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"To get anywhere, or even live a long time, a man has to guess, and guess right, over and over again, without enough data for a logical answer."
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![]() As far as I know, the first use of this phrase in mainstream science fiction magazines.
If you poke around, you can find earlier usage of the idea, but not in science fiction. For example, in The Philosophy of a Commoner published in 1928, there is this idea:
Science fiction writer James Schmitz picked up the same phrase for use in Second Night of Summer (1950):
Compare to the ring-table from The Universe Wreckers (1930) by Edmond Hamilton, a device which creates a group mind among participants ("...the great metal globe whose strange mechanism made of the thirty minds of the Council members a single mind"). See also the group ego from Methuselah's Children (1941) by Robert Heinlein. Comment/Join this discussion ( 0 ) | RSS/XML | Blog This | Additional
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Science Fiction
Timeline
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'...war-balloons, or, as it would be more correct to call them, navigable aerostats.'
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'This robot is a creature... It is a manlike being. Therefore, like any other talking, thinking man, he is entitled to a court trial!'
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'...small electric motors at the principal joints worked the prosthetic framework by means of steel cables...'
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