If curse and magic is two sides of the same coin, why the former is forbidden? [closed]












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A gun can bring destruction but at the same time save lives, both curse and magic belongs to different system and operates independently.



Curse requires strong feeling such as suffering pain while magic usually needs tranquility and serenity, however both draws energy from a common source which permeate throughout the universe.



Magic can be used to bring harm when misused or even abused, but curse regardless of modus operandi is deemed as an act of cruelty and often frowned upon by the community. If the only distinction is the state of emotion while the spell took form, why only curse is forbidden? A good analogy is matter and it's anti-matter, they are very similar but have opposite charge, simply throwing a tantrum cannot manifest curse unless it resonate together with the frequency of the target.










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closed as primarily opinion-based by JBH, Cyn, Vincent, vsz, jdunlop Mar 16 at 6:38


Many good questions generate some degree of opinion based on expert experience, but answers to this question will tend to be almost entirely based on opinions, rather than facts, references, or specific expertise. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.














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    The same reason why driving a car isn't a crime, but driving it with the intent to harm someone is? Owning and using a hammer isn't a crime either, but using it in anger knowing you'll hurt someone is definitely a crime.
    $endgroup$
    – Demigan
    Mar 15 at 12:57












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    Minor question on the side: how exactly are curses and magic initiated? With some kind of ritual, spells, or just the intention to do so?
    $endgroup$
    – DarthDonut
    Mar 15 at 13:00










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    @DarthDonut: it's the state of mind...if the user mind is disturbed greatly, the magic can cause destructive interference to the surrounding including people. Like matter and antimatter...
    $endgroup$
    – user6760
    Mar 15 at 13:06












  • $begingroup$
    @user6760 So, as soon as someone is terribly angry, stuff is blowing up?
    $endgroup$
    – DarthDonut
    Mar 15 at 13:18






  • 2




    $begingroup$
    This question is vague and seems to be inviting a discussion rather than asking to solve a specific problem. SE is not a discussion forum and from our help center, "You should only ask practical, answerable questions based on actual problems that you face. Chatty, open-ended questions diminish the usefulness of our site." That same page also says to avoid questions were the answers are all equally valid. VTC OT:POB.
    $endgroup$
    – JBH
    Mar 15 at 13:40
















7












$begingroup$


A gun can bring destruction but at the same time save lives, both curse and magic belongs to different system and operates independently.



Curse requires strong feeling such as suffering pain while magic usually needs tranquility and serenity, however both draws energy from a common source which permeate throughout the universe.



Magic can be used to bring harm when misused or even abused, but curse regardless of modus operandi is deemed as an act of cruelty and often frowned upon by the community. If the only distinction is the state of emotion while the spell took form, why only curse is forbidden? A good analogy is matter and it's anti-matter, they are very similar but have opposite charge, simply throwing a tantrum cannot manifest curse unless it resonate together with the frequency of the target.










share|improve this question











$endgroup$



closed as primarily opinion-based by JBH, Cyn, Vincent, vsz, jdunlop Mar 16 at 6:38


Many good questions generate some degree of opinion based on expert experience, but answers to this question will tend to be almost entirely based on opinions, rather than facts, references, or specific expertise. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.














  • 8




    $begingroup$
    The same reason why driving a car isn't a crime, but driving it with the intent to harm someone is? Owning and using a hammer isn't a crime either, but using it in anger knowing you'll hurt someone is definitely a crime.
    $endgroup$
    – Demigan
    Mar 15 at 12:57












  • $begingroup$
    Minor question on the side: how exactly are curses and magic initiated? With some kind of ritual, spells, or just the intention to do so?
    $endgroup$
    – DarthDonut
    Mar 15 at 13:00










  • $begingroup$
    @DarthDonut: it's the state of mind...if the user mind is disturbed greatly, the magic can cause destructive interference to the surrounding including people. Like matter and antimatter...
    $endgroup$
    – user6760
    Mar 15 at 13:06












  • $begingroup$
    @user6760 So, as soon as someone is terribly angry, stuff is blowing up?
    $endgroup$
    – DarthDonut
    Mar 15 at 13:18






  • 2




    $begingroup$
    This question is vague and seems to be inviting a discussion rather than asking to solve a specific problem. SE is not a discussion forum and from our help center, "You should only ask practical, answerable questions based on actual problems that you face. Chatty, open-ended questions diminish the usefulness of our site." That same page also says to avoid questions were the answers are all equally valid. VTC OT:POB.
    $endgroup$
    – JBH
    Mar 15 at 13:40














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$begingroup$


A gun can bring destruction but at the same time save lives, both curse and magic belongs to different system and operates independently.



Curse requires strong feeling such as suffering pain while magic usually needs tranquility and serenity, however both draws energy from a common source which permeate throughout the universe.



Magic can be used to bring harm when misused or even abused, but curse regardless of modus operandi is deemed as an act of cruelty and often frowned upon by the community. If the only distinction is the state of emotion while the spell took form, why only curse is forbidden? A good analogy is matter and it's anti-matter, they are very similar but have opposite charge, simply throwing a tantrum cannot manifest curse unless it resonate together with the frequency of the target.










share|improve this question











$endgroup$




A gun can bring destruction but at the same time save lives, both curse and magic belongs to different system and operates independently.



Curse requires strong feeling such as suffering pain while magic usually needs tranquility and serenity, however both draws energy from a common source which permeate throughout the universe.



Magic can be used to bring harm when misused or even abused, but curse regardless of modus operandi is deemed as an act of cruelty and often frowned upon by the community. If the only distinction is the state of emotion while the spell took form, why only curse is forbidden? A good analogy is matter and it's anti-matter, they are very similar but have opposite charge, simply throwing a tantrum cannot manifest curse unless it resonate together with the frequency of the target.







magic alternate-worlds energy






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share|improve this question













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edited Mar 16 at 4:27







user6760

















asked Mar 15 at 12:01









user6760user6760

13.5k1674163




13.5k1674163




closed as primarily opinion-based by JBH, Cyn, Vincent, vsz, jdunlop Mar 16 at 6:38


Many good questions generate some degree of opinion based on expert experience, but answers to this question will tend to be almost entirely based on opinions, rather than facts, references, or specific expertise. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.









closed as primarily opinion-based by JBH, Cyn, Vincent, vsz, jdunlop Mar 16 at 6:38


Many good questions generate some degree of opinion based on expert experience, but answers to this question will tend to be almost entirely based on opinions, rather than facts, references, or specific expertise. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.










