Psychedelic Rhino wrote:This all stems from comics and cartoons being translated into film using our 'reality'.
Reality or not, simple books as a medium for entertainment do not get the artists vision across. I've tried it, and I have some very unreal and mystical ideas sometimes, and putting them into literature has always proven to be a failure. Even after I use my best language skills.
Psychedelic Rhino wrote:Analysis of the powers of these fictitious figures actually helps children (and some adults) understand the basic concepts and principles of physics, chemistry and scale. And believe me, it's needed. I once worked with an electrical engineer several years ago that believed there was a zero g chamber at the Houston Space Center. I've seen engineers who confused the speed of sound with light speed. People who think shooting stars are generally the size of planets. That going to the planets is roughly the same as going to other star systems. These were adults. And I see the same confusion, all the time, in forums such as this.
Years ago, I would be taken aback and stunned by the huge gaps in understanding in an adult, but once the internet kicked in, I saw it was pervasive throughout society.
Yes, I love to see individuals question the bizarre and fictitious, it helps them learn.
I agree, but in terms of learning, some people it just doesn't work with.