@Splint:
If Mr Frog!gnomes go into SB2, make sure you call them 'high gnomes' or something -- DF kinda already has gnomes (Talvi pointed it out to me after the fact), which don't seem to be civilised.
@Asea:
That comment made me smile. Magic Vs Science as a trope seems to be hardwired into modern culture for some reason, which is a shame, because I've yet to see an implementation that actually makes sense.
I feel that our culture's concept of magic is a memetic fossil from a bygone era in which the world itself seemed to work by magic. Nobody knew why lightning fell or why seasons changed, so saying that putting a bunch of animal parts in a giant cookpot would let one see the future made about as much sense as anything in the real world.
However, we now, as a species, have built a fairly-comprehensive understanding of the world around us that seems to work fairly well when put into practice, so the arbitrary functioning of 'classic' magic feels jarringly-incongruous with what I currently understand to be reality, when it isn't actively-contradictory. I feel that this necessitates a change in approach, though others will disagree with me.
I also believe that the whole Magic Vs. Science thing stems from a perception that people's traditional beliefs were 'under attack' by the march of scientific progress; I say this because in most of the examples I've seen, the scientist is painted as a narrow-minded buffoon whereas the magician is always, always 100% right about everything, which indicates a degree of bias on the authours' part to me, as well as a lack of understanding of what 'science' actually is -- it usually isn't even science the magician is fighting, but rather basic human arrogance, and implicitly conflating the two like that says a lot about the authour's worldview.
(Sometimes, if the authour is feeling charitable, the scientist will get tech-y gadgetry to play with, but the magician still gets to be an almighty know-it-all.)
(Okay, so at some point this turned into a rant about one of my many pet peeves. I'm leaving it here, though, because hopefully someone will find it interesting. I'm not looking for a debate with this, though.
This isn't directed at what anyone in-thread said; I saw an episode of Gargoyles the other night that touched my Raeg Button, and the discussion at hand indirectly reminded me of it.)