PeterZ wrote:The two principal ways magic has been dealt with in the stories I have read has been either channeling or some systematic way of imposing the will unto the physical world. In no case has magic not had a systematic definition to explain it. It follows that the scientific method can be applied to any non-chaneling magic.
I have yet to run into any fantasy story involving magic that doesn't follow this basic premise.
If you want to find some innovative magic systems look at the works of Brent Weeks and Brian Sanderson.
Brent Weeks in particular has very well developed, intricate and innovative magic systems which vary series to series. Personally, I found his 'lightbringer' series too complicated in some ways, but here magic is based on the spectrum of light, with different frequencies/colours involved in different magics. I much preferred his debut trilogy (the Night Trilogy). Here the magic system was less complex but was still explained, defined and worked predictably within its limits. I definitely recommend that trilogy btw - its rather dark but ultimately uplifting, and very very well plotted out and written.
Then there are Brian Sanderson's mistborn books - where the magic system is based around gifted individuals consuming different metals and getting different magics depending on the metal. Again, this is a clearly defined system with limits.
There are plenty of fantasy series out there which have properly defined magic systems - I much prefer them as they can avoid the deus ex machina and plot holes which can plague books without defined (and thus limited) magic. However, there are few where magic is truly scientific - by which I mean it has the scientific method applied to it by the society in the book. I think this is one of the most innovative and interesting things about the multiverse series - pitting a mid-industrial-age society (but mostly based on our science) against an cuspal-information-age society (but based on a very different science, aka magic)and seeing what happens. I think the Arcanan society's technology and its attitude to technology has interesting parallels to our own (and pretty much embodies the rule 'any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishabl from magic'). In some ways I was disappointed on learning that Weber is planning on taking the series in a different direction to this.