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Magical thinking
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=== Direct effect === [[Bronisลaw Malinowski]]'s ''Magic, Science and Religion'' (1954) discusses another type of magical thinking, in which words and sounds are thought to have the ability to directly affect the world.<ref>{{harvnb|Glucklich|1997|pp= 59โ61, 205โ12}}</ref> This type of [[wish fulfillment]] thinking can result in the avoidance of talking about certain subjects ("Speak of the devil and he'll appear"), the use of [[euphemisms]] instead of certain words, or the belief that to know the "true name" of something gives one power over it; or that certain chants, prayers, or mystical phrases will bring about physical changes in the world. More generally, it is magical thinking to take a [[symbol]] to be its referent or an [[analogy]] to represent an identity.{{Citation needed|date=August 2024}} [[Sigmund Freud]] believed that magical thinking was produced by [[cognitive development]]al factors. He described practitioners of magic as projecting their mental states onto the world around them, similar to a common phase in child development.<ref>{{harvnb|Glucklich|1997|pp= 53โ5}}</ref> From [[Toddler|toddlerhood]] to early school age, children will often link the outside world with their internal consciousness, e.g. "It is raining because I am sad."
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