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| Posts: 17652 | Location: Lincoln Place, Granite City, IL, USA | Registered: 06-03-02 |    |
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The origin of "serendipity" is also discussed in a delightful (but unfortunately out-of-print) collection of essays called Retrospectroscope: Insights into Medical Discovery by Julius Comroe, Jr. (Von Gehr, 1977). The author affirms FP's attribution of the coinage by Walpole in 1754, based on his fairytale as titled above. Comroe states that Serendip is indeed the former name of Ceylon [now Sri Lanka], and that the Oxford English Dictionary defines serendipity as "the faculty of making happy and unexpected discoveries." He adds, "some wag's more recent definition is that serendipity is looking for a needle in a haystack but coming up with the farmer's daughter." 
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