Well usually in Sci-fi (and in some fantasy) there is an explanation of how things work. All I am saying is that the whole, line of "advanced technology= magic" to primitive people does this:G-Man wrote: ↑Mon May 07, 2018 11:59 pm I am NOT using "magic" as shorthand for "don't explain it." I am saying that the explanations for things like cell phones would sound magical when you think about the reference points you would need to make them understandable. Cell phones use the power of lightning (electricity) to send invisible light to a tower that sends the invisible light to a machine flying above the air (the satellite) which sends the invisible light to another tower, etc.
If magic works in ways that can be analyzed, it is essentially just another set of physical laws - Arthur C. Clarke said that any science sufficiently advanced is indistinguishable from magic. I believe it was the comic Girl Genius that pointed out that any magic sufficiently explained is indistinguishable from science.
From a perspective of fictional works, magic that works in ways that can be predicted is just another form of made-up science (e.g. warp drive).
A. doesn't really give us an explanation of how these things work and/or are supposed to work. Instead, it just avoids the issue entirely.
B) Makes the person saying this assuming that the person (or persons) they are telling this to won't understand the basics.
C) Since this line was uttered by Thor to Jane Foster (who is a physicist in the movie) and in my opinion, it was talking down to her.
BUT
D) Maybe the Asgards literally DID combine their magic (like literal magic) with their technology (hey it's possible in the comics and the Earth base characters have been doing it for some time. The humans have called it, "Shadow Physics" and it's basically just a combination of magic and science. Hell, T'Challa is a leading Shadow Physics scientist of this form of "science" in the comics. I think that Dr. Doom is also a leading Shadow Physics scientist as well.