Scientific Concepts You're Taught in School Which are Actually Wrong

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@Sideprojects Ай бұрын
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@theod9548
@theod9548 Ай бұрын
in what country are told blood is blue ??? first time ever I hear this. I am 59. edit: and what about the temperature loss through the head ?? really ?? again, never heard of that. I was brought up in France and move to UK in 1998. neither in France nor in UK have ever heard those "concepts".
@Kaede-Sasaki
@Kaede-Sasaki Ай бұрын
Going out in winter "with just a hat and buck naked. This doesn't make a 😏TINY bit of sense. " Package may shrink in cold weather.😏
@Kaede-Sasaki
@Kaede-Sasaki Ай бұрын
...
@Kaede-Sasaki
@Kaede-Sasaki Ай бұрын
Error 404
@TB-wi3sq
@TB-wi3sq Ай бұрын
How can a smart guy like you (Simon) have absolutely zero German skills? Why don‘t you at least type the 4 words in google translate or so to hear how it‘s pronounced? Roughly right would be way better than completely wrong
@howardchli
@howardchli Ай бұрын
"The amount of energy needed to refute bullshit is an order of magnitude bigger than that needed to produce it." Alberto Brandolini
@joelcarson4602
@joelcarson4602 Ай бұрын
That's THREE orders of magnitude greater, at least!
@tarajoyce3598
@tarajoyce3598 Ай бұрын
😂
@Summonergeek
@Summonergeek Ай бұрын
Based
@markbrowning4334
@markbrowning4334 Ай бұрын
And yet the entire existence of youtube and liberals is to completely undo and tear down ever fact or standard that has ever been established.
@Summonergeek
@Summonergeek Ай бұрын
@@markbrowning4334 Name one.
@jeaniebird999
@jeaniebird999 Ай бұрын
When I was little, my older brother convinced me that our blood is really blue and it just turns red the instant it touches oxygen, which is why we never get to see the blue. He proved it by showing me the veins in my forearm. I was convinced. Fast forward to 7th grade science class and the teacher is talking about blood and why it's red. I _almost_ raised my hand, with the intention of correcting my teacher, when it suddenly occurred to me that my brother might be fucking with me. 🤣 I'll never forget that and it's one of my fondest memories. 🥰
@bipolarminddroppings
@bipolarminddroppings Ай бұрын
That's a common thing that used to "folk knowledge". I used to be told it all the time as a kid by adults, and I would have to correct them.
@markbrowning4334
@markbrowning4334 Ай бұрын
That's a Spinal Tap joke.
@ronchappel4812
@ronchappel4812 28 күн бұрын
I probably would have barged right in to 'correct' the teacher. My COMMON SENSory organ must be faulty😄
@greekkidshows9373
@greekkidshows9373 28 күн бұрын
Your bro wasn't fcking around with you, the teachers were fcking around with your bro
@greekkidshows9373
@greekkidshows9373 28 күн бұрын
​@@bipolarminddroppingssometimes the school stops telling the lie. But at the same time, who cares. Why teach it to kids? This for someone that may want to know because they decided to follow the education of the body to be a doctor or something! Why would anyone else care?
@ignitionfrn2223
@ignitionfrn2223 Ай бұрын
<a href="#" class="seekto" data-time="75">1:15</a> - Mid roll ads <a href="#" class="seekto" data-time="140">2:20</a> - Chapter 1 - Deoxygenated blood is blue <a href="#" class="seekto" data-time="255">4:15</a> - Chapter 2 - Eating carrots improves your eyesight <a href="#" class="seekto" data-time="395">6:35</a> - Chapter 3 - Human have 5 senses <a href="#" class="seekto" data-time="550">9:10</a> - Chapter 4 - The taste map <a href="#" class="seekto" data-time="715">11:55</a> - Chapter 5 - You lose 80% of your heat through your head
@HumanityInCrisis
@HumanityInCrisis Ай бұрын
You are truly wonderful 🐳
@rainx7078
@rainx7078 Ай бұрын
❤a golden beacon in the dawn
@billowspillow
@billowspillow Ай бұрын
Saved me 15 minutes. Thanks!
@Clandestinemonkey
@Clandestinemonkey Ай бұрын
thanks for saving me time watching a dumbass video
@tolkienfan1972
@tolkienfan1972 Ай бұрын
Thanks. Don't need to waste my time now
@MusicalRaichu
@MusicalRaichu Ай бұрын
We know carrots are good for eyesight by the lack of rabbits wearing glasses.
