TheGMan said:
Just to get off the homosexuality stuff for a little while...
Is magic immoral? Not prestidigitation but tarot cards, astral projection, invoking spirits... that sort of stuff.
I'm not asking if you think it works - or how you think it works - although that may have some bearing on whether or not you think its right or wrong.
I suppose this is primarily aimed at Christians or other Abrahamic faiths. Everyone else I kind of expect to either think it's hokey or just a tool to be used like any other. Not that this should stop you from chipping in!
Oh and - like all good essay questions - why?
As an atheist, I'm part of "everyone else" in your OP. I do not believe in the existence of what is commonly referred to as "supernatural". If someone could actually demonstrate it, I'd be willing to change my mind, but until then...
That said, I think that "magick" (yes, practitioners use the "k" to differentiate it from stage magic) is mostly a combination of wish fulfillment, self delusion, with a pinch of manipulation thrown in. Most practitioners of magick that I have met, are doing it to try to achieve access to power. That power may be information, control over others, or control over events. What makes it "magick" is the means by which they try to gain that power.
Things like tarot cards work the same way horoscopes do. They can both be explained by a common psychological phenomenom called the "Forer Effect" (see
link).
Divination, pendulum reading, or dowsing have never been demonstrated to work in an environment controlled to rule out fraud. Period. Anyone that tells you otherwise is trying to sell you something.
Astral projection and other out of body experiences have been demonstrated to be related to human physiological phenomena called "sleep paralysis" and "lucid dreaming" (see
link).
So far as this materialistic atheist can tell, none of it works.
That said, is there a moral problem these things?
If one is using such things to control, manipulate, or harm others, then I believe it is morally wrong.
Used as carnival tricks or tall tales to entertain folks, there's no more harm in it than watching a Penn & Teller or David Copperfield "magic show".