Which question in this sequence is your first "yes" answer? (Explanations and justifications welcome.)
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Replying to @KevinSimler
I answered Q1, but I would otherwise answer Q3 to avoid annoying confusions
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Replying to @KevinSimler
Beliefs about the mind affect the mind. Magick (and superstition) is a tool for affecting the mind through belief
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Replying to @FateOfTwist_ @KevinSimler
In domains where belief causes truth, it is useful to have tools for controlling that effect
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Replying to @FateOfTwist_
so superstitions work by way of your (or others') beliefs? you can't be affected by other culture's superstitions, right?
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Replying to @KevinSimler
You're affected by the superstitions of your social environment, regardless of belief ->
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Replying to @FateOfTwist_ @KevinSimler
professed disbelief provides some defence, but monkey brain can still be affected, and still vulnerable to other's beliefs
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Replying to @FateOfTwist_ @KevinSimler
If you don't believe 4 is unlucky, but everyone else does, it's unlucky for you regardless of your belief or even knowledge
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Replying to @FateOfTwist_ @KevinSimler
If they don't tell you, you can still be affected. Your belief can make it worse, but allows you to do public banishing ritual
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"If they don't tell you, you can still be affected." <— only by the way others treat you though, right?
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Replying to @KevinSimler
and the way their actions cause you to think and behave. Gain nonverbal/tacit belief in current unluck or even bad luck of 4
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