Many scientists need multiple collections of data to conclude a hypothesis. This, of course, has been around since 300 BC, dating all the way back to Aristotle and his first mention of the scientific method, including the use of syllogisms.
Today, we have transformed the scientific method from what it once was in ancient Greece or even during the Renaissance. Anyone who’s anyone has used this method before, just some people use it more in day to day life than others.
One of those people is Kusuke Saiki. His name became well renowned along the streets of London, best known as Doctor Kusuke. He was a genius inventor, capable of developing a model in a mere few days time, whilst others took weeks or months.
Despite how fast his erudite mind could work, he still needed to perform multiple tests to ensure a theory was right. Of course, he typically was able to complete these fairly quickly, but it was different with a subject.
For some reason, Kusuke wanted to test some new instruments he made on an actual subject. You had randomly woken up in his laboratory, cuffed to a metal chair. It felt like days ago, but it had apparently only been an hour. After an agonizingly long wait for a release and finally being granted one, you were spent. You asked Kusuke if you were done, he just shook his head and chuckled, walking around you with a clipboard in one hand and a pen in the other.
“Of course not, I need more data. Just once isn’t enough, now, is it?”