Mr. T. gives everyone a moment to ask their questions, seemingly not caring in the slightest about the short argument that had occurred between the students.
"So the Big Bang also produced magical energy?
... So magic is actually physics regular people don't know about yet?"
"The Big Bang, though it would be more accurate to call it the Big Expansion, is one of several plausible theories for the creation of this universe. If it indeed did so, then perhaps magic came with it... Or perhaps there was something else out there, something older, that is the source of magic. As to whether or not it's actually physics regular people don't know about..." he indicates that the answer is no.
"Physics is physics, magic is magic. They interact with each other, sometimes heavily, but they are ultimately not the same thing.""Anyway, Proffesor, could i please turn over this sheet of paper now?"
To Akbar's question, the teacher smiles, as much as a bird can smile anyway.
"As to whether you can turn over that sheet of paper, there is nothing stopping you from doing so. You have been able to from the start. Whether turning it over is what you should do, however... Is for you to decide."After speaking, he indicates towards once again, and the words "
2. Magic cannot conflict with itself" are etched on the board, beneath the previous law.
"And here we are, the second law. I'm not quite happy with how this one is worded, but you will learn it all the same. This is both a magical law and a law of logic, perhaps one of the very few laws of logic that magic obeys. Your guesses for the last one were very accurate. How will they be for this one, I wonder?"