  • 8




    $begingroup$
    The same reason why driving a car isn't a crime, but driving it with the intent to harm someone is? Owning and using a hammer isn't a crime either, but using it in anger knowing you'll hurt someone is definitely a crime.
    $endgroup$
    – Demigan
    Mar 15 at 12:57












  • $begingroup$
    Minor question on the side: how exactly are curses and magic initiated? With some kind of ritual, spells, or just the intention to do so?
    $endgroup$
    – DarthDonut
    Mar 15 at 13:00










  • $begingroup$
    @DarthDonut: it's the state of mind...if the user mind is disturbed greatly, the magic can cause destructive interference to the surrounding including people. Like matter and antimatter...
    $endgroup$
    – user6760
    Mar 15 at 13:06












  • $begingroup$
    @user6760 So, as soon as someone is terribly angry, stuff is blowing up?
    $endgroup$
    – DarthDonut
    Mar 15 at 13:18






  • 2




    $begingroup$
    This question is vague and seems to be inviting a discussion rather than asking to solve a specific problem. SE is not a discussion forum and from our help center, "You should only ask practical, answerable questions based on actual problems that you face. Chatty, open-ended questions diminish the usefulness of our site." That same page also says to avoid questions were the answers are all equally valid. VTC OT:POB.
    $endgroup$
    – JBH
    Mar 15 at 13:40














  • 8




    $begingroup$
    The same reason why driving a car isn't a crime, but driving it with the intent to harm someone is? Owning and using a hammer isn't a crime either, but using it in anger knowing you'll hurt someone is definitely a crime.
    $endgroup$
    – Demigan
    Mar 15 at 12:57












  • $begingroup$
    Minor question on the side: how exactly are curses and magic initiated? With some kind of ritual, spells, or just the intention to do so?
    $endgroup$
    – DarthDonut
    Mar 15 at 13:00










  • $begingroup$
    @DarthDonut: it's the state of mind...if the user mind is disturbed greatly, the magic can cause destructive interference to the surrounding including people. Like matter and antimatter...
    $endgroup$
    – user6760
    Mar 15 at 13:06












  • $begingroup$
    @user6760 So, as soon as someone is terribly angry, stuff is blowing up?
    $endgroup$
    – DarthDonut
    Mar 15 at 13:18






  • 2




    $begingroup$
    This question is vague and seems to be inviting a discussion rather than asking to solve a specific problem. SE is not a discussion forum and from our help center, "You should only ask practical, answerable questions based on actual problems that you face. Chatty, open-ended questions diminish the usefulness of our site." That same page also says to avoid questions were the answers are all equally valid. VTC OT:POB.
    $endgroup$
    – JBH
    Mar 15 at 13:40








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8




$begingroup$
The same reason why driving a car isn't a crime, but driving it with the intent to harm someone is? Owning and using a hammer isn't a crime either, but using it in anger knowing you'll hurt someone is definitely a crime.
$endgroup$
– Demigan
Mar 15 at 12:57






$begingroup$
The same reason why driving a car isn't a crime, but driving it with the intent to harm someone is? Owning and using a hammer isn't a crime either, but using it in anger knowing you'll hurt someone is definitely a crime.
$endgroup$
– Demigan
Mar 15 at 12:57














$begingroup$
Minor question on the side: how exactly are curses and magic initiated? With some kind of ritual, spells, or just the intention to do so?
$endgroup$
– DarthDonut
Mar 15 at 13:00




$begingroup$
Minor question on the side: how exactly are curses and magic initiated? With some kind of ritual, spells, or just the intention to do so?
$endgroup$
– DarthDonut
Mar 15 at 13:00












$begingroup$
@DarthDonut: it's the state of mind...if the user mind is disturbed greatly, the magic can cause destructive interference to the surrounding including people. Like matter and antimatter...
$endgroup$
– user6760
Mar 15 at 13:06






$begingroup$
@DarthDonut: it's the state of mind...if the user mind is disturbed greatly, the magic can cause destructive interference to the surrounding including people. Like matter and antimatter...
$endgroup$
– user6760
Mar 15 at 13:06














$begingroup$
@user6760 So, as soon as someone is terribly angry, stuff is blowing up?
$endgroup$
– DarthDonut
Mar 15 at 13:18




$begingroup$
@user6760 So, as soon as someone is terribly angry, stuff is blowing up?
$endgroup$
– DarthDonut
Mar 15 at 13:18




2




2




$begingroup$
This question is vague and seems to be inviting a discussion rather than asking to solve a specific problem. SE is not a discussion forum and from our help center, "You should only ask practical, answerable questions based on actual problems that you face. Chatty, open-ended questions diminish the usefulness of our site." That same page also says to avoid questions were the answers are all equally valid. VTC OT:POB.
$endgroup$
– JBH
Mar 15 at 13:40




$begingroup$
This question is vague and seems to be inviting a discussion rather than asking to solve a specific problem. SE is not a discussion forum and from our help center, "You should only ask practical, answerable questions based on actual problems that you face. Chatty, open-ended questions diminish the usefulness of our site." That same page also says to avoid questions were the answers are all equally valid. VTC OT:POB.
$endgroup$
– JBH
Mar 15 at 13:40










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When you are angry you can only "curse" and therefore only bring destruction - you are angry after all. when you are relaxed you can do anything because you can rationally think about your options and your goals.



"Curse" is therefore simply a name for "casting magic while in a negative state of mind" and as a negative state of mind leads to destructive magic this is deemed illegal. It's just semantics according to your definitions, therefore only "curses" are forbidden because that is equivalent to saying "you were out of control while using a very, very powerful tool". It's like drunk driving or something similarly reckless. If you accidentally harm someone with normal use of magic it's just that - an accident. You didn't plan to do something dangerous.






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    Are you clinically depressed? Take Panancea and cast legal curse free magic again! (Panancea has not been regulated by the CDC or FDA for preventing illegal Curses)
    $endgroup$
    – IT Alex
    Mar 15 at 12:39






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    Curses are basically purposefully putting yourself in compromised state of mind before handling a deadly tool. Drunk driving to a tee.
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    – John
    Mar 15 at 23:28





















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I would argue that the opposite of a curse is really a blessing. A curse is always intended to do harm to the target, but a blessing is always intended to benefit the target. The caster of a curse would not necessarily have to be angry. Jealousy or greed would work just as well as a motive to place a curse on somebody. Black magic may come from a dark or bad place, but could potentially be used for good. All curses may be black magic, but not all black magic is a curse. There are also other scenarios like granting immortality, which depending on your point of view can be a blessing or a curse.






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    I agree. The opposite of Curse is not Magic. The opposite of Curse is Blessing and both are types of Magic. The difference between them is the intention of the person exerting the influence.
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    – krb
    Mar 15 at 16:15






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    @SciFiGuy This is Worldbuilding. The intent here is to create new worlds that don't necessarily work the way the real world (or existing fictional ones do). To some extent you have to take as a given "counterfactual" statements that OP gives. Don't get too focused on the words. In OP's world the two terms are "Curse" and "Magic", but they could just as easily have been "Xarg'blag" and "Threen". Threen requires a state of calm, whereas Xarg'blag requires strong emotion, but both pull energy from a common source. So why is Threen permitted and Xarg'blag banned?
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    – R.M.
    Mar 15 at 21:29



















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You can't fuel your magic with negative emotions without it changing you as well.



So, the Unforgivable Curses in Harry Potter follow this kind of logic. After Harry casts a Cruciatus Curse fueled by righteous anger, it has a neglegible effect on Bellatrix Lestrange.