@Maksior99
@Maksior99 Ай бұрын
another myth, more than little bit of carrots will cause diarrhea in rabbits. Any root veggies + fruits will work like that for rabbits.
@darkvisiongothacked
@darkvisiongothacked Ай бұрын
*pushes glasses up* axshually....they are really bad for rabbits. not to say the same level as dogs and chocolate, but certainly not something good to have in their diet overall.
@nekomatafuyu
@nekomatafuyu Ай бұрын
What do bunnies need such good eyesight for anyway?
@Blitterbug
@Blitterbug Ай бұрын
@@nekomatafuyu Hah! to see which way the foxes are coming?
@Hellseeker1
@Hellseeker1 26 күн бұрын
TooL: Undertow track 69 "Let the rabbits wear glasses"
@rickt10
@rickt10 Ай бұрын
When teaching General Chemisty in a University I tell my students that most of what they will get in this class are: "Lies, half-truths, and approximations." The truth is just to difficult.
@rickt10
@rickt10 Ай бұрын
​@@zahadou You are correct😅
@CoffeeLoki67879
@CoffeeLoki67879 Ай бұрын
I had to retake intro to Chem after getting a bachelors degree in physics, I talked to the professor asking for help because I was so confused due to how many lies and half-truths there are. He tried to tell me everything we were learning was 100% accurate. I stopped giving a shit after he told me that.
@rickt10
@rickt10 Ай бұрын
@@CoffeeLoki67879 Yeah, well, you have to understand the basics (which are just that, basics) before you can get the higher concepts. How many times in physics is friction ignored? Real? No, but still valuable.
@captainspaulding5963
@captainspaulding5963 Ай бұрын
​@@zahadou "I've no idea what you teach"...... it's the first sentence of the comment..... were you just looking for mistakes to point out and ignoring everything else?
@Holgerdanske369
@Holgerdanske369 Ай бұрын
Thanks for reminding me that Universities were complete waste of time and money and you took a paycheck for it.
@alecogden12345
@alecogden12345 Ай бұрын
With the first one, you got it backwards - it's the blue wavelengths that are LESS absorbed (which it why you see the blue).
@markhafner9938
@markhafner9938 Ай бұрын
Came here to say this. Blue has harder time penetrating and so reflects more. Red penetrates better and is absorbed. Reflected light is blue so we see blue.
@fssstyuniaf
@fssstyuniaf Ай бұрын
I remember my science teachers in school being pretty honest. They told us alot of what we would learn is simplified and thus wrong. But it's the building blocks you need, to pursue science at a higher level.
@greekkidshows9373
@greekkidshows9373 28 күн бұрын
I think that's a lie!!! 😮 You can't build up from a lie 😢 Teaching the basics is better then lying about the whole truth! You build up from the BASICS Any one that says otherwise is lying or at least misinformed and didn't think about it! Misinformation is a big thing these day's in everyday life! I wander why!!
@juliavixen176
@juliavixen176 Ай бұрын
Something I rarely see mentioned about the human sense of temperature is that the "hot" and "cold" sensitive nerves are physically separate and distinct. Feeling "hot" and feeling "cold" are orthogonal vectors, and you can simultaneously sense both "hot" and "cold" at the same time! This is what Menthol does by the way. Similar to how Capsaicin stimulates the "hot" temperature receptor, Menthol stimulates both "hot" and "cold" receptors at the same time.
@FranciscoJG
@FranciscoJG Ай бұрын
And sometimes when we have fever I guess
@sillyking1991
@sillyking1991 Ай бұрын
to be fair to that military manual, it *does* say "when fully clothed". so its not claiming that a person that is naked except for their hat is better insulated.
@loganmedia4401
@loganmedia4401 Ай бұрын
No, but even mentioning the heat loss from head doesn't make sense. If written more accurately, as in heat will be lost more from any part of the body not covered than from those parts that are covered, it would be obvious how redundant it is to even mention it.
@sillyking1991
@sillyking1991 Ай бұрын
@@loganmedia4401 nah, i think it makes sense to mention it. I mean, right off the bat, generally speaking the head, hands and neck are the last things you expect a person to cover when dressing themselves. Also its way easier to underestimate how much heat youre losing through your head as opposed to your hands or neck
@justing7490
@justing7490 21 күн бұрын
@@loganmedia4401 and yet people constantly go out with parts of their body exposed because they are wearing a coat.... Almost like you are proving why the saying is necessary
@PhantomQueenOne
@PhantomQueenOne Ай бұрын
My mother had a blood draw done and her blood was _pink_ ... she had leukemia. If your blood looks anything but what it _should_ look like, it's bad.
