He does not want to rip off or "steal" from Aaron Fisher, but instead wants to "pay [his] dues to the creater [Mr. Fisher]" by buying the gimmick. He just does not want the DVD because he does not want to follow his routine, but instead create his own, unique one.
He hasn't "figured out the routine" because he doesn't want it. Also, he does want the gimmick, not for "good practice," but rather in order to make a deck vanish.
By why are we talking about this -- the question for this thread was "who else doesnt want the dvd," not "who else thinks that buying the dvd is stealing/plagiarism/unethical/immoral" ... Further, why am I involved in this conversation ... I digress ...
Cheers,
JTM
Hmm hm, and what if it was an effect or routine that did not use any gimmicks? If he still wanted it, should he just say, "I figured out the basic secret, but I don't want him too be giving me any further insight into it, so I shouldn't buy it, but just use it myself" ?
You may think that there is an ethical difference, but the thinking is identical.
It is the thinking here that is a huge problem. Not from just the ethical stand point, but from the way it will affect his own magic, and life in general.
Look at it this way, say he was a mechanical genius, and understood everything about how a car worked, how to make it go, change gears etc. Should he just say, I don't need drivers ed, or anyone to show me how to drive properly, or "their way," I just need to buy a car and I can learn it MY way. I'll develop my own way to drive." ???
Of course there are far more safety implications here, but the thinking is identical.
You can argue that he already knows magic, well, in my example, he already knew how a car works, you push the gas to make it go, break to stop, wheel to turn, the rest he can just learn himself.
Everyone will drive differently, and even drive different cars differently. But every body still needs to learn first. and every new car you get has different features than other ones they have driven before, that is why car's have owner's manuals.
They also have previous owners, or dealers, who will go over the cars features and how to use them.
There is also plenty of thinking that goes into designing each new car, and different purposes. If you get into a car and don't bother to let someone tell you that the dash is off to the centre, and why, you won't understand that they have found that it is actually far less distracting to look to it there then looking down and through the wheel and it is safer, and you may have otherwise thought it was stupid and dismissed the car and or the feature.
Also, to ignore all of these things is to spit in the face of the person who designed them.
You are saying, "I'm smart I don't need YOU to tell me how to use something you designed. I'm smart enough to understand what you made." Well, them why didn't you already do it yourself.