‘Never used an Unforgivable Curse before, have you, boy?’ she yelled. She had abandoned her baby voice now. ‘You need to mean them, Potter! You need to really want to cause pain – to enjoy it - righteous anger won’t hurt me for long – I’ll show you how it is done, shall I? I’ll give you a lesson –’




The key here is that it's not just anger that drives the curse, but the cruelty as well. That level of hatred and cruelty inevitably corrupt the person trying to harness it. If you don't truly feel it, you can't harness it, but if you truly feel it, it begins to take hold of your life until it consumes you.



This is also why the Sith form Star Wars appear to grow so powerful so quickly.




Luke: Vader... Is the dark side stronger?



Yoda: No, no, no. Quicker, easier, more seductive.




Because the use of curse magic reinforces the cruelty of the user, it becomes easier and easier to do, making the user very powerful but also sealing them off from the good things in the world.



It's pretty easy to imagine why a society would be against that. You can only handle so many dark wizards before you start taking steps to prevent them from being created.



It's the same logic our society uses with dogs. If a dog bites someone, more often than not it's euthanized, not because of the bite itself, most are superficial damage at best. It's because when the dog finds itself in a similar situation again the dog realizes that option worked before, so it's clearly on the table.






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    Why the downvote? Looks like a nice answer to me.
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    – raven
    Mar 15 at 18:23










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    I'm fairly certain that the Sith aren't inherently evil, and there are plenty of examples in the extended canon of Sith who practiced the Dark Side without evil intent - Vadar and (especially) Sidius just happened to be evil as well as being Sith. For example, Quigon Jinn is a famous (if unconfirmed) grey Jedi - a user of both Light and Dark Sides of The Force without being corrupted by the Dark Side. There's a more fundamental and less "good-vs-evil" difference between Light and Dark.
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    – Abion47
    Mar 16 at 0:13










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    @Abion47: "Plenty" seems to be pushing it. AFAICT, there are a tiny handful of exceptions, wherein people who come to the Dark Side late in life (with fully developed mental control and codes of ethics), for reasons of essentially academic curiosity, manage to resist the temptation to fully embrace the Dark Side and the inherently evil things it demands of its practitioners. When the other 99% of the Sith are evil, #NotAllSith kinda loses its power.
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    – ShadowRanger
    Mar 16 at 0:37



















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I deny the hypothesis.



Sometimes a curse is the only resort for someone who is tormented by another, and who cannot get justice in any other way. The deck is stacked against them, the laws favor the powerful, and the only way they can get justice is by the curse.



This, of course, is well known by those in power. It is not in the interests of the powerful to let just anyone cast a curse. Of course curses are frowned on by the community of those in power. "Look at the scum who use them!", they say to each other.



Thus the prohibition. If those in power allowed just anyone to cast a curse, they would have a populist revolution on their hands in no time.






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    Propaganda



    Why do you think it's called something with such a strong connotation as "Curse" in the first place?



    Magic is tranquility and serenity like you mention. But more than that, Magic is Order, Control and a steady strength.



    "Curse," as the propagandists would have you believe, is suffering and pain. But deeper than that, it's Chaos and Change. Do you really need strong painful emotions when casting? Or just strong emotions in general? Just how much of what you know of "Curse" is actually true?



    So of course the goal of those who firmly believe in Magic, Order and Control is to outlaw anything that could shake their rule. And what could be more disruptive to them than the force of disruption itself? Chaos and Change are naturally their most dangerous enemy. So how do you prevent the populous from practicing this? Outlaw it. Make it taboo. Paint it as a sick and evil art.



    Of course, as any historian knows, you can't hold back Change forever. The longer you try, the more Chaos it will bring when it finally comes...






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      I'm sure this comparison has been drawn already, but this notion is very similar to the Light and Dark Sides of The Force. They are both sides of the same power that governs and intertwines among all living things, but the aspects of The Force that are seen as "The Dark Side" are heavily discouraged and, past a certain point, criminalized.



      The difference is that the Light Side is the side that is attributed to peace, order, and serenity, whereas the Dark Side is attributed to passion and chaos. While not inherently so, the Dark Side was seen as evil because of the penchant of its followers to sow destruction. In addition, in the words of then Supreme Chancellor Palpatine, "The Dark Side of the force is a pathway to many abilities, some considered to be unnatural", which further deepened the mistrust directed toward Dark Side practitioners.



      Your "curses" are similar in that they differ from "good magic" only in the nature of their source - passion as opposed to peace. That by itself isn't enough to label curses as evil, but consider the types of people who would be drawn to a more passionate form of magic. Those types are more likely to cause chaos and destruction, either accidentally as they experiment and explore, or deliberately as they seek higher forms of power. Practitioners of "good magic" would be seen as calm and noble by comparison, so they would become the standard by which all users of magic are judged.



      As such, there would grow to be a historical mistrust toward users of curses that penetrates deep into people's prejudices to the extent that even suggesting their use could be seen as a criminal offense.






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        6 Answers
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        6 Answers
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        When you are angry you can only "curse" and therefore only bring destruction - you are angry after all. when you are relaxed you can do anything because you can rationally think about your options and your goals.



        "Curse" is therefore simply a name for "casting magic while in a negative state of mind" and as a negative state of mind leads to destructive magic this is deemed illegal. It's just semantics according to your definitions, therefore only "curses" are forbidden because that is equivalent to saying "you were out of control while using a very, very powerful tool". It's like drunk driving or something similarly reckless. If you accidentally harm someone with normal use of magic it's just that - an accident. You didn't plan to do something dangerous.






        share|improve this answer









        $endgroup$









        • 9




          $begingroup$
          Are you clinically depressed? Take Panancea and cast legal curse free magic again! (Panancea has not been regulated by the CDC or FDA for preventing illegal Curses)
          $endgroup$
          – IT Alex
          Mar 15 at 12:39






        • 3




          $begingroup$
          Curses are basically purposefully putting yourself in compromised state of mind before handling a deadly tool. Drunk driving to a tee.
          $endgroup$
          – John
          Mar 15 at 23:28


















        14












        $begingroup$

        When you are angry you can only "curse" and therefore only bring destruction - you are angry after all. when you are relaxed you can do anything because you can rationally think about your options and your goals.



        "Curse" is therefore simply a name for "casting magic while in a negative state of mind" and as a negative state of mind leads to destructive magic this is deemed illegal. It's just semantics according to your definitions, therefore only "curses" are forbidden because that is equivalent to saying "you were out of control while using a very, very powerful tool". It's like drunk driving or something similarly reckless. If you accidentally harm someone with normal use of magic it's just that - an accident. You didn't plan to do something dangerous.






        share|improve this answer









        $endgroup$









        • 9




          $begingroup$
          Are you clinically depressed? Take Panancea and cast legal curse free magic again! (Panancea has not been regulated by the CDC or FDA for preventing illegal Curses)
          $endgroup$
          – IT Alex
          Mar 15 at 12:39






        • 3




          $begingroup$
          Curses are basically purposefully putting yourself in compromised state of mind before handling a deadly tool. Drunk driving to a tee.
          $endgroup$
          – John
          Mar 15 at 23:28
















        14












        14








        14





        $begingroup$

        When you are angry you can only "curse" and therefore only bring destruction - you are angry after all. when you are relaxed you can do anything because you can rationally think about your options and your goals.



