You do know that we are talking about science FICTION right? Why would you expect advanced technology to conform with our primitive definition of the "laws of physics"?Simon_Jester wrote:Magic- as in, violations of the laws of physics. Tractor beams, hyperspace, desert planets with oxygen atmospheres... and that's before we get into Darth Vader choking shit.
There's no basis for any of this in reality; the only reason you don't call it magic is because if I glue some blinky lights to a piece of magic and wave my hands very fast, you won't notice that it's magic.
Advanced Technology = May defy modern day scientific knowledge but will be weakly rationalized in-universe (e.g. treknobabble). Whether or not treknobabble makes sense in a scientific context (and they usually don't) is a completely different issue. In some occasions, no in-universe rationalization is made, but there will never be a slide to reasons that are "mystical" or "magical". That is where the line is drawn.
Magic = Defies modern day scientific knowledge and all in-universe rationalization is "unscientific", usually relying on "mystical" or "superstitious" elements.
Want to go down the list you provided?
Tractor Beams Star Wars doesn't do a good job of in-universe rationalizing in the movies, but may have been explained in EU (I don't know). Might be explainable using the more esoteric scientific theories we have today (graviton particles?) Does not invoke "mystical" or "superstitious" rationalization. It is an Advanced Technology and not magic.
Hyperspace Same with Tractor Beams.
Desert Planet without Oxygen Atmosphere Why is this listed? I assume this is a scientific implausibility that such planets cannot form? Then, it's the fault of "bad science" in the writing and has nothing to do with magic.
Force Unfortunately, the force as perceived in OT has "magic" elements, but PT retconned it with midichlorians, so there is a biological explanation (although not a very good one). Force can also be explained as telekinesis and precognition, I'm not sure if the EU moved into this explanation. Overall, this is has some magical elements, and I would prefer SW rationalizing it more of genetically inherited TK and Precog "powers".
More examples, for the idiots out there who can't distinguish fantasy and science fiction.
Science Fiction:
1) The "prophecy" of Valen in B5 was very mystical from the beginning but was later rationalized as Sinclair time traveling to the past and becoming Valen, so there is a plausible scientific explanation for the mystical bullshit.
2) The Bajoran "prophets" in DS9 have been rationalized as wormhole aliens and NOT mystical gods. Although the in-universe rationalization is good, I wished DS9 could have cut down on the Bajoran religious superstitious bullshit.
3) Chaos gods in warhammer 40k has been rationalized as extradimensional aliens living in the warp (another dimension used for hyperspace travel). They feed on the "psychic energy" of their followers, this part is slanting more towards the "magic" realm, so it's a bit grey. However, most of warhammer 40k phenomenon can be explained using "psychic energy", and if you try to force out a scientific model that has this component, it becomes internally consistent.
Fantasy:
1) Lord of the Rings. The quest for some "magical" ring. Everything is bullshit magic and mysticism.
It's an utter disgrace that you fucktards call yourself science fiction fans when you can't even separate science fiction from fantasy. Fantasy is like the fucking anti-thesis of science fiction... you guys suffering from some severe brain damage that you can't distinguish the two from each other?!