gedankenexperiment
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English
[edit]Alternative forms
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From German Gedankenexperiment (“thought experiment”), from Gedanke (“thought”) + Experiment (“experiment”).
Noun
[edit]gedankenexperiment (plural gedankenexperiments)
- thought experiment
- 2005 January 6, Cory Doctorow, BoingBoing[1], retrieved 2012-02-04:
- So here's a gedankenexperiment for ya: what if the DC and Marvel put all their funnybooks on the Web two months after they were shipped to the stores?
- 2005 Aug, Eugene Mirabelli, “The Woman in Schrödinger's Wave Equations”, in Fantasy & Science Fiction, volume 109, number 2, page 143:
- John told her about his dissertation, about the equations he had concocted from a gedanken experiment. "What's a gedanken experiment?" she asked him. / "It's where you just think an experiment, but you don't actually do it, you just think it through," he told her.
Usage notes
[edit]Often found as two words gedanken experiment.
Translations
[edit]thought experiment — see thought experiment