@thecaneater
@thecaneater Ай бұрын
Blood can also be pink due to hyperlipidemia. Basically, lots of fat in the blood. The fat adds a white color, mixed with the red of normal blood makes it pink.
@PhantomQueenOne
@PhantomQueenOne Ай бұрын
@@thecaneater In her case, this was the reason.
@Kaede-Sasaki
@Kaede-Sasaki Ай бұрын
She could be a klingon (from the 6th movie, more specifically-all the others are assumedly from the north 😂
@Kaede-Sasaki
@Kaede-Sasaki Ай бұрын
...
@Kaede-Sasaki
@Kaede-Sasaki Ай бұрын
Error 404
@Benson_aka_devils_advocate_88
@Benson_aka_devils_advocate_88 Ай бұрын
Babies lose a lot of body heat through their heads, relative to adults. But only because babies head are proportionally larger than adults. It's not a huge difference but it is important to cover their heads when outside on really cold days.
@MindBodySoulOk
@MindBodySoulOk Ай бұрын
Babies have big fat heads. They look like aliens
@anna9072
@anna9072 Ай бұрын
It really depends on how much hair you have, and what kind. I had a friend who had very thick, bushy hair. Confining it in a hat squashed it down, decreasing its insulative qualities and making him colder. This is why you really shouldn’t put a coat on a fluffy dog in the winter, you’ll actually make them colder.
@jonadabtheunsightly
@jonadabtheunsightly Ай бұрын
Babies also just get cold more easily in general, because they have a much higher surface-area-to-volume ratio. So keeping them warm is important.
@bluex610
@bluex610 Ай бұрын
​@anna9072 I think it depends on the breed. Some dogs like pugs recommend having a coat if it's too cold.
@anna9072
@anna9072 Ай бұрын
@@bluex610 yes, certainly breed matters, that’s why I said “fluffy dogs”. Pugs are short-coated, and they’re also small, so would lose body heat faster. But I’ve seen people put coats on dogs like huskies.
@ts25679
@ts25679 Ай бұрын
I was told the overemphasis on carrots improving vision was British wartime propaganda to obfuscate the implementation of radar. I.e. "How the bloody hell do you Limie's keep spotting our bombers‽" "Carrots mate."
@Mike-ie5xu
@Mike-ie5xu 20 күн бұрын
Correct. This wasn't just a rumor - British and US governments printed propaganda flyers and posters advertising this, especially after a much more advanced radar tube was developed in the US in 1943. The Germans actually had a primitive radar system, but it used a lower frequency (not microwave frequencies), and wasn't remarkably effective. The carrot propaganda was designed to hopefully stagnate the German discovery of the more advanced radar, and the carrot/eyesight myth carried forward into Baby Boomers from their parents, most of whom didn't know the truth behind the propaganda posters they saw. Many of those Boomers became teachers, and taught Gen X the carrot myth. It was so prevalent through the 1980s that it could be found in school science books as a "fact".
@RealSaintB
@RealSaintB Ай бұрын
<a href="#" class="seekto" data-time="45">0:45</a> Last time some idiot declared himself an alpha male in my presence I asked them, "What, like a chimp?" oddly they didn't act very alpha after that they got kinda whiny.
@vaclavjebavy5118
@vaclavjebavy5118 Ай бұрын
Return to Monke
@stevelee5724
@stevelee5724 Ай бұрын
​Lucky he wasn't an Alpha male, probably...😊
@jrector666
@jrector666 Ай бұрын
Actually the whole alpha thing comes from studies of chickens. Not roosters, chickens. Females.
@khallrik
@khallrik Ай бұрын
​@jrector666 so I guess being hen-pecked is pretty normal...
@Xython88
@Xython88 Ай бұрын
I did a “Taste Map” test in school. & I was told I was wrong when I refuted this idea. Ok.. sure… whatever
@pennybourban3712
@pennybourban3712 Ай бұрын
Same, so I always knew that map was a lie. I also had a few teachers who believed urban myths.
@bythelee
@bythelee Ай бұрын
The sadest part about this, is that you're clearly a thinker that challenges the norms and generally accepted misinformation. But being told you were wrong, damages that important spirit, crushing it back into conformity. I hope you managed to retain the independent thought needed to explore, discover, and learn the real truth, wherever you sought it. Go get it back NOW, if you didn't.
