GrenMeera wrote:
Except for the magic. I generally always agree with the aforementioned stance mentioned by Jason Buhlman that magic itself is something to see/smell/hear/taste/feel.
It doesn't need a spell component to be seen, because the glowing eyes is always an option.
As all threads that I take this stance, may I remind everybody that the book does not mention that magic has a visual effect. The book ALSO does not mention that magic does NOT have a visual effect. The interpretation that magic has a visual effect is an opinion of Jason Buhlman and others such as myself, and is practically the only way to explain how Spellcraft and identifying a spell actually works....
I'm pretty new to Pathfinder, just got the core rules a few weeks ago, but my interpretation of Spellcraft has always been less identifying physical aspects of the spell like "hey, he wiggled his pinky five times at X speed and waved his hand in a Z, he's clearly casting a Sleep spell!" and more just being able to sense the pull on the Aether as the spell comes into being, or something like that. It's subtle enough that you need to be witnessing the spell as it's being cast to detect it, but it does exist and those properly trained in Spellcrafting can do it.
But, anyway, I don't have a problem with someone trained in Spellcrafting being able to detect a Paladin using a spell-like ability like Detect Evil. The thing that I'm confused about is the claim I've seen in this thread that anyone around the Paladin will know they are using magic because of this.
Spellcrafting is a trained skill. As far as I'm aware (like I said, I'm pretty new so I can very well be wrong) someone who hasn't "trained" in Spellcrafting (put a point in it) is completely unable to make a Spellcrafting check, which means, no, a random commoner in a bar will have no idea what the Paladin is doing on that basis. They may think the Paladin is up to something if they're staring at someone, and if they are familiar with what Paladins can do then they might be able to suspect what they're up to. But I'm not seeing how some of the people in this thread have come to the conclusion that every random Joe in the area will know the Paladin used magic the moment he tries to use Detect Magic, no mater how discretely.
Even if we go with the interpretation that Spellcrafting is your ability to see physical things caused by the casting of magic, such as glowing, and not some kind of "sixth sense" type thing, it's still a trained ability, meaning that the "evidence" is subtle enough that not everyone even knows it is there. And this doesn't have real basis in a RAW discussion, but just on an aesthetics level I don't think I like the idea that a bard lights up like a magical christmas tree just from casting Prestidigitation.