying that PPE is transformed into energy. That is a specific claim. Back it up. Otherwise there is no proof that magic has to work by transforming PPE into energy.
Nightmask wrote:2) No, no you haven't. Saying 'well PPE was used but you can't prove it was transformed' isn't proof, nor is 'well I think magic violates the physical laws so I take it that create spells do by violating the physical laws rather than operating within them'.
I have provided some support. You need to attack that support.
To wit my support is that magic does not follow physical laws, and that magic is said to create things. my negative proof is that magic is never said to ever 'turn ppe' into anything else. That means that claims that this is wrong have to attack my evidence, not just simply say they are wrong.
Nightmask wrote:So you're going to need a lot more than 'I think magic violates physical laws because that's what I want incomprehensible to magic to mean' to back up such an unsupported claim that 'magic doesn't get used up it's immutable and somehow violates physical laws to make new energy that never existed before and totally unrelated to the original magic spent'.
I have repeatedly provided my proof of what incomprehensible means. You are free to attack that definition, or the proof behind it. But I have provided one. Its a reasoned, supported claim not just some 'I want it to mean this'
Nightmask wrote:eliakon wrote:Nightmask wrote: you've provided no proof that it violates the conservation of matter and energy
You mean besides other than quoting the book?
You've never quoted the book saying that. You've quoted the book saying 'magic is incomprehensible to science' which doesn't mean 'violates the law of conservation of matter and energy'. All of your arguments require things meaning what you want them to mean rather than what they actually mean.
How many times would you like me to repeat the logical chain here? If you can provide a counter definition that negates my provided definition and still mandates that magic follows the laws of physics, and is supported by the text I am all ears
Nightmask wrote:eliakon wrote:Nightmask wrote:and you've provided no proof that someone like a techno-wizard can't make a device that turns non-magical energies into magical energies
Again two issues
1) I don't have to prove your theory is wrong, it is your job to prove it right (you have yet to provide contextual support for your claim. Which means that you have sill not met your burden of proof)
2) If my contention IS right, then that
is proof that a TW cant made a device to turn non-magical energy into magical energy. Because if my contention is true then magical energy is never turned into non-magical energy in the first place. And thus if there is no transformation one way, then it can never be reversed.
1) No, you have to disprove it since we know energy can be converted into other energy so you have to prove magic doesn't follow the laws that allow for energy being converted from one form to another. I don't have to disprove your contention that magic is special you have to prove it is.
Except that I have proved that magic doesn't follow the laws of physics
And there is nothing, anywhere that says that magic is ever converted into any other form of energy
Once I provide proof of something you have to disprove that proof. And you have not done so
Nightmask wrote:2) Except your contention isn't right. You haven't shown that contrary to what we've actually seen that magical energy doesn't really get converted into non-magical energy (because again 'you can't really prove the magic energy is used up and converted' is a fallacy, just like you can't really prove magical fairies are the real reason solar cells work). Spell cast, PPE in, Energy Out, PPE converted into other energy. That's basic logic. Spell cast, PPE in, Energy Out, PPE just hangs around unused and energy spontaneously appears not logical.
Again your pulling out a red herring and trying to apply something that doesn't apply and make it fit.
And no you do have to show that PPE is transformed to claim that PPE is transformed. Because I have shown in my claim that it is not transformed. That's how logic works, once I provide a proof of something, then you have to attack that proof you cant just say "no it works differently because I say it does"
Nightmask wrote:eliakon wrote:Nightmask wrote: All you've provided is your spin on how you want to see things to support your conclusion.
Actually I have provided citations from the book. However all you have done is argue that my citations are wrong. You have never provided support for this, just spin and argumentation that I am wrong and that your view is right....
No, you haven't. You've pointed to things in the book and then said 'I take that to mean this...', which is your spin on things and not actually something one can reasonably derive from those citations.
No I have pointed to the books, and provided a step by step logical explanation of how those mean what they mean. To which the only counter has been "no that's not what they mean"
Nightmask wrote:eliakon wrote:Nightmask wrote:'Hey they said this spell creates something I can claim that's proof that it's violating the conservation of matter and energy because it's magic and I've already concluded magic does that' doesn't constitute proof, the spells don't say that explicitly or implicitly.
Magic is explicitly said to not follow the law of science (incomprehensible to science)
It says it creates. It is up to you to prove that those (factually cited) claims are wrong. Simply disliking them doesn't do it.