@Vagitarian01
@Vagitarian01 Ай бұрын
Elementary teachers have a penchant for being under-educated, ironically.
@bobm4378
@bobm4378 Ай бұрын
it gets worse now quantum physics is part of the syllabus they have made the photon a particle, even though many have disproved it..
@pensive8552
@pensive8552 Ай бұрын
Same, except my school acknowledged the inconsistency and said that's why the map isn't on the test - just the list of senses (but they still liked to see kids do the test and see if they thought for themselves). This was many decades ago btw. Something similar happened in school to my dad btw, when they tried to teach him that the number of grains of sand on a beach were infinite, and he refuted the claim by noticing that the earth itself is finite. Obviously, for the number of grains of sand to actually be infinite the earth which contains the sand would also have to be infinite. His teacher did not accept his refutation, sadly.
@louisfrancisco2171
@louisfrancisco2171 Ай бұрын
<a href="#" class="seekto" data-time="775">12:55</a> If you read at the actual sentence quoted, you see "when fully clothed". It makes sense that the majority of heat loss would be from the uncovered parts.
@TheDahaka1
@TheDahaka1 24 күн бұрын
Yeah, that, and no one actually believes that, when fully naked, 80% of heat loss comes from the head. If they did they would rush to cover their head when it's cold, while everyone prioritizes covering the rest of the body.
@DaveBarrack
@DaveBarrack Ай бұрын
My (possibly apocryphal) understanding was that the "carrots are good for eyesight" was actually a WWII disinformation campaign to explain why US and British pilots could spot enemies nearly over the horizon and/or had exceptional night vision, when in fact they were being spotted by radar, which was, at the time, a secret.
@sam1812seal
@sam1812seal Ай бұрын
Spot on
@muddygirl8819
@muddygirl8819 Ай бұрын
Was coming to comments to say this lol
@Summonergeek
@Summonergeek Ай бұрын
I love it when someone busts out history.
@francisboyle1739
@francisboyle1739 Ай бұрын
I look forward to Simon debunking that in "5 myths about propaganda you probably believe".
@muddygirl8819
@muddygirl8819 Ай бұрын
@@francisboyle1739 there are actual advertisements and posters from ww2 that say things like “night sight is life or death” and go on to list vegetables high in vitamin a including carrots and that it’s essential for vitamin a to be eaten for good night vision. It was truly used as a cover to try to explain away why the raf could find and shoot down German bombers before they even hit the British channel because they were trying to keep the onboard radar on their planes a secret.
@Highclearing
@Highclearing Ай бұрын
The tastebud map is more wrong even than presented in the video. You have taste buds all around your mouth, especially including the inside of your cheeks and your soft palate. I’m particularly appreciative of this having lost 90% of my oral tongue to cancer in the last dozen years. Also particularly aware of it: I can *sense taste happening* in those parts of my mouth much more than I used to.
@TheExpatpom
@TheExpatpom Ай бұрын
That’s really interesting. I had no idea about that. Also fcuk cancer - I’m sorry you had to find out that way.
@Daniel-Strain
@Daniel-Strain Ай бұрын
One huge issue in science education that needs to be corrected: We all know that one needs to be taught simpler things early, and more complex things as you get older. And we generally agree that it would be good for kids to know the HISTORY of science. So, because science was simpler in the past, this got turned into a widespread practice of teaching old science to youngsters and newer science as you went up in grades, until only the most advanced post graduates got the most recent understandings. This is why you are constantly being told by teachers that what you learned in previous grades was wrong, or at least misleading. We need to STOP this. Instead of teaching young kids old models of the atom, we need to find a way to teach them the current conception of an atom and particle physics, but simplify it to conceptual ideas they are ready for. Completely throw out old and obsolete notions, and teach ONLY current science, but in very simple terms, that becomes more nuanced in higher grades. Then, if some history, physics, or medical major wants to take a separate class "The history of scientific ideas" for example, they can do that and learn interesting but scientifically irrelevant things like, "Oh! They used to think the sun revolved around the earth" or "Wow, they once thought an electron was the smallest particle - weird."
@Riven_5
@Riven_5 Ай бұрын
While teaching kids old information as if it were current is indeed a problem, I feel like you're veering too far towards the other major problem in science education: teaching science as a collection of information instead of a process. The various historical models of the atom aren't important. And unless you're a chemist or particle physisist, neither is the current one. What's important is why those models were initially accepted, how we determined each of them was wrong, and how that led to the next wrong model. Building models based on the available data, testing them, and adjusting based on the results. That's what science IS and what's important to instill, despite schools generally being awful at it.
