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- Path: sparky!uunet!spool.mu.edu!agate!anarres.CS.Berkeley.EDU!bh
- From: bh@anarres.CS.Berkeley.EDU (Brian Harvey)
- Newsgroups: alt.magic
- Subject: Re: To reveal or not to reveal...
- Date: 19 Nov 1992 15:40:46 GMT
- Organization: University of California, Berkeley
- Lines: 30
- Message-ID: <1egchuINNj2k@agate.berkeley.edu>
- References: <1ebdl6INNmc8@agate.berkeley.edu> <BARNETT.92Nov18090435@grymoire.crd.ge.com> <1992Nov18.194757.7437@vpnet.chi.il.us>
- NNTP-Posting-Host: anarres.cs.berkeley.edu
-
- mike@vpnet.chi.il.us (michael kamlet) writes:
- |In article <BARNETT.92Nov18090435@grymoire.crd.ge.com> barnett@crdgw1.ge.com writes:
- |>In article <1ebdl6INNmc8@agate.berkeley.edu> bh@anarres.CS.Berkeley.EDU (Brian Harvey) writes:
- |>>>People don't want secrets. They think they do, but they really want mystery.
- |>
- |>>Imho, saying this to 13,000 non-magicians does more harm to the magic community
- |>>than revealing secrets. "I know what you want better than you do" is pretty
- |>>insulting.
- |>
- |>How do you figure this does harm? If the audience knew how every trick
- |>worked, there would be no reason to see a magic act. [...]
- |
- |I couldn't agree more. I have explained how some stuff works to a few people
- |and EVERY time the person is now unimpressed & disappointed. [...]
-
- I've already replied to Mr. Barnett by mail, but several other people seem
- to have misunderstood what I intended to say in the same way, so let me say
- it to all of you:
-
- My original message quoted above was *not* intended as an argument for
- revealing secrets. *All* I meant was, it's really rude to say "I know
- what you want better than you know what you want" to anyone. You can
- find ways to explain and defend your policy on secrets that do not
- use this offensive tone.
-
- For example you could say "I recognize that you're curious about the way
- this is done, but I feel that you'd be disappointed if ..." or you could
- say "I recognize that you're curious about the way this is done, but my
- continued ability to present this effect requires..." or lots of things
- that don't suggest that the person asking doesn't "really" want to know.
-