Sunday, August 1, 2021

Fantasy

 

Pure Imagination

There is no life I know
To compare with pure imagination
Living there you'll be free
If you truly wish to be

Is truth always better than fantasy?

In a previous blog post I proposed a framework for human behavior https://dbeagan.blogspot.com/2021/06/truth-justice-and-american-way.html, that included an attribute of Truth vs. Fiction.  I stand by that attribute, but it is not meant to be judgmental.

Being at an extreme for truth might mean reading only works of non‑fiction, watching only documentaries, and viewing a suspension of disbelief as a waste to time.  You can enjoy fiction without abandoning the truth.  Much of the humor in cartoons comes from the knowledge that the reality does not act that way.  If Wil E. Coyote runs off a cliff and doesn’t begin to fall until he realizes that he is running on air, or  the Road Runner enters a tunnel painted on a rock, the humor is that this is contrary to the way things work.  Superheroes smash and destroy buildings without injuring anyone but showing the probable injury might evoke horror instead of the intended excitement. We willingly suspend our belief and accept the conventions of fantasy.  If you read Harry Potter, watch Star Wars, Star Trek or Game of Thrones, you can accept the rules of the story even if those are not the laws of physics.

Believing in something that is not true does not mean that your other contributions are not valuable.  Isaac Newton developed calculus, the law of gravity, optics, etc., but he also wasted his time pursuing  alchemy and occultism and trying to find an elixir to turn lead into gold.

Being able to do stage magic, practicing the art of deception, can be useful in telling stories. Some of the most famous storytellers and performers (e.g. Charles Dickens, Walt Disney, J.J. Abrams, Arsenio Hall, Johnny Carson, etc.) were amateur magicians.  That does not mean that using the tricks of stage magic for deceit or swindling is not wrong. In fact some of the most famous debunkers of the occult were themselves stage magicians, e.g. Harry Houdini, The Great Randi, Penn Jillette).  They better than anyone understand that there is a difference between fantasy and reality.

Believing in fantasy despite facts to the contrary is an extreme that is just as problematic as denying all fiction.  I believe that people who believe in ancient astronauts, UFOs, astrology, a flat Earth, etc. despite facts to the contrary are to be pitied.  But those who swindle, lie, or deceive those who have those beliefs are to be condemned.  There is a difference between believing in fantasy ( e.g. “the WWE is real”) and being entertained by fantasy ( e.g. “I enjoy watching the WWE”).  Some of the greatest advances have come because people adapted ideas from their fantasies.  It is good to have an imagination. It is only bad if you start believing your imagination.

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