@Daniel-Strain
@Daniel-Strain Ай бұрын
@@Riven_5 Yes I agree with that being important, but people should know the major general consensus of current scientific theories as well. They should know basic physics, biology, etc at least.
@Statalyzer
@Statalyzer 28 күн бұрын
Cough conventional current cough
@Daniel-Strain
@Daniel-Strain 28 күн бұрын
@@Statalyzer Yes, absolutely. Conventional is what should be taught.
@jv-lk7bc
@jv-lk7bc 14 күн бұрын
I used to think the election was the smallest, then i realized those running in the election must be smaller...
@Accipitercooperii
@Accipitercooperii Ай бұрын
Water will conduct heat away from your head faster than air. And as it evaporates it will remove even more heat. That’s why sweating works. Those effects still happen at cold temperatures and happen whether it’s sweat or applied water.
@bythelee
@bythelee Ай бұрын
Very nicely put. I tried but failed to be this concise, explaining this reality.
@RedshiftDougal
@RedshiftDougal Ай бұрын
Absolutely true and well put, but this upholds the fact that one will "be" cold if going outside with wet hair, not the folk myth that we will "catch a cold" if going out with wet hair. That requires one's system to be exposed to an infection, not just lower temperature. When I was a child in the 70s, all the responsible adults seemed convinced that one caught a cold simply by being too cold.
@loisavci3382
@loisavci3382 Ай бұрын
If it's really cold, the water turns to ice, which is a pretty good insulator. Once the hair next to your scalp, warmed by body heat, dries out, creating a pocket of warm air, it's kind of like wearing an insulated helmet.
@PhilBertran
@PhilBertran Ай бұрын
The 'alpha' thing is funny though, because now whenever some guy says he's an alpha it's obviously a sign that they don't have a clue about anything.
@everettputerbaugh3996
@everettputerbaugh3996 Ай бұрын
Especially that he scores high on the psychopathy scale...
@donbianconi8446
@donbianconi8446 Ай бұрын
I always thought when someone claimed to be alpha, they really meant they were scared
@benjaminshepard
@benjaminshepard 29 күн бұрын
Or you can think of it as being an indication of self-awareness. After all, 'alpha' denotes the initial version of a product that is first given to testers. Their development teams just released these guys to the public prematurely. They need more UX testing.
@edwinwhitaker5679
@edwinwhitaker5679 Ай бұрын
Your section on "do eating carrots improve eyesight" is interesting but there is another aspect. The first British aircraft to carry radar was the Bristol Beaufighter which was designed just before WW2. It was used as a night fighter during the Battle of Britain. The British Government became aware that the Germans would be suspicious about the increasing numbers of their aircraft that we were shooting down. This led to the British press publishing a number of fake cover stories which said our pilots had found eating large amounts of carrots had altered their night vision. This was done as the Germans were monitoring the British press. A few years later the Germans tried eating large amounts of carrots and found it did not help night vision. After WW2 this story was passed onto British children from their parents. This was mentioned by the British TV programme World War Weird.
@josephiudice8287
@josephiudice8287 Ай бұрын
Reply I learned this same information from The Fat Electrician (another KZbinr who does video about military stuff). Basically the carrots thing was intentional misinformation.
@einundsiebenziger5488
@einundsiebenziger5488 Ай бұрын
... does* eating carrots improve eyesight
@edwinwhitaker5679
@edwinwhitaker5679 Ай бұрын
@@einundsiebenziger5488 Carrots are a source of carotene which is converted into vitamin A. Insufficiency of this will lead to poorer vision.
@lizw6603
@lizw6603 Ай бұрын
Yes, I have heard the same story: that it was the British government that popularised the myth that carrots improved your eyesight ( specifically in pilots) as a way if covering up the use of radar. It had its source in the fact that carrots are a good source of vitamin A, which is needed to maintain eyesight.
@chrisvickers7928
@chrisvickers7928 18 күн бұрын
I have also heard that the Germans did not believe it and thought the British were trying to conceal their improved radar. The British were really to conceal the code breaking at Bletchley Park
@TKDB13
@TKDB13 Ай бұрын
On the topic of the senses, if we're going to divide up touch, pain, and temperature into separate senses on the grounds of their being mediated by different kinds of sensory nerves (when all three would have been included under the umbrella of "touch" in the Aristotelian model), it's only fair that we do the same for light vs. color vision. Or for that matter, even the three different wavelengths of colored light we have cone cells for! On the other hand, if you think saying we actually have four different senses under the umbrella classically called "vision" is silly, perhaps it's also fair to say it's silly to say we actually have three different senses under what was classically called "touch". (Balance and proprioception, on the other hand, are indeed new discoveries.)
