Arthur C Clarke made the point long ago that any sufficiently advanced technology woudl look like magic to the unindoctrinated. Maybe if it is two generations of advance away, rather than one, it might even appear miraculous to those who knew not how it could be.It is one thing to know how something works and be familiar with it. It's another to barely be able to accept the notion of how it works -- some people are still this way about computyers, and telling them there are little tiny switches inside going on and off a trillion times an hour doesn't cure them of saying, "It's just mad at me...".
It even more removed to have absolutely no cognitive framework from which to understand how something happens. This is the outer limit of science fiction. If you were to see a device that --oh, say -- stopped time for a minute when you pushed a button -- you'd think it was a darn miracle, because it is something we can't even conceive of how it works -- we don't have to vocabulary of ideas to see it!
Here's this century's next miracle, I betcha:
Entangled clouds raise hope of teleportation
Mind dazzling consequences loom -- not in practical reality, but may be just over the horizon -- from this remarkable (if small) step forward.
Ya never know....