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  • ...next year or five years or fifty years, but it will happen, or anarchy by crime will prevail, and this would not be the first nation to come to widespread ...sensitive to the consciousness of their operators. For now, it is science fiction.
    28 KB (4,801 words) - 23:36, 12 December 2020
  • ...oul]] experiences that, you think it does not exist, or it's made up, or [[fiction]] or they're wrong. There are those that are [[different]] on [[this planet ...rison]] if you could not see him as a [[human being]] without seeing the [[crime]] that was committed? That would be impossible, for you would be blinded by
    32 KB (5,401 words) - 23:19, 12 December 2020
  • ...ughter) They are very charming, as if you were momentarily in some science-fiction time-traveling, or in what you might call a closed temporal loop where ever ...maturity has a direct effect upon other people. A reduction in warfare and crime has the most profound effect on the net happiness of the human race. But th
    29 KB (5,176 words) - 19:55, 26 December 2010
  • ...ans living in [[city|cities]] include various forms of [[pollution]] and [[crime]],[https://www.ojp.usdoj.gov/bjs/abstract/usrv98.htm] especially in inner c .... Psychologist [[B.F. Skinner]] has argued that the mind is an explanatory fiction that diverts attention from environmental causes of behavior. Further, that
    56 KB (8,237 words) - 00:50, 13 December 2020
  • ...em inimical to your sense of yourself, or your very life as in the case of crime and warfare. ...It very rarely gets as full or comprehensive as your portrayals of science-fiction telepathy where two people exchange actual thoughts. That’s very rare, t
    33 KB (5,768 words) - 16:41, 26 December 2010
  • Dr. Neruda: "BST is a specific form of time travel. Science fiction treats time travel as something that is relatively easy to design and devel ...ation systems that are obsolete and therefore non-strategic. The organized crime network is a much less sophisticated version of the network I was referring
    90 KB (15,547 words) - 22:08, 21 January 2010
  • ...t get that [[picture]]. They may [[picture]] something like some [[science fiction]] movie, which would be more frightening to them. So this is just a suggest ...] is really [[the Father]] and it's people that are causing [[pain]] and [[crime]] and [[anger]] and the [[hatred]] on [[earth]]. I've been trying to explai
    75 KB (12,769 words) - 23:03, 12 December 2020
  • In speculative fiction, the line between dreams and reality may be blurred even more in the servic ...to move, not being able to focus vision, car accidents, being accused of a crime you didn't commit and many more.
    31 KB (4,612 words) - 00:59, 13 December 2020
  • ...or Wales to escape the problems of London, which it portrays as a place of crime, corruption, and neglect of the poor. Johnson could not bring himself to re ...the work almost every year. References to it appear in many later works of fiction, including ''[[Jane Eyre]]'', ''[[Cranford]]'' and ''[[The House of the Sev
    71 KB (11,230 words) - 02:36, 13 December 2020
  • # Spielman, Fran (February 19, 2009). "Surveillance cams help fight crime, city says" (in English). Chicago Sun Times. https://www.suntimes.com/news/ ...policeone.com/police-products/less-lethal/articles/99337-No-Longer-Science-Fiction-Less-Than-Lethal-Directed-Energy-Weapons/. Retrieved on 2009-03-15.
    58 KB (8,353 words) - 02:32, 13 December 2020

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