Again no, incomprehensible to science does not mean it fails to follow the laws of science only that it can't comprehend it currently. It certainly can't be expanded to mean 'magic violates all physical laws including the Conservation of Matter and Energy'.
The book doesn't say "currently" it says point blank that magic is incomprehensible to science.
Nightmask wrote:eliakon wrote:Nightmask wrote: You see magic spent, you see a result, you don't see proof the magic isn't being used up or converted because you've seen it used up.
Your conflating here again. Used up is not the same as converted into. We can agree that magic is used up with out agreeing that it is converted. They are different processes, different words and need different levels and kinds of support.
No, I'm not conflating. No we can't agree that magic being used up has a valid option of magic not being converted, they aren't different processes they're all part of the same process.
Then prove it. Provide some proof that magic is transformed into regular energy. Because your making an affirmative claim so you need to provide proof of it. Transformation is not the status quo, its an actual claim. Because your claiming that a specific mechanic is at play.
Nightmask wrote:eliakon wrote:Nightmask wrote:You might as well claim there's no proof that sunlight falling on a photocell isn't converted into electrical energy and that some mysterious thing happens in between that no sunlight is converted and that mysterious thing that shows up is doing it instead and carrying off the sunlight which remains inviolate.
Except that a photocell is 'comprehensible to science' so I can go to the laws of physics for information on what is happening.
Since a spell is not comprehensible to science, by definition then it does not use the laws of physics.
Apples to Apples, Oranges to Oranges.
This is a nice amusing story....except that as I point out its not actually what is going on here, nor is it relevant.
In your photocell example we already know how it working. But that conversion information is not something we get by watching it. To know how it works we have to go to an outside source of information (photovoltaic theory). Thus in our magic example we need to go to a similar outside source (in this case the text and rules on magic).
No, you don't get to claim that 'so it follows that it doesn't use the laws of physics'. A calculator is incomprehensible to science' if you go back 200 years, one can't say that because they can't comprehend it that must violate the laws of physics. It doesn't matter that something is incomprehensible NOW, without definitive proof otherwise we have to consider it to still work within the existing known laws (or that the existing laws must be changed or scrapped in the face of the new information). So again 'incomprehensible to science' does not equal 'so it must violate known existing physical laws'.
No a calculator or photocell is comprehensible to science. It may not be understood by specific scientests but it is understood by science.
Magic is not incomprehensible to current science. Its not incomprehensible to certain scientists. Its incomprehensible to science. That means ALL science, ALL the time, in ALL eras fails to comprehend it.
Nightmask wrote:eliakon wrote:Nightmask wrote:Seriously, you wouldn't use these kinds of arguments anywhere else because they're so patently unsupportable why do you think they'd be any more useful here?
I use factually supported, textually cited logical argumentation in all my arguments. Since that is the only kind of logical argument that exists.
No, no you didn't. There is no factual support that the create spells violate the law of conservation of energy and matter and none of your arguments were logical. There is nothing logical about 'it's incomprehensible to science so that can and only means it must violate all physical laws'. Everything you've presented has come with the qualifier that 'so I take it to mean this even though that's not what it says' or fallacies like 'well you have to prove to me magical fairies aren't really responsible for what's going on and if you can't then my point is equally valid'. So even when you've presented facts you've tossed out conclusions that have no relation to the actual fact and can't be reasonably linked to it.
If all your arguments hinge on things like 'if something's incomprehensible then it must violate physical laws' and 'well you can't prove that magic is getting converted because I don't accept seeing PPE spent and energy coming out as proof' this is beyond pointless because you aren't using English or logic in any accepted definition to get to the things you insist as being valid when they aren't.
I do not think you are understanding what the words being used here mean then
Incomprehnsible: this means that it can not be understood, that it uses methods or technices that the viewer is unable to understand or comprehend.
Science: this is a catch all for all science, science lore, scientists, and relations to them
Thus
Magic is incomprehensible to Science means that science is unable to understand or comprehend how magic works.
The scientific method implies that all things that follow natural law are understandable by aplications of that natural law
Therefore if something is NOT understandable by applying science and natural law to it, then it must not be science.
One of the natural laws that is used by science to understand how things work (comprehend things) is the law of the conservation of energy.
If magic is not understandable by applying natural law to it, then it has to be in violation of one or more natural laws (otherwise it could be understood by the application of those laws)
Therefore magic is not bound by natural law