For what it’s worth, some people read “Omelas” as being about a superstition that torturing a child is necessary (see the bit about good weather) rather than a situation where torturing a child is actually contributing to public welfare.
And the ‘wisdom of their scholars’ depends on the torture as well? ‘terms’ implies this is a magical contract of some sort. No mechanism, of course, like most magic and all of LeGuin’s magic that I’ve read (Earthsea especially).
For what it’s worth, some people read “Omelas” as being about a superstition that torturing a child is necessary (see the bit about good weather) rather than a situation where torturing a child is actually contributing to public welfare.
And the ‘wisdom of their scholars’ depends on the torture as well? ‘terms’ implies this is a magical contract of some sort. No mechanism, of course, like most magic and all of LeGuin’s magic that I’ve read (Earthsea especially).