(November 19, 2021 at 8:44 am)brewer Wrote:(November 18, 2021 at 11:12 pm)Oldandeasilyconfused Wrote: That depends on where one happens to be.
To the ignorant , science can seem to be magic.
I remain ignorant of exactly how computers work (code is magic to me)
As for the very idea that the universe may in fact have come from nothing---that does me head in.
Yikes! Don't understand = magic?
Perhaps of myself, I should have used a term such as 'a marvel'.
You don't get say the 'magic' of say a person seeing person seeing an airplane when there is no such thing in your own culture? As a child I was apparently terrified the first time I saw a movie; thought it was real and that the theatre was on fire. I was about 3.No TV here at that time.
A great example are the Cargo cults of Melanesia. One of 'em worships prince Philip.
--These things came from the sky and had all kinds of wonderful things inside. So, some tribes built 'airstrips' and 'control towers' to lure the magical beings.
A cargo cult is an indigenist millenarian belief system in which adherents perform rituals which they believe will cause a more technologically advanced society to deliver goods. These cults were first described in Melanesia in the wake of contact with allied military forces during the Second World War.
Isolated and pre-industrial island cultures that were lacking technology found soldiers and supplies arriving in large numbers, often by airdrop. The soldiers would trade with the islanders. After the war, the soldiers departed. Cargo cults arose, attempting to imitate the behaviors of the soldiers, thinking that this would cause the soldiers and their cargo to return. Some cult behaviors involved mimicking the day-to-day activities and dress styles of soldiers, such as performing parade ground drills with wooden or salvaged rifles.
Cargo cult - Wikipedia