@semaj_5022
@semaj_5022 Ай бұрын
I can at least accept the sense of temperature being separate from touch since it works for both gauging ambient temperature as well as temperature of objects through contact. Pain, though? That's just touch, but harder. And yes, extreme temperatures can cause pain, but do so through touch. At worst, you can call pain and temperature pseudo-senses under the umbrella of "touch."
@juliavixen176
@juliavixen176 Ай бұрын
​@semaj_5022 Something I rarely see mentioned about the human sense of temperature is that the "hot" and "cold" sensitive nerves are physically separate and distinct. Feeling "hot" and feeling "cold" are orthogonal vectors, and you can simultaneously sense both "hot" and "cold" at the same time! This is what Menthol does by the way. Similar to how Capsaicin stimulates the "hot" temperature receptor, Menthol stimulates both "hot" and "cold" receptors at the same time. Also, you have olfactory receptors all over your (human) body, not just your nose. There are olfactory receptors inside your stomach, in your armpits, and on your genitals. Your body, like most animal life, has a distinct sense of being poisioned. One of the only parts of the brain which directly comes into contact with blood, is dedicated to sensing poison, and will immediately eject the contents of the gastrointestinal tract out of either end until the poison is gone. The sense of carbon dioxide ppm dissolved in your blood is the sense of suffocating and needing to breathe. (You can't sense the oxygen level, only excess carbon dioxide. This is why hypoxic atmospheres are so dangerous: everything feels "normal" until you lose consciousness and die.)
@TKDB13
@TKDB13 Ай бұрын
@@juliavixen176 Speaking of olfactory receptors, if we are to extend the principle of "pain and temperature use different nerve receptors than regular touch, so they're distinct senses", then that would also imply that we have hundreds of different "senses", the vast majority of which are just the different unique olfactory chemoreceptors.
@WilliamBrownMBA
@WilliamBrownMBA Ай бұрын
I remember when I did my first year college courses and so much of it was the teacher saying something akin to, “You were taught this in high school but it’s not correct. This is what the science actually says.” Many of my fellow students were very resistant, confused, and upset about it.
@PhuckedUpPhilosophy
@PhuckedUpPhilosophy Ай бұрын
Must be a pretty backwards society when you literally have to unlearn shit that you were taught as truth only a year before. Like can we just skip the lies and go straight to the truth ? Who decreed that lies were a mandatory part of the curriculum ?
@iRunKids
@iRunKids Ай бұрын
in grad school they tell you the same thing about undergrad, it’s kind of a turtles all the way down sorta deal
@WilliamBrownMBA
@WilliamBrownMBA Ай бұрын
@@iRunKids I only had science electives for my film undergrad. Then I went and got an MBA because I’m a masochist. There was less of that in Business school.
@TKBarnes
@TKBarnes Ай бұрын
Heh, in my first year Psych classes half of them were "This is the popular science version of X experiment. Here's the actual paper, go read it and tell us how the popular science is incorrect." Things like the Milgram experiment, Stanford Prison, Calhoun's Rat Utopia... and so on, and so forth. By the same token, my first ever lecture in applied psychology had a 15 minute diatribe on how early social scientists obsession with math and quantifying everything is equal parts amazing and destroys psychology. :D
@GlowBright333
@GlowBright333 Ай бұрын
Centrifugal Force, when you spin a ball on a string it is held in orbit by Centrifugal Force. My grade school science teacher explained this with a straight face. Then in college physics, no such thing. It is Centripetal Force = mass x velocity2 / radius. He could have said we call it Centrifugal, but this is just a name we assigned to represent a set of advanced math calculations we have not covered yet. I wonder if he actually knew the correct answer?
@tomholroyd7519
@tomholroyd7519 Ай бұрын
The oxygenation state of hemoglobin changes its IR spectrum, this is used in NIRS imaging. Thus your blood *does* change color, you just can't see it.
@Collector261
@Collector261 Ай бұрын
My elementary school teacher was an idiot. She insisted that the American Civil War was fought in the 1840’s. And that the dinosaurs were killed by the ice age. After getting marked wrong on tests for saying otherwise, I told this to my “wonderful supporting” parents, they actually took the teacher’s side: saying that I should have wrote what the teacher said, as I would have gotten those tests questions “correct”.
