Seven Brief Lessons on Magic
By Paul Tyson
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Paul Tyson
Paul Tyson writes about Christian Platonism, theological metaphysics, epistemology, the theology of science, theological sociology, the sociology of knowledge, and the theology and politics of money.
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Seven Brief Lessons on Magic - Paul Tyson
Lesson One
We Live in a High Age of Magic
Gandalf, Dumbledore, and Rincewind—to name-drop just a few of the most famous wizards of our times—are far better known to us than our real masters of power and illusion. Harry Potter is world famous, and any reader of Terry Pratchett will have quite a sophisticated theoretical knowledge of Disc World magic. In contrast, very few people know who the main players are in our own mysterious world of high financial alchemy. What actually makes the fabulous world of currency markets and derivative trading fly may as well be a genuine occult mystery to most people (many traders, bankers, treasury officials, and finance ministers included).
We live in an age where we are embedded in skillfully manufactured collective illusions and where our most familiar objects are astonishing technological devices with extraordinary powers, whose inner workings we hardly understand at all. But these devices are not simply wands and portals that give us power and knowledge, they are tools of power to those who provide them to us. Profiling algorithms and information collection are deeply integral to nearly every internet search and every social media interaction we undertake. We have grown accustomed to detailed and pervasive information gathering and intrusive surveillance technologies that both map and steer almost every aspect of our lives. We are like fish in a sea of translucent liquid power: power in the form of the skillful control and distribution of information, of pervasive data gathering, and of psychologically subtle collective choice influence. But we do not see this sea, for we are immersed in it—it is the very medium of our way of life.¹
On the one hand, this is all a bit sinister. On the other hand, we love it. We are pretty well addicted to the dazzling seductions of our communication, information, and entertainment technologies: tools that obliterate the normal texture of space and time, that deeply re-fashion pre-social-media ways of relating to others, and that powerfully erode simply being present
to where we physically are. These technologies refashion our imaginative landscape as well. They give free vent to the enjoyment, projection, and marketing of astonishing fantasies. A manufactured hyper-real world of wishful fantasy is now a mundane part of the way we communicate, relax, and do business. And yet, having been raised by the educational institutions of the modern scientific age, we largely accept the prevailing materialist motherhood truths about what reality is really like. Our educated truths about the real and public world exclude enchantment, deny reality to all spiritual beings and powers, and reject the very possibility that frameworks of transcendent truth structure the immanent contours of ordinary