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Winds of Magic
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There are many conflicting theories among the different Orders of Magic as to why and how the random energies of the Aethyr fall into reasonably consistent laws in the mortal world. Most of those who study the phenomena agree that wherever and whenever the immaterial meets the material, some kind of hybrid of the two is created. When the raw metaphysical stuff of the Aethyr leaks through the Chaos Gates, it becomes perceptible as eight separate aspects to those with the appropriate senses.
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n8:abstract
There are many conflicting theories among the different Orders of Magic as to why and how the random energies of the Aethyr fall into reasonably consistent laws in the mortal world. Most of those who study the phenomena agree that wherever and whenever the immaterial meets the material, some kind of hybrid of the two is created. When the raw metaphysical stuff of the Aethyr leaks through the Chaos Gates, it becomes perceptible as eight separate aspects to those with the appropriate senses. The eight separate aspects, made up of different and consistent colours, known to the Imperial Colleges of Magic as the Winds of Magic. These are not literal winds. Rather, they are made up of the immaterial substance of magic, dispersed at different speeds and in different amounts. Each aspect of this refracted magic has an associated colour and is drawn to different things in different ways. Each different “Wind” is associated with different kinds of spellcraft that have their own distinct “flavours.” Although “Winds” is the most widespread term given to them, that name is not necessarily the correct term. The Magister Alchemists of the Gold College often refer to the Winds as the “Aethyric Humours,” while the Hierophants of the College of Light sometimes refer to them as the “Paradigms of Magic,” or even the “World Dreamings” as the Shaman of the Amber College refer to them. The Winds are experienced in many different ways, both among the sanctioned Magisters of the Empire and amongst wild and untrained spellcasters of the world. Those who study and practice magic know the Winds variously as concepts, moods, vibrations, fluxes, tides, spirits, forces, and colours. Aethyrically sensitive people often “feel” magic in slightly different ways depending on the nature of their particular magical awareness, and will often express their descriptions of magic in terms familiar to their personal experiences and cultures. Regardless of the differences in personal experience, it is worth noting that the association of specific colours with the Winds of Magic is consistent amongst all traditions of arcane spellcraft. Although those sensitive to magic often perceive the Winds initially in radically different ways, if they survive long enough to hone these perceptions, they will gradually come to “see” the different Winds as possessing distinct and consistent colours. The Imperial College’s system of magic use is powerful, stable and successful when compared alongside any other Human tradition of arcane spellcraft. Its ideas have influenced even nonsanctioned and downright illegal magic users—Hedge Wizards, Witches, Black Magisters, Necromancers, and Warlocks—over the last few centuries.