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6th degrees of separation
6th degrees of separation




The real breakthrough came a few decades later thanks to a college game called 'Six Degrees of Kevin Bacon', where students had to try and link any actor to Kevin Bacon via their co-stars in six steps or less (usually after smoking a whole lot of weed, we can only assume). "So we're talking about a sample size of 18 is all the evidence there was for six degrees of separation," Derek explains.īut that doesn't mean it doesn't exist.

6th degrees of separation

And of those 100, only 18 made it back to the target. Only 64 of those packages actually reached the target, with an average path length of just 5.2 intermediary connections, and this experiment was used as evidence for six degrees of separation, or the 'small world phenomenon', as the researcher called it.īut Derek dug a little deeper and found that, of the original 300 packages, 100 were sent to people already living in Boston (where the target also lives) and 100 were sent to stockbrokers who shared a profession with the target, so there were really only 100 purely random packages sent out. They weren't asked to forward it to him directly, but to send it to someone they knew on a first name basis, with instructions for that person to forward it on to someone in their network that they thought might know the stockbroker. 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.

6th degrees of separation 6th degrees of separation

Assuming everyone knows at least 44 people, and that each of those people knows an entirely new 44 people, and so on, the maths shows that in just six steps everyone could be connected to 44^6, or 7.26 billion people - more than are alive on Earth today.īut is there any experimental evidence to show that's the case in IRL social groups? As Derek explains, the whole basis of the theory came from a 1929 short story called Chains, in which one of the characters challenges the others to find another person on Earth that he can not connect himself to through fewer than five intermediaries. If you just take a look at the numbers, the six degrees of separation idea seems pretty plausible.






6th degrees of separation