        "Curse" is therefore simply a name for "casting magic while in a negative state of mind" and as a negative state of mind leads to destructive magic this is deemed illegal. It's just semantics according to your definitions, therefore only "curses" are forbidden because that is equivalent to saying "you were out of control while using a very, very powerful tool". It's like drunk driving or something similarly reckless. If you accidentally harm someone with normal use of magic it's just that - an accident. You didn't plan to do something dangerous.






        share|improve this answer









        $endgroup$



        When you are angry you can only "curse" and therefore only bring destruction - you are angry after all. when you are relaxed you can do anything because you can rationally think about your options and your goals.



        "Curse" is therefore simply a name for "casting magic while in a negative state of mind" and as a negative state of mind leads to destructive magic this is deemed illegal. It's just semantics according to your definitions, therefore only "curses" are forbidden because that is equivalent to saying "you were out of control while using a very, very powerful tool". It's like drunk driving or something similarly reckless. If you accidentally harm someone with normal use of magic it's just that - an accident. You didn't plan to do something dangerous.







        share|improve this answer












        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer










        answered Mar 15 at 12:33









        SecespitusSecespitus

        15.5k963106




        15.5k963106








        • 9




          $begingroup$
          Are you clinically depressed? Take Panancea and cast legal curse free magic again! (Panancea has not been regulated by the CDC or FDA for preventing illegal Curses)
          $endgroup$
          – IT Alex
          Mar 15 at 12:39






        • 3




          $begingroup$
          Curses are basically purposefully putting yourself in compromised state of mind before handling a deadly tool. Drunk driving to a tee.
          $endgroup$
          – John
          Mar 15 at 23:28
















        • 9




          $begingroup$
          Are you clinically depressed? Take Panancea and cast legal curse free magic again! (Panancea has not been regulated by the CDC or FDA for preventing illegal Curses)
          $endgroup$
          – IT Alex
          Mar 15 at 12:39






        • 3




          $begingroup$
          Curses are basically purposefully putting yourself in compromised state of mind before handling a deadly tool. Drunk driving to a tee.
          $endgroup$
          – John
          Mar 15 at 23:28










        9




        9




        $begingroup$
        Are you clinically depressed? Take Panancea and cast legal curse free magic again! (Panancea has not been regulated by the CDC or FDA for preventing illegal Curses)
        $endgroup$
        – IT Alex
        Mar 15 at 12:39




        $begingroup$
        Are you clinically depressed? Take Panancea and cast legal curse free magic again! (Panancea has not been regulated by the CDC or FDA for preventing illegal Curses)
        $endgroup$
        – IT Alex
        Mar 15 at 12:39




        3




        3




        $begingroup$
        Curses are basically purposefully putting yourself in compromised state of mind before handling a deadly tool. Drunk driving to a tee.
        $endgroup$
        – John
        Mar 15 at 23:28






        $begingroup$
        Curses are basically purposefully putting yourself in compromised state of mind before handling a deadly tool. Drunk driving to a tee.
        $endgroup$
        – John
        Mar 15 at 23:28













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        I would argue that the opposite of a curse is really a blessing. A curse is always intended to do harm to the target, but a blessing is always intended to benefit the target. The caster of a curse would not necessarily have to be angry. Jealousy or greed would work just as well as a motive to place a curse on somebody. Black magic may come from a dark or bad place, but could potentially be used for good. All curses may be black magic, but not all black magic is a curse. There are also other scenarios like granting immortality, which depending on your point of view can be a blessing or a curse.






        share|improve this answer











        $endgroup$









        • 3




          $begingroup$
          I agree. The opposite of Curse is not Magic. The opposite of Curse is Blessing and both are types of Magic. The difference between them is the intention of the person exerting the influence.
          $endgroup$
          – krb
          Mar 15 at 16:15






        • 2




          $begingroup$
          @SciFiGuy This is Worldbuilding. The intent here is to create new worlds that don't necessarily work the way the real world (or existing fictional ones do). To some extent you have to take as a given "counterfactual" statements that OP gives. Don't get too focused on the words. In OP's world the two terms are "Curse" and "Magic", but they could just as easily have been "Xarg'blag" and "Threen". Threen requires a state of calm, whereas Xarg'blag requires strong emotion, but both pull energy from a common source. So why is Threen permitted and Xarg'blag banned?
          $endgroup$
          – R.M.
          Mar 15 at 21:29
















        10












        $begingroup$

        I would argue that the opposite of a curse is really a blessing. A curse is always intended to do harm to the target, but a blessing is always intended to benefit the target. The caster of a curse would not necessarily have to be angry. Jealousy or greed would work just as well as a motive to place a curse on somebody. Black magic may come from a dark or bad place, but could potentially be used for good. All curses may be black magic, but not all black magic is a curse. There are also other scenarios like granting immortality, which depending on your point of view can be a blessing or a curse.






        share|improve this answer











        $endgroup$









        • 3




          $begingroup$
          I agree. The opposite of Curse is not Magic. The opposite of Curse is Blessing and both are types of Magic. The difference between them is the intention of the person exerting the influence.
          $endgroup$
          – krb
          Mar 15 at 16:15






        • 2




          $begingroup$
          @SciFiGuy This is Worldbuilding. The intent here is to create new worlds that don't necessarily work the way the real world (or existing fictional ones do). To some extent you have to take as a given "counterfactual" statements that OP gives. Don't get too focused on the words. In OP's world the two terms are "Curse" and "Magic", but they could just as easily have been "Xarg'blag" and "Threen". Threen requires a state of calm, whereas Xarg'blag requires strong emotion, but both pull energy from a common source. So why is Threen permitted and Xarg'blag banned?
          $endgroup$
          – R.M.
          Mar 15 at 21:29














        10












        10








        10





        $begingroup$

        I would argue that the opposite of a curse is really a blessing. A curse is always intended to do harm to the target, but a blessing is always intended to benefit the target. The caster of a curse would not necessarily have to be angry. Jealousy or greed would work just as well as a motive to place a curse on somebody. Black magic may come from a dark or bad place, but could potentially be used for good. All curses may be black magic, but not all black magic is a curse. There are also other scenarios like granting immortality, which depending on your point of view can be a blessing or a curse.






        share|improve this answer











        $endgroup$



        I would argue that the opposite of a curse is really a blessing. A curse is always intended to do harm to the target, but a blessing is always intended to benefit the target. The caster of a curse would not necessarily have to be angry. Jealousy or greed would work just as well as a motive to place a curse on somebody. Black magic may come from a dark or bad place, but could potentially be used for good. All curses may be black magic, but not all black magic is a curse. There are also other scenarios like granting immortality, which depending on your point of view can be a blessing or a curse.







        share|improve this answer














        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer








        edited Mar 15 at 15:32

























        answered Mar 15 at 15:04









        SciFiGuySciFiGuy

        1,64312




        1,64312








        • 3




          $begingroup$
          I agree. The opposite of Curse is not Magic. The opposite of Curse is Blessing and both are types of Magic. The difference between them is the intention of the person exerting the influence.
          $endgroup$
          – krb
          Mar 15 at 16:15






