Wizard: I brought the wrong system.

Chapter 328 Wizarding Skills

Chapter 328 Wizarding Skills
Sensing that the time for further instruction was limited, Yaro's tone became somewhat harsh:

"This kind of thing should be categorized as a load-bearing task. The fact that you came to this conclusion only shows that your perspective on the problem is flawed!"

"Isn't it a matter of its own weight?" Bevin was stunned. This was a conclusion he came to after making the actual object and comparing it with others!
Yaro tapped the scraps of paper on the table. "Have you ever wondered why birds can fly?"

"Because...they have wings?"

puff!

……

"What are you laughing at? Do you know the answer?" Yaro turned around helplessly and looked at the trembling little shoulders beside him.

Little Heri stubbornly pouted and said confidently, "I don't know, but I know Bevan must be wrong!"

Hey! Look at my temper!

"He's right! Birds can fly because they have wings. Otherwise, why can't horses fly? Why can't fish fly? Do you know any ordinary animals that can fly without wings?"

Anyone can disagree.

“Is that so…?” Little Heri’s momentum immediately weakened. “My lord, you are right.”

Bevin, however, inexplicably felt like he'd won the lottery. So, even though I was just making things up, he could answer correctly?
Yaro turned his gaze back to Bevin, who was secretly pleased. "What are you so happy about now? Is that all you see?"

“This…” Bevin was speechless.

"Think! I've told you so many times, you need to think!"

This is another free point question!
Hey!
Yaro finally understood the pain that his teachers in his previous life had felt.

Yaro decided to try a different approach to guiding them.

Simply giving a direct answer can only solve one problem, but teaching him how to think can help him solve countless problems.

"Think back to when you were a child, and you saw birds flying in the sky. Didn't you find it amazing?"

"Yes, yes!" little Heri answered cheerfully, "I even dreamed last night that I was flying in the sky too!"

"Mmm, me too!" Bevan chimed in from the side, his timid and hesitant manner resembling that of a struggling student trying to answer a question he couldn't answer.

Yaro looked over curiously, "You dreamed you went to heaven too?"

They've gone to heaven?
Something doesn't sound quite right.

Was it a dream?
That's fine.

"Uh...ah...um!"

Hearing Bevin's long, three-note monologue, Yaro knew he was just going through the motions, so he didn't call him out on it and continued along the line of conversation: "Yes, that's it, that's the feeling of novelty!"

"Why do most of these dreams of flying only appear when we are children? It's because they are novel! When we get older, we think that everything should be like this. When our thoughts are gradually constrained by frameworks, it is difficult for even our dreams to escape reality."

“But what we’re doing is innovation, breaking free from these constraints.” Yaro tapped the air lightly, and a flame flickered and swayed.

—This is a byproduct of Yaro's recent research into fireball magic.

The magical spell immediately attracted the attention of those around them.

"Look, this world is so amazing!"

“But what you usually see and experience is within the framework of ordinary people’s lives. What you need to do is transcend ordinary people’s thinking and possess the power I have. So… can your previous way of thinking still apply?”

Yaro didn't talk to them about scientific literacy.

In the environment of my previous life, not everyone could possess such a thing, let alone the fact that there are truly extraordinary powers in this world. Instead of talking about scientific literacy with them, let's be more direct and talk about 'wizard literacy'.

Is scientific thinking universal?

Why make it so complicated to give a child a lollipop every time they greet someone?
It doesn't matter if it's a black cat or a white cat, as long as it catches mice, it's a good cat!

“But… can’t I…?” Heri stammered, her head drooping, looking inexplicably dejected.

Hery knew she didn't have much talent as a wizard, and because of that, she felt even more strongly that Yaro's words were meant for Bevin alone.

Yaro gently stroked Heri's little head, looking at her with a smile and said, "Do you remember the story I told you? Do you remember the stone I just gave you? With enough knowledge and talent, why can't a mortal body stand shoulder to shoulder with the gods?"

Bevan stood to the side, his gaze filled with resentment—you've always treated me like I was at your beck and call, but you've never been this gentle before!
Heri was deeply moved. She looked at the stone placed to the side, clutching the bronze tag she had treasured for so long, and murmured, repeating Yaro's words: "Mortal body...comparable to gods?"

This world truly has gods, so the effect of these words is even stronger and more awe-inspiring than in the previous life.

If we were to truly compare them, perhaps only in Yaro's previous life, when someone first shouted, "Are kings and nobles born with a special destiny?", could he be somewhat comparable.

When the girl finally came to her senses and saw the affirmation in Yaro's eyes, she became even more apprehensive: "Me? I...can I really do it?"

Heri suddenly realized the error of her words and hurriedly explained in a flustered manner, "I... I didn't mean to be on par with the gods! I meant... I meant... to be able to be like you..."

“Why not!” Yaro interrupted firmly, his resounding voice filling Heli with boundless courage. “As long as you are willing to learn and study, not only can you become like us, but you can even rival the true gods. Why can’t you?”

As far as Yaro knew, there were many strange beings that were like gods, but they had been subdued and destroyed by powerful wizards.

Even setting aside those rumors, wasn't the evil god scroll that Yaro faced every day in his childhood just a scroll of the true form that remained after the wizard destroyed the original form?

Is the difference between an ordinary person and a wizard apprentice comparable to the difference between a wizard apprentice and those evil gods?

Moreover, even if one's mental aptitude and magical affinity are only at the lowest level, it's not impossible to become a wizard apprentice; it's just that the cost-effectiveness is too low, and no academy will accept one.

—Spending many times the cost, only to end up with a low-ranking ordinary apprentice, it's unlikely that many people would be willing to make such a losing deal.

Yaro hadn't forgotten the previous question either. He looked at Bevin and concluded in a meaningful tone:
“Bevin, your perspective is too one-sided. You only see the immediate problem, without getting to the root of the issue or figuring out why things turned out this way.”

It's like taking an exam. When Bevin is doing a test, he only focuses on solving the problem at hand, without studying why the problem exists, and naturally he can't find the purpose of the problem.

(End of this chapter)

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