Subject: Well, spells and enchantments can be considered a technology
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Posted on: 2016-08-14 03:07:00 UTC

My search on technology came up with "Technology ("science of craft", from Greek τέχνη, techne, "art, skill, cunning of hand"; and -λογία, -logia) is the collection of techniques, skills, methods and processes used in the production of goods or services or in the accomplishment of objectives, such as scientific investigation."* Based on that, technology means that you have a tool that can accomplish it's intended objective. I'd say that if magic is consistent, meaning that the same grunts and hand gestures will always net you the same fireball every time, you have a technology. The Elven Rings of power are a technology, in that they successfully preserved the Elves that lived in Arda.

On a tangent, science isn't evidence based on a hypothesis, it's a hypothesis based on evidence. If my ice beam defies the laws of thermodynamics, too bad. Go back to the drawing board. If I start floating 5 inches off the ground, no scientist has a right to stop me fom breaking their "law" of gravity. It's not actually a law, because you only think that everything must follow that rule. If it turns out its false, you should be overjoyed, because that's new knowledge. At least, that's what I think should happen. I haven't actually walked in a scientist's shoes yet.**

* Note: I should probably take what Wikipedia says with a grain of salt, but I'll take my chances.

** No, I'm not implying that I have levitated in a Scientist's shoes, either.***

*** No, I'm not a human being that can levitate.****

**** Yes, I am actually human, and not a panini press, though I do like paninis.

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