        • 2




          $begingroup$
          @SciFiGuy This is Worldbuilding. The intent here is to create new worlds that don't necessarily work the way the real world (or existing fictional ones do). To some extent you have to take as a given "counterfactual" statements that OP gives. Don't get too focused on the words. In OP's world the two terms are "Curse" and "Magic", but they could just as easily have been "Xarg'blag" and "Threen". Threen requires a state of calm, whereas Xarg'blag requires strong emotion, but both pull energy from a common source. So why is Threen permitted and Xarg'blag banned?
          $endgroup$
          – R.M.
          Mar 15 at 21:29














        • 3




          $begingroup$
          I agree. The opposite of Curse is not Magic. The opposite of Curse is Blessing and both are types of Magic. The difference between them is the intention of the person exerting the influence.
          $endgroup$
          – krb
          Mar 15 at 16:15






        • 2




          $begingroup$
          @SciFiGuy This is Worldbuilding. The intent here is to create new worlds that don't necessarily work the way the real world (or existing fictional ones do). To some extent you have to take as a given "counterfactual" statements that OP gives. Don't get too focused on the words. In OP's world the two terms are "Curse" and "Magic", but they could just as easily have been "Xarg'blag" and "Threen". Threen requires a state of calm, whereas Xarg'blag requires strong emotion, but both pull energy from a common source. So why is Threen permitted and Xarg'blag banned?
          $endgroup$
          – R.M.
          Mar 15 at 21:29








        3




        3




        $begingroup$
        I agree. The opposite of Curse is not Magic. The opposite of Curse is Blessing and both are types of Magic. The difference between them is the intention of the person exerting the influence.
        $endgroup$
        – krb
        Mar 15 at 16:15




        $begingroup$
        I agree. The opposite of Curse is not Magic. The opposite of Curse is Blessing and both are types of Magic. The difference between them is the intention of the person exerting the influence.
        $endgroup$
        – krb
        Mar 15 at 16:15




        2




        2




        $begingroup$
        @SciFiGuy This is Worldbuilding. The intent here is to create new worlds that don't necessarily work the way the real world (or existing fictional ones do). To some extent you have to take as a given "counterfactual" statements that OP gives. Don't get too focused on the words. In OP's world the two terms are "Curse" and "Magic", but they could just as easily have been "Xarg'blag" and "Threen". Threen requires a state of calm, whereas Xarg'blag requires strong emotion, but both pull energy from a common source. So why is Threen permitted and Xarg'blag banned?
        $endgroup$
        – R.M.
        Mar 15 at 21:29




        $begingroup$
        @SciFiGuy This is Worldbuilding. The intent here is to create new worlds that don't necessarily work the way the real world (or existing fictional ones do). To some extent you have to take as a given "counterfactual" statements that OP gives. Don't get too focused on the words. In OP's world the two terms are "Curse" and "Magic", but they could just as easily have been "Xarg'blag" and "Threen". Threen requires a state of calm, whereas Xarg'blag requires strong emotion, but both pull energy from a common source. So why is Threen permitted and Xarg'blag banned?
        $endgroup$
        – R.M.
        Mar 15 at 21:29











        7












        $begingroup$

        You can't fuel your magic with negative emotions without it changing you as well.



        So, the Unforgivable Curses in Harry Potter follow this kind of logic. After Harry casts a Cruciatus Curse fueled by righteous anger, it has a neglegible effect on Bellatrix Lestrange.




        ‘Never used an Unforgivable Curse before, have you, boy?’ she yelled. She had abandoned her baby voice now. ‘You need to mean them, Potter! You need to really want to cause pain – to enjoy it - righteous anger won’t hurt me for long – I’ll show you how it is done, shall I? I’ll give you a lesson –’




        The key here is that it's not just anger that drives the curse, but the cruelty as well. That level of hatred and cruelty inevitably corrupt the person trying to harness it. If you don't truly feel it, you can't harness it, but if you truly feel it, it begins to take hold of your life until it consumes you.



        This is also why the Sith form Star Wars appear to grow so powerful so quickly.




        Luke: Vader... Is the dark side stronger?



        Yoda: No, no, no. Quicker, easier, more seductive.




        Because the use of curse magic reinforces the cruelty of the user, it becomes easier and easier to do, making the user very powerful but also sealing them off from the good things in the world.



        It's pretty easy to imagine why a society would be against that. You can only handle so many dark wizards before you start taking steps to prevent them from being created.



        It's the same logic our society uses with dogs. If a dog bites someone, more often than not it's euthanized, not because of the bite itself, most are superficial damage at best. It's because when the dog finds itself in a similar situation again the dog realizes that option worked before, so it's clearly on the table.






        share|improve this answer









        $endgroup$













        • $begingroup$
          Why the downvote? Looks like a nice answer to me.
          $endgroup$
          – raven
          Mar 15 at 18:23










        • $begingroup$
          I'm fairly certain that the Sith aren't inherently evil, and there are plenty of examples in the extended canon of Sith who practiced the Dark Side without evil intent - Vadar and (especially) Sidius just happened to be evil as well as being Sith. For example, Quigon Jinn is a famous (if unconfirmed) grey Jedi - a user of both Light and Dark Sides of The Force without being corrupted by the Dark Side. There's a more fundamental and less "good-vs-evil" difference between Light and Dark.
          $endgroup$
          – Abion47
          Mar 16 at 0:13










        • $begingroup$
          @Abion47: "Plenty" seems to be pushing it. AFAICT, there are a tiny handful of exceptions, wherein people who come to the Dark Side late in life (with fully developed mental control and codes of ethics), for reasons of essentially academic curiosity, manage to resist the temptation to fully embrace the Dark Side and the inherently evil things it demands of its practitioners. When the other 99% of the Sith are evil, #NotAllSith kinda loses its power.
          $endgroup$
          – ShadowRanger
          Mar 16 at 0:37
















        7












        $begingroup$

        You can't fuel your magic with negative emotions without it changing you as well.



        So, the Unforgivable Curses in Harry Potter follow this kind of logic. After Harry casts a Cruciatus Curse fueled by righteous anger, it has a neglegible effect on Bellatrix Lestrange.




        ‘Never used an Unforgivable Curse before, have you, boy?’ she yelled. She had abandoned her baby voice now. ‘You need to mean them, Potter! You need to really want to cause pain – to enjoy it - righteous anger won’t hurt me for long – I’ll show you how it is done, shall I? I’ll give you a lesson –’




        The key here is that it's not just anger that drives the curse, but the cruelty as well. That level of hatred and cruelty inevitably corrupt the person trying to harness it. If you don't truly feel it, you can't harness it, but if you truly feel it, it begins to take hold of your life until it consumes you.



        This is also why the Sith form Star Wars appear to grow so powerful so quickly.




        Luke: Vader... Is the dark side stronger?



        Yoda: No, no, no. Quicker, easier, more seductive.




        Because the use of curse magic reinforces the cruelty of the user, it becomes easier and easier to do, making the user very powerful but also sealing them off from the good things in the world.



