Mindy E. wrote:
And you've piqued my curiosity. 

  How do you think telepathy is creepy?
(And if Lady E. would rather, we could continue that discussion over pm.  I don't know if this counts as spamming her thread...)
Before I get started, let me explain that if I do not return to this thread for a couple days, that doesn't mean I forgot ya, it means that a family member took away my computer for 6-8 hours of the day so I couldn't multi-task knitting and HW/etc... 

 Anyway, knitting project should be done soon so that I have more time to attend to writing, forums, etc. 
 
 I was not completely clear originally; I did not hit the animal topic, using blanket statements (something I ought not to use). I addressed animal communication back in the original thread. 
::back much later in the day::
Okay, I've analyzed this situation, and this is the real problem:
Did you know that there are people out there who really do think the Force is real, and label themselves as Jedi? 
That's how real a story can become to some people.
This hands us, the writers, a great power - and a great burden. 
Real is good. 
Truth is paramount.
You can sacrifice reality for story: you cannot sacrifice truth. 
See, what we're dealing with is - how far can we stray from reality before it gets dangerous? 
You must understand, fantasy is all right. Fantasy merely is creating an alternate form of reality which your reader temporarily steps into.
This alternate form of reality must not become the only form of reality that your reader believes. 
Hence the problem of Jedism - it's so real - it's actually very similar to Christianity. 
But that is not the original topic--telepathy. 
Telepathy, as far as we know it, is not part of reality. 
Telepathy is the communication of two minds through thought rather than words or body language. 
In the (book) Lord of the Rings, the Ringbearers are permitted to use their Rings to telepathically speak among themselves, but this is only mentioned once (near the end of RotK if anyone's interested). 
Telepathy typically appears in sci-fi, often connected with mystical energy fields such as the Force (Star Wars universe) 
Hence is the problem. 
Telepathy is often mystic. It often relies on 'psychic powers' (whatever those are) rather than cold hard science or else directly God-given abilities. 
To many people, telepathy is automatically assigned to the new-age realm. I am afraid that I do that as well. I have heard the worst about it, and consistently freak out about anything that seems like it. 
So, telepathy is not part of reality. However, it does not break any truths which we know. 
Therefore, I cannot defend a position of 'no telepathy'. I cannot defend a position of 'all telepathy is okay'. 
What I will warn writers, then, is to analyze your motivations for including telepathy, as well as the necessity of it to your plot. Avoid any hint towards mysticism - but don't take upon yourself the sole responsibility for some unknown reader's fall into New Age philosophy because ultimately, it is their choice and you can only do the best you can. 
Ain't fantasy fun?   
 ...And the real moral to this story is: don't try to start a discussion about things like telepathy while you're running back and forth from the kitchen to check on the pizza every couple minutes like I was doing last night...
 ...And the real moral to this story is: don't try to start a discussion about things like telepathy while you're running back and forth from the kitchen to check on the pizza every couple minutes like I was doing last night...  