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John Ohno
2 min readDec 1, 2023

As a magick practitioner the whole “magic is science we don’t understand” thing frustrates me.

It’s not totally wrong: magick is full of proto-science. But you can also practice magick without acknowledging any forces not accepted in scientific consensus or proposing any mechanisms that would be a tough sell to a scientist.

This often makes talking to “skeptics” hard! Some magick practitioners are really attached to dubious models (many of them scientistic though not scientific — ex., quantum anything), but a lot of the time a skeptic will say “that’s not magic, that’s just availability bias” and the Magus will try to explain “no, you’re missing the point — it’s availability bias, but when you *use* availability bias, that’s magick”.

So on the one hand, you can have magick that completely overlaps with science in its content, but differs in form & intent. Magick is like engineering, in that it applies science toward a goal, but it also does things that are anathema to science & engineering because it specifically involves fucking with your experimental apparatus (the practitioner engaging in temporary tactical self-deception), which is sort of like self-modifying code in that it can be super useful but is also dangerous in its unpredictability.

But at the same time, magick deals specifically with fractalline paradoxes a lot (what GEB calls strange loops). Really, self-deception falls into this category. These structures can’t be flattened into a non-paradoxical form so they lie outside the frameworks that would render then internally inconsistent. “Nonsense…

John Ohno
John Ohno

Written by John Ohno

Resident hypertext crank. Author of Big and Small Computing: Trajectories for the Future of Software. http://www.lord-enki.net

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