        It's pretty easy to imagine why a society would be against that. You can only handle so many dark wizards before you start taking steps to prevent them from being created.



        It's the same logic our society uses with dogs. If a dog bites someone, more often than not it's euthanized, not because of the bite itself, most are superficial damage at best. It's because when the dog finds itself in a similar situation again the dog realizes that option worked before, so it's clearly on the table.






        share|improve this answer









        $endgroup$













        • $begingroup$
          Why the downvote? Looks like a nice answer to me.
          $endgroup$
          – raven
          Mar 15 at 18:23










        • $begingroup$
          I'm fairly certain that the Sith aren't inherently evil, and there are plenty of examples in the extended canon of Sith who practiced the Dark Side without evil intent - Vadar and (especially) Sidius just happened to be evil as well as being Sith. For example, Quigon Jinn is a famous (if unconfirmed) grey Jedi - a user of both Light and Dark Sides of The Force without being corrupted by the Dark Side. There's a more fundamental and less "good-vs-evil" difference between Light and Dark.
          $endgroup$
          – Abion47
          Mar 16 at 0:13










        • $begingroup$
          @Abion47: "Plenty" seems to be pushing it. AFAICT, there are a tiny handful of exceptions, wherein people who come to the Dark Side late in life (with fully developed mental control and codes of ethics), for reasons of essentially academic curiosity, manage to resist the temptation to fully embrace the Dark Side and the inherently evil things it demands of its practitioners. When the other 99% of the Sith are evil, #NotAllSith kinda loses its power.
          $endgroup$
          – ShadowRanger
          Mar 16 at 0:37














        7












        7








        7





        $begingroup$

        You can't fuel your magic with negative emotions without it changing you as well.



        So, the Unforgivable Curses in Harry Potter follow this kind of logic. After Harry casts a Cruciatus Curse fueled by righteous anger, it has a neglegible effect on Bellatrix Lestrange.




        ‘Never used an Unforgivable Curse before, have you, boy?’ she yelled. She had abandoned her baby voice now. ‘You need to mean them, Potter! You need to really want to cause pain – to enjoy it - righteous anger won’t hurt me for long – I’ll show you how it is done, shall I? I’ll give you a lesson –’




        The key here is that it's not just anger that drives the curse, but the cruelty as well. That level of hatred and cruelty inevitably corrupt the person trying to harness it. If you don't truly feel it, you can't harness it, but if you truly feel it, it begins to take hold of your life until it consumes you.



        This is also why the Sith form Star Wars appear to grow so powerful so quickly.




        Luke: Vader... Is the dark side stronger?



        Yoda: No, no, no. Quicker, easier, more seductive.




        Because the use of curse magic reinforces the cruelty of the user, it becomes easier and easier to do, making the user very powerful but also sealing them off from the good things in the world.



        It's pretty easy to imagine why a society would be against that. You can only handle so many dark wizards before you start taking steps to prevent them from being created.



        It's the same logic our society uses with dogs. If a dog bites someone, more often than not it's euthanized, not because of the bite itself, most are superficial damage at best. It's because when the dog finds itself in a similar situation again the dog realizes that option worked before, so it's clearly on the table.






        share|improve this answer









        $endgroup$



        You can't fuel your magic with negative emotions without it changing you as well.



        So, the Unforgivable Curses in Harry Potter follow this kind of logic. After Harry casts a Cruciatus Curse fueled by righteous anger, it has a neglegible effect on Bellatrix Lestrange.




        ‘Never used an Unforgivable Curse before, have you, boy?’ she yelled. She had abandoned her baby voice now. ‘You need to mean them, Potter! You need to really want to cause pain – to enjoy it - righteous anger won’t hurt me for long – I’ll show you how it is done, shall I? I’ll give you a lesson –’




        The key here is that it's not just anger that drives the curse, but the cruelty as well. That level of hatred and cruelty inevitably corrupt the person trying to harness it. If you don't truly feel it, you can't harness it, but if you truly feel it, it begins to take hold of your life until it consumes you.



        This is also why the Sith form Star Wars appear to grow so powerful so quickly.




        Luke: Vader... Is the dark side stronger?



        Yoda: No, no, no. Quicker, easier, more seductive.




        Because the use of curse magic reinforces the cruelty of the user, it becomes easier and easier to do, making the user very powerful but also sealing them off from the good things in the world.



        It's pretty easy to imagine why a society would be against that. You can only handle so many dark wizards before you start taking steps to prevent them from being created.



        It's the same logic our society uses with dogs. If a dog bites someone, more often than not it's euthanized, not because of the bite itself, most are superficial damage at best. It's because when the dog finds itself in a similar situation again the dog realizes that option worked before, so it's clearly on the table.







        share|improve this answer












        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer










        answered Mar 15 at 15:33









        John KossaJohn Kossa

        4594




        4594












        • $begingroup$
          Why the downvote? Looks like a nice answer to me.
          $endgroup$
          – raven
          Mar 15 at 18:23










        • $begingroup$
          I'm fairly certain that the Sith aren't inherently evil, and there are plenty of examples in the extended canon of Sith who practiced the Dark Side without evil intent - Vadar and (especially) Sidius just happened to be evil as well as being Sith. For example, Quigon Jinn is a famous (if unconfirmed) grey Jedi - a user of both Light and Dark Sides of The Force without being corrupted by the Dark Side. There's a more fundamental and less "good-vs-evil" difference between Light and Dark.
          $endgroup$
          – Abion47
          Mar 16 at 0:13










        • $begingroup$
          @Abion47: "Plenty" seems to be pushing it. AFAICT, there are a tiny handful of exceptions, wherein people who come to the Dark Side late in life (with fully developed mental control and codes of ethics), for reasons of essentially academic curiosity, manage to resist the temptation to fully embrace the Dark Side and the inherently evil things it demands of its practitioners. When the other 99% of the Sith are evil, #NotAllSith kinda loses its power.
          $endgroup$
          – ShadowRanger
          Mar 16 at 0:37


















        • $begingroup$
          Why the downvote? Looks like a nice answer to me.
          $endgroup$
          – raven
          Mar 15 at 18:23










        • $begingroup$
          I'm fairly certain that the Sith aren't inherently evil, and there are plenty of examples in the extended canon of Sith who practiced the Dark Side without evil intent - Vadar and (especially) Sidius just happened to be evil as well as being Sith. For example, Quigon Jinn is a famous (if unconfirmed) grey Jedi - a user of both Light and Dark Sides of The Force without being corrupted by the Dark Side. There's a more fundamental and less "good-vs-evil" difference between Light and Dark.
          $endgroup$
          – Abion47
          Mar 16 at 0:13










        • $begingroup$
          @Abion47: "Plenty" seems to be pushing it. AFAICT, there are a tiny handful of exceptions, wherein people who come to the Dark Side late in life (with fully developed mental control and codes of ethics), for reasons of essentially academic curiosity, manage to resist the temptation to fully embrace the Dark Side and the inherently evil things it demands of its practitioners. When the other 99% of the Sith are evil, #NotAllSith kinda loses its power.
          $endgroup$
          – ShadowRanger
          Mar 16 at 0:37
















