The science of magic: how tricks are changing real-life research..
The small yellow ball disappears from the magician’s left hand, reappearing moments later, plucked out of thin air, by his right.
Hardly a mind-boggling move at a magic show, but this is an academic meeting – and the disappearing act is being used to punctuate the finer points of taxonomy.
As the inaugural conference on the Science of Magic at Goldsmiths, University of London, revealed, the study of magic is not the stuff of Harry Potter – a character mentioned just once in the day, and sarcastically – but an actual research tool, studied in the pursuit of knowledge about perception, belief and even politics.
Such research was presented at the Science of Magic conference last week to around 80 attendees, made up of local students, visiting researchers, creative educators, and magicians themselves. (Where normally bored listeners fiddle with phones, this audience shuffled decks of cards.)
Many attendees were a hybrid of academic and magician. Conference convenor Gustav Kuhn is a senior lecturer in psychology at the south London university, but he’s also been a semi-professional magician since his teens. While the psychological principles used by magicians helped trigger his career path, he realised not far along in his studies that one could inform the other. “I started to draw these links between magic and psychology,” he said. “Quite a lot of the questions that magicians are interested in are actually really quite similar to the kind of things that psychologists study as well.” Read more…
http://www.wired.co.uk/news/archive/2016-02/23/science-of-magic