@bythelee
@bythelee Ай бұрын
A story reported in the news in recent years, was when a teacher reported a young pupil for disobedience and disruption, when they argued with the teacher's claim that one kilometer was a greater distance than one mile. Even though the teacher was wrong and the pupil right, the pupil was STILL suspended for being argumentative, when the school agreed with the teacher that the pupil accepting the teacher's word as gospel was more important. Wow, are we heading for catastrophe, when the importance of FACTS being RIGHT is worth less than brain-dead obedience. PS extremely sad to hear your parents taking that same blind obedience route, and not realising and appreciating your cleverness in understanding the deeper story. It's the kinda thing that scars people for life. Sounds like you at least comprehend WHY they took that stance, and even understand how and when you might need to apply this "toe the line" strategy. There are times (like, when writing a PhD) when suggesting the controversial can win brownie points - but even that depends on whether the people assessing your thinking prefer the notion that you challenge the accepted norms, or fluff their tail feathers with some "yes-men" flattery. Ultimately, if your career leads to the need to break traditions and find new ways (rocket science, for instance) then you need to keep pushing the boundaries. On the other hand, a career in sales and customer helplines means having to accept "the customer is always right", no matter how daft their expectations.
@azaph_yt
@azaph_yt Ай бұрын
@@bythelee School traditionally wasn't about educating children, it was about turning them into obedient workers and soldiers. There seems to be a lot of inertia in the system tho.
@scottthewaterwarrior
@scottthewaterwarrior Ай бұрын
@@bythelee Even more scary given the rise of fascism we are starting to see.
@mockupguy3577
@mockupguy3577 Ай бұрын
Remember that half the population is below median intelligence.
@weasle5022
@weasle5022 Ай бұрын
@@bythelee I always think back to the immigrant attending college that got accused of rape. Another student, the woman, accused him of rape after she regretted sleeping with him. Guy is cleared as footage clearly shows her literally dragging him home. School still expells him and says they don't let rapists go there. Justice, welcome to America.
@mj.ray0898
@mj.ray0898 Ай бұрын
"No con-senses on how many senses we have" is how I heard it, whether intentional or not, well done
@TonyYeungExe
@TonyYeungExe Ай бұрын
I can't say this is wrong, but most schools taught incompetely how our solar system moves in space. Most school system ignores the sun also moves through the galaxy.
@leewilkinson6372
@leewilkinson6372 Ай бұрын
Very true! And the fact tha5 we are "tilted" relative to the suspected plane of the galaxy, as well as where er are in the "thickness" of that plane..... among other things. I do suspect that these things would make the topic too complex for young minds. Heck. It makes MY brain ache😅
@Goldfire-tt3dv
@Goldfire-tt3dv Ай бұрын
Generally, the notion that "prolonged exposure of the human body to cold temperatures" automatically means "catching a cold". A common cold is caused by coming into close contact with a person who already has a common cold and is infectious. Cold temperatures might contribute to decreasing your immune system's ability to fight off the infection without you ever experiencing any symptions, but it's perfectly possible to catch a common cold and get sick on a hot summer day, and it's possible to expose yourself to cold temperatures without getting sick because you never came into contact with an infected person.
@brianartillery
@brianartillery Ай бұрын
After I left school (when it was all trees round here, etc.,) I became an autodidact, and was neither surprised, nor disappointed, to find that a large proportion of what I had been taught at school, in multiple disciplines, was utter bollocks. It may be better nowadays, but I doubt it. A friend of mine, who enjoys taking part in pub quizzes, told me that a team comprising teachers from local schools, seem to always do badly, and often give out ludicrous answers to fairly simple questions. Do they all work from source books now? It's a sobering thought.
@darkvisiongothacked
@darkvisiongothacked Ай бұрын
yeah its one of those weird ones, where i partially get why its done, and also hate it overall. there is also ofc pure incompetence in so many ways like "new math" that they keep trying to teach in america despite it fundamentally being flawed. my dad PROVED it mathematically to the school board in GA when my sister was in grade school. So GA removed it form the curriculum, but its still being taught in a lot of places in america. As to the kind of things where im like "yeah i get that you are teaching it "wrong"", E=mc^2 is ridiculously difficult to understand. like that one equation is taught as a course of its own AFTER you have taken multiple other advanced math courses. so ofc high school or middle school isnt going to do a good job of explaining it. there are other concepts that are true 99.9% of the time, but explaining that .1% is again something you would learn while getting a masters in that subject. its again understandable that its "dumbed down" and "wrong". i still think that over all it could be done better, but the point stands that in some instances it really is the only feasible way. Where the real issue lies is twofold: most of our textbooks are 20+ years old so have a lot of outdated/incorrect info and so much no or then is dumbed down that just does not need to be. just because its going to take 10 minutes to get it right they mangle it so it takes 5 minutes instead.