        $begingroup$
        Why the downvote? Looks like a nice answer to me.
        $endgroup$
        – raven
        Mar 15 at 18:23




        $begingroup$
        Why the downvote? Looks like a nice answer to me.
        $endgroup$
        – raven
        Mar 15 at 18:23












        $begingroup$
        I'm fairly certain that the Sith aren't inherently evil, and there are plenty of examples in the extended canon of Sith who practiced the Dark Side without evil intent - Vadar and (especially) Sidius just happened to be evil as well as being Sith. For example, Quigon Jinn is a famous (if unconfirmed) grey Jedi - a user of both Light and Dark Sides of The Force without being corrupted by the Dark Side. There's a more fundamental and less "good-vs-evil" difference between Light and Dark.
        $endgroup$
        – Abion47
        Mar 16 at 0:13




        $begingroup$
        I'm fairly certain that the Sith aren't inherently evil, and there are plenty of examples in the extended canon of Sith who practiced the Dark Side without evil intent - Vadar and (especially) Sidius just happened to be evil as well as being Sith. For example, Quigon Jinn is a famous (if unconfirmed) grey Jedi - a user of both Light and Dark Sides of The Force without being corrupted by the Dark Side. There's a more fundamental and less "good-vs-evil" difference between Light and Dark.
        $endgroup$
        – Abion47
        Mar 16 at 0:13












        $begingroup$
        @Abion47: "Plenty" seems to be pushing it. AFAICT, there are a tiny handful of exceptions, wherein people who come to the Dark Side late in life (with fully developed mental control and codes of ethics), for reasons of essentially academic curiosity, manage to resist the temptation to fully embrace the Dark Side and the inherently evil things it demands of its practitioners. When the other 99% of the Sith are evil, #NotAllSith kinda loses its power.
        $endgroup$
        – ShadowRanger
        Mar 16 at 0:37




        $begingroup$
        @Abion47: "Plenty" seems to be pushing it. AFAICT, there are a tiny handful of exceptions, wherein people who come to the Dark Side late in life (with fully developed mental control and codes of ethics), for reasons of essentially academic curiosity, manage to resist the temptation to fully embrace the Dark Side and the inherently evil things it demands of its practitioners. When the other 99% of the Sith are evil, #NotAllSith kinda loses its power.
        $endgroup$
        – ShadowRanger
        Mar 16 at 0:37











        2












        $begingroup$

        I deny the hypothesis.



        Sometimes a curse is the only resort for someone who is tormented by another, and who cannot get justice in any other way. The deck is stacked against them, the laws favor the powerful, and the only way they can get justice is by the curse.



        This, of course, is well known by those in power. It is not in the interests of the powerful to let just anyone cast a curse. Of course curses are frowned on by the community of those in power. "Look at the scum who use them!", they say to each other.



        Thus the prohibition. If those in power allowed just anyone to cast a curse, they would have a populist revolution on their hands in no time.






        share|improve this answer









        $endgroup$


















          2












          $begingroup$

          I deny the hypothesis.



          Sometimes a curse is the only resort for someone who is tormented by another, and who cannot get justice in any other way. The deck is stacked against them, the laws favor the powerful, and the only way they can get justice is by the curse.



          This, of course, is well known by those in power. It is not in the interests of the powerful to let just anyone cast a curse. Of course curses are frowned on by the community of those in power. "Look at the scum who use them!", they say to each other.



          Thus the prohibition. If those in power allowed just anyone to cast a curse, they would have a populist revolution on their hands in no time.






          share|improve this answer









          $endgroup$
















            2












            2








            2





            $begingroup$

            I deny the hypothesis.



            Sometimes a curse is the only resort for someone who is tormented by another, and who cannot get justice in any other way. The deck is stacked against them, the laws favor the powerful, and the only way they can get justice is by the curse.



            This, of course, is well known by those in power. It is not in the interests of the powerful to let just anyone cast a curse. Of course curses are frowned on by the community of those in power. "Look at the scum who use them!", they say to each other.



            Thus the prohibition. If those in power allowed just anyone to cast a curse, they would have a populist revolution on their hands in no time.






            share|improve this answer









            $endgroup$



            I deny the hypothesis.



            Sometimes a curse is the only resort for someone who is tormented by another, and who cannot get justice in any other way. The deck is stacked against them, the laws favor the powerful, and the only way they can get justice is by the curse.



            This, of course, is well known by those in power. It is not in the interests of the powerful to let just anyone cast a curse. Of course curses are frowned on by the community of those in power. "Look at the scum who use them!", they say to each other.



            Thus the prohibition. If those in power allowed just anyone to cast a curse, they would have a populist revolution on their hands in no time.







            share|improve this answer












            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer










            answered Mar 15 at 21:11









            Lee MosherLee Mosher

            1213




            1213























                2












                $begingroup$

                Propaganda



                Why do you think it's called something with such a strong connotation as "Curse" in the first place?



                Magic is tranquility and serenity like you mention. But more than that, Magic is Order, Control and a steady strength.



                "Curse," as the propagandists would have you believe, is suffering and pain. But deeper than that, it's Chaos and Change. Do you really need strong painful emotions when casting? Or just strong emotions in general? Just how much of what you know of "Curse" is actually true?



                So of course the goal of those who firmly believe in Magic, Order and Control is to outlaw anything that could shake their rule. And what could be more disruptive to them than the force of disruption itself? Chaos and Change are naturally their most dangerous enemy. So how do you prevent the populous from practicing this? Outlaw it. Make it taboo. Paint it as a sick and evil art.



                Of course, as any historian knows, you can't hold back Change forever. The longer you try, the more Chaos it will bring when it finally comes...






                share|improve this answer











                $endgroup$


















                  2












                  $begingroup$

                  Propaganda



                  Why do you think it's called something with such a strong connotation as "Curse" in the first place?



                  Magic is tranquility and serenity like you mention. But more than that, Magic is Order, Control and a steady strength.



                  "Curse," as the propagandists would have you believe, is suffering and pain. But deeper than that, it's Chaos and Change. Do you really need strong painful emotions when casting? Or just strong emotions in general? Just how much of what you know of "Curse" is actually true?



                  So of course the goal of those who firmly believe in Magic, Order and Control is to outlaw anything that could shake their rule. And what could be more disruptive to them than the force of disruption itself? Chaos and Change are naturally their most dangerous enemy. So how do you prevent the populous from practicing this? Outlaw it. Make it taboo. Paint it as a sick and evil art.



                  Of course, as any historian knows, you can't hold back Change forever. The longer you try, the more Chaos it will bring when it finally comes...






                  share|improve this answer











                  $endgroup$
















                    2












                    2








                    2





                    $begingroup$

                    Propaganda



                    Why do you think it's called something with such a strong connotation as "Curse" in the first place?



                    Magic is tranquility and serenity like you mention. But more than that, Magic is Order, Control and a steady strength.



                    "Curse," as the propagandists would have you believe, is suffering and pain. But deeper than that, it's Chaos and Change. Do you really need strong painful emotions when casting? Or just strong emotions in general? Just how much of what you know of "Curse" is actually true?



