Dukes also writes about magical thought following scientific thought rather than preceeding it. He says he moved toward magic when science wouldn't hold up to its own standards of inquiry.
He also writes about he thinks science limits us rather than helps us in solving problems, in that it limits our scope to a small set of variables and ignores the infinite other factors at play in a given situation.
i agree. great points. i think science can often act as close minded as religion. so we need to keep an open mind, both to allow for possibilities, as well as to remain critical. so for me, i remain open minded that we might find ways to circumvent linear time, but i remain sceptical that anyone has yet figured out how to do such a thing. also on the subject, i think the ability to change one's perception of time seems like a very powerful tool, which could allow for all kinds of practical uses like what anosognosia reports from his invocation. BUT i remain pretty sceptical of people claiming to break the "laws" of physics with virtually no evidence.