msxyz
Augur
- Joined
- Jun 5, 2011
- Messages
- 296
From an evolutionary point of view it could be the other way around. If there are enough magic users around, there's no push to create machines or to approach problems from an engineering point of view. Who need medicine when you have magic healers? Who need fast means of transport when wizards can create portals?In any practical sense, technology devalues traditional magic systems. Therefore magic users will either attempt to control the advancement of technology or try to delay it. If magic can be improved, we will certainly see some kind of arms race.
However, if magic users are scarce and those who can wield magic rapidly climb at the top of the social structure, then I can imagine a scenario where commoners would be interested in technology as a mean to be freed from the rule of magic users. It would be something clandestine because magic users would have all the interest to keep people ignorant about all the mundane knowledge (medicine, physics, chemistry...) and proactively prosecute those who defy their narrative that 'magic is the only way to go'.
There are some JRPGs which have such a premise, i.e. most of the Final Fantasy games. The entire story of the 6th notably revolves around fusing magic with technologyWhat is rare is the existence of magic technology. In any setting where magic exists as a fundamental force, people will try to build on it.