                    So of course the goal of those who firmly believe in Magic, Order and Control is to outlaw anything that could shake their rule. And what could be more disruptive to them than the force of disruption itself? Chaos and Change are naturally their most dangerous enemy. So how do you prevent the populous from practicing this? Outlaw it. Make it taboo. Paint it as a sick and evil art.



                    Of course, as any historian knows, you can't hold back Change forever. The longer you try, the more Chaos it will bring when it finally comes...






                    share|improve this answer











                    $endgroup$



                    Propaganda



                    Why do you think it's called something with such a strong connotation as "Curse" in the first place?



                    Magic is tranquility and serenity like you mention. But more than that, Magic is Order, Control and a steady strength.



                    "Curse," as the propagandists would have you believe, is suffering and pain. But deeper than that, it's Chaos and Change. Do you really need strong painful emotions when casting? Or just strong emotions in general? Just how much of what you know of "Curse" is actually true?



                    So of course the goal of those who firmly believe in Magic, Order and Control is to outlaw anything that could shake their rule. And what could be more disruptive to them than the force of disruption itself? Chaos and Change are naturally their most dangerous enemy. So how do you prevent the populous from practicing this? Outlaw it. Make it taboo. Paint it as a sick and evil art.



                    Of course, as any historian knows, you can't hold back Change forever. The longer you try, the more Chaos it will bring when it finally comes...







                    share|improve this answer














                    share|improve this answer



                    share|improve this answer








                    edited Mar 18 at 20:54

























                    answered Mar 15 at 20:20









                    scohe001scohe001

                    8501517




                    8501517























                        1












                        $begingroup$

                        I'm sure this comparison has been drawn already, but this notion is very similar to the Light and Dark Sides of The Force. They are both sides of the same power that governs and intertwines among all living things, but the aspects of The Force that are seen as "The Dark Side" are heavily discouraged and, past a certain point, criminalized.



                        The difference is that the Light Side is the side that is attributed to peace, order, and serenity, whereas the Dark Side is attributed to passion and chaos. While not inherently so, the Dark Side was seen as evil because of the penchant of its followers to sow destruction. In addition, in the words of then Supreme Chancellor Palpatine, "The Dark Side of the force is a pathway to many abilities, some considered to be unnatural", which further deepened the mistrust directed toward Dark Side practitioners.



                        Your "curses" are similar in that they differ from "good magic" only in the nature of their source - passion as opposed to peace. That by itself isn't enough to label curses as evil, but consider the types of people who would be drawn to a more passionate form of magic. Those types are more likely to cause chaos and destruction, either accidentally as they experiment and explore, or deliberately as they seek higher forms of power. Practitioners of "good magic" would be seen as calm and noble by comparison, so they would become the standard by which all users of magic are judged.



                        As such, there would grow to be a historical mistrust toward users of curses that penetrates deep into people's prejudices to the extent that even suggesting their use could be seen as a criminal offense.






                        share|improve this answer









                        $endgroup$


















                          1












                          $begingroup$

                          I'm sure this comparison has been drawn already, but this notion is very similar to the Light and Dark Sides of The Force. They are both sides of the same power that governs and intertwines among all living things, but the aspects of The Force that are seen as "The Dark Side" are heavily discouraged and, past a certain point, criminalized.



                          The difference is that the Light Side is the side that is attributed to peace, order, and serenity, whereas the Dark Side is attributed to passion and chaos. While not inherently so, the Dark Side was seen as evil because of the penchant of its followers to sow destruction. In addition, in the words of then Supreme Chancellor Palpatine, "The Dark Side of the force is a pathway to many abilities, some considered to be unnatural", which further deepened the mistrust directed toward Dark Side practitioners.



                          Your "curses" are similar in that they differ from "good magic" only in the nature of their source - passion as opposed to peace. That by itself isn't enough to label curses as evil, but consider the types of people who would be drawn to a more passionate form of magic. Those types are more likely to cause chaos and destruction, either accidentally as they experiment and explore, or deliberately as they seek higher forms of power. Practitioners of "good magic" would be seen as calm and noble by comparison, so they would become the standard by which all users of magic are judged.



                          As such, there would grow to be a historical mistrust toward users of curses that penetrates deep into people's prejudices to the extent that even suggesting their use could be seen as a criminal offense.






                          share|improve this answer









                          $endgroup$
















                            1












                            1








                            1





                            $begingroup$

                            I'm sure this comparison has been drawn already, but this notion is very similar to the Light and Dark Sides of The Force. They are both sides of the same power that governs and intertwines among all living things, but the aspects of The Force that are seen as "The Dark Side" are heavily discouraged and, past a certain point, criminalized.



                            The difference is that the Light Side is the side that is attributed to peace, order, and serenity, whereas the Dark Side is attributed to passion and chaos. While not inherently so, the Dark Side was seen as evil because of the penchant of its followers to sow destruction. In addition, in the words of then Supreme Chancellor Palpatine, "The Dark Side of the force is a pathway to many abilities, some considered to be unnatural", which further deepened the mistrust directed toward Dark Side practitioners.



                            Your "curses" are similar in that they differ from "good magic" only in the nature of their source - passion as opposed to peace. That by itself isn't enough to label curses as evil, but consider the types of people who would be drawn to a more passionate form of magic. Those types are more likely to cause chaos and destruction, either accidentally as they experiment and explore, or deliberately as they seek higher forms of power. Practitioners of "good magic" would be seen as calm and noble by comparison, so they would become the standard by which all users of magic are judged.



                            As such, there would grow to be a historical mistrust toward users of curses that penetrates deep into people's prejudices to the extent that even suggesting their use could be seen as a criminal offense.






                            share|improve this answer









                            $endgroup$



                            I'm sure this comparison has been drawn already, but this notion is very similar to the Light and Dark Sides of The Force. They are both sides of the same power that governs and intertwines among all living things, but the aspects of The Force that are seen as "The Dark Side" are heavily discouraged and, past a certain point, criminalized.



                            The difference is that the Light Side is the side that is attributed to peace, order, and serenity, whereas the Dark Side is attributed to passion and chaos. While not inherently so, the Dark Side was seen as evil because of the penchant of its followers to sow destruction. In addition, in the words of then Supreme Chancellor Palpatine, "The Dark Side of the force is a pathway to many abilities, some considered to be unnatural", which further deepened the mistrust directed toward Dark Side practitioners.



                            Your "curses" are similar in that they differ from "good magic" only in the nature of their source - passion as opposed to peace. That by itself isn't enough to label curses as evil, but consider the types of people who would be drawn to a more passionate form of magic. Those types are more likely to cause chaos and destruction, either accidentally as they experiment and explore, or deliberately as they seek higher forms of power. Practitioners of "good magic" would be seen as calm and noble by comparison, so they would become the standard by which all users of magic are judged.



                            As such, there would grow to be a historical mistrust toward users of curses that penetrates deep into people's prejudices to the extent that even suggesting their use could be seen as a criminal offense.







                            share|improve this answer












                            share|improve this answer



                            share|improve this answer










                            answered Mar 16 at 0:06









                            Abion47Abion47

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