I read in Melburnian Rachel Davey becomes the first Australian woman to visit every nation in the world (mirror):
In human history, more people have been to space than visited every nation.
Is that true?
I read in Melburnian Rachel Davey becomes the first Australian woman to visit every nation in the world (mirror):
In human history, more people have been to space than visited every nation.
Is that true?
Have more people have been to space than visited every nation?
It depends on what means by "visiting every nation" and on what means by "going into space".
The United Nations has 193 member nations. There are also 2 addition non-member observer states, the Holy See and the State of Palestine. There are also many territories, etc., such as Taiwan and Kosovo that claim to be independent nations. This makes the list of those who have traveled to a nation a bit fuzzy. Even fuzzier, what counts as a visit? Does stepping across the border and stepping back, just on ones say-so, count? Does buying a trinket in an airport during a layover (thereby making the visit official, in the eyes of some (including the Guinness Book of World Records) count?
The list of self-proclaimed world travelers (those who have visited 193 or 195 or 196 or 200 nations) is small, about 300 according to the article linked in the question. The number who have proof of this is smaller yet. Most of those about 300 dromomaniacs are self-proclaimed world travelers. There are websites where one can register as a dromomaniac just on ones say-so.
In any case, there aren't very many people who, self-proclaimed or documented by some means, who have visited all 193 member countries of the United Nations, plus entities that claim to be nations but aren't recognized as such. The linked article says "about 300". Other sites / articles say similar numbers.
On the flip side, what does "going into space" mean? This too is fuzzy.
Most people and organizations, including NASA, will agree that orbiting the Earth counts as "going into space". By that metric, Yuri Gagarin was the first person who went into space. That puts the number of people who have gone into space at about 600, in which case the claim is true.