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  1. Mar 14, 2018 · The idea of six degrees of separation is sometimes traced to a 1929 essay by the Hungarian writer Frigyes Karinthy. And Milgram’s work was preceded by some calculations by political scientist Ithiel de Sola Pool and mathematician Manfred Kochen who in the 1950s estimated a greater than 50-percent chance that any two people could be linked by ...

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  2. The concept was originally set out in a 1929 short story by Frigyes Karinthy, in which a group of people play a game of trying to connect any person in the world to themselves by a chain of five others. It was popularized in John Guare 's 1990 play Six Degrees of Separation .

  3. Aug 27, 2015 · This idea wasn't scientifically tested until the 1960s, when a psychologist sent 300 packages out to people in Nebraska and Boston, and asked them to use their networks to get them back to one specific target - a stockbroker living in Boston.

  4. Jun 26, 2023 · The research suggests that our universal six degrees of separation results from individuals trying to balance the costs and benefits of their social connections.

  5. Dec 12, 2012 · In 1967, psychologist Stanley Milgram conducted the seminal experiment in which he sent packets to hundreds of individuals in Kansas and Nebraska, who were told the ultimate goal was to get the...

  6. Mar 8, 2024 · First proposed in the late 1920s by Hungarian author Frigyes Karinthy, the concept posits that any two individuals on Earth can be connected through a chain of no more than six acquaintances.

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  8. Six Degrees of Separation first opened off-Broadway in 1990. Its original ten-week run was extended almost immediately. Audiences lined up in hopes of ticket cancellations to see this play that explores late twentieth-century society as deftly as it does universal human relationships.

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