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jasirs94 at Mar 25, 2017 07:55 PM

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G22

questions before he discovers what the object thought of was,
unless it was decidedly prominent. This shows that the class of
objects that from which the answerer will have made is selection
numbers near is composed of nearly 220 single objects, or about
a million. Then it Therefore, it is pretty clear that the number of
facts with any one of which a conjecture might conceivably
connect a surprising fact is, at the very least, a million. Consequently,
if the conjecturer were completely in the dark,—as much so, for
example, as some medieval alchemist would be who might have surmised

22

G22

questions before he discovers what the object thought of was, unless it was decidedly prominent. This shows that the class of objects from which the answerer will have made [h]is selection is composed of nearly 220 single objects, or about a million. Therefore, it is pretty clear that the number of facts with any one of which a conjecture might conceivably connect a surprising fact is, at the very least, a million. Consequently, if the conjecturer were completely in the dark,—as much so, for example, as some medieval alchemist would be who might have surmised