A mage accidentally drifts to Blue Star. The intelligent life on Blue Star cannot influence reality by manipulating dark matter, thus the mage loses their casting ability.
In order to recover...
Of course, there were also many normal comments:
"What an incredible discovery!"
"If monkeys have souls, does that mean humans also have souls? Shouldn't we conduct related experiments on humans?"
What they didn't know was that governments around the world had already conducted experiments related to the human soul.
"Taking monkeys out of their lives is cruel enough; taking human lives would be even more cruel. Such experiments should not be conducted. I would rather not know."
"Does a soul disappear after it floats in the air? Does it change the air? When my grandfather passed away when I was a child, I was sleeping next to him. I only found out he was dead when I woke up the next day. Did I absorb all of his soul?"
What would happen if someone went to a hospital specifically to absorb the souls of the dead?
The comments below were so imaginative that even the staff monitoring them were amazed.
The American side made the existence of the soul public in order to gather ideas from all sides.
See what the public thinks about this, and you can use that to study the essence of the soul.
They hadn't considered what kind of changes would occur if people absorbed souls floating in the air.
I've been conducting experiments at the microscopic level of the soul, and I never thought I could actually put them to use.
Whether absorbing the souls of the dead can strengthen one's own soul was something the staff at America noted down and compiled together at the end of the day before sending to the back office.
Researchers from other countries, after seeing this special issue of Science, made various sarcastic remarks:
"The Americans still have some conscience; they used Merlin's name as the attribution."
"They wouldn't dare to do anything reckless. What if Merlin would mind? Scientists are very wary of their research results being infringed upon, and so might mages be just as concerned."