@RudCh01
@RudCh01 Ай бұрын
At no point in my life did I interpret "you lose 80% of your body's heat through your head" to mean that a fully naked person would lose 80% of their body's heat through their head.
@repatch43
@repatch43 Ай бұрын
It's infuriating that as a child I knew most of these things were nonsense (especially the hat one), and had logical arguments 'proving' it, yet got shot down all the time due to the 'common sense' argument. It's annoying when a child is smarter then the adults supposedly 'teaching' them.
@captainspaulding5963
@captainspaulding5963 Ай бұрын
Wait, didn't the carrot myth get started as a wartime ploy to keep the Germans from finding out that Bletchley Park had broken the enigma code?
@thehomeschoolinglibrarian
@thehomeschoolinglibrarian Ай бұрын
No it had to do with radar and was used to explain how RAF pilots were seeing in the dark. Also carrots were an easy to grow food so encouraging people in the UK to eat more carrots was also a way to help with food rationing.
@captainspaulding5963
@captainspaulding5963 Ай бұрын
​@thehomeschoolinglibrarian I thought the cover story was that RAF were seeing targets better "because carrots", but it was the fact that the code was broken so the RAF knew where to hit.
@TheDJPCol
@TheDJPCol Ай бұрын
@@captainspaulding5963 I thought it was to cover up our use of radar too. Found this on BBC Science Focus; "To prevent the Germans finding out that Britain was using radar to intercept bombers on night raids, they issued press releases stating that British pilots were eating lots of carrots to give them exceptional night vision."
@captainspaulding5963
@captainspaulding5963 Ай бұрын
​@@TheDJPCol oh hell! Had them confused!! Thank you :)
@korbinianrottmair8189
@korbinianrottmair8189 Ай бұрын
Ist was radar and a special aming optic for the anti aircraft guns. Both helped britan to win the air war. To cover it up, they used the carrot myth.
@spineshivers
@spineshivers Ай бұрын
I think that blue blood part is a myth confined to the Anglo-American cultural space. I'm from Eastern Europe and I haven't heard about this in my entire life. Not as kids, not ever.
@avrillavignefanclub1927
@avrillavignefanclub1927 Ай бұрын
me too, i was like wtf
@avrillavignefanclub1927
@avrillavignefanclub1927 Ай бұрын
i cant believe anyone thinks that?
@Bellpipe41
@Bellpipe41 Ай бұрын
I’m English and have never heard it either. If it is Anglo-American, it never penetrated my neck of the woods.
@kentstevens5839
@kentstevens5839 Ай бұрын
I am from New Zealand and have heard of this blue-blood myth somewhere. I can see blue-looking veins in my arms even though this is an optical illusion.
@enadegheeghaghe6369
@enadegheeghaghe6369 Ай бұрын
I am African and I have never heard of this blue blood myth either
@seanhayes1996
@seanhayes1996 Ай бұрын
With regards to Mech and Duvall's work, there genuinely is no such thing as an alpha male: only sociopaths and malignant narcissists who demand to be worshipped like gods.
@apostatereacts
@apostatereacts Ай бұрын
Spot on!
@billybob7135
@billybob7135 Ай бұрын
It's like the "Great Man" theory of history (also debunked). Sure, you can be skilled and well adjusted, but that won't magically make you a leader or more successful without the right circumstances. Even a "beta" male can get along well with others and find happiness.
@covereye5731
@covereye5731 Ай бұрын
The frustration with telling people about the extra senses is that they all want to lump it in with just touch, even with proprioception they will argue you are feeling your body through the touch with air and what not.
@semaj_5022
@semaj_5022 Ай бұрын
It's honestly really difficult to conceptualize proprioception for a lot of people, I'd imagine. The sense does utilize touch, but it also uses sight, hearing, balance, etc, along with your brain's mental map of your location and understanding of direction and time. It's a lot easier to picture it as "knowing where you are by everything you're touching," wrong though that may be. Brains are the most difficult thing for brains to understand.
@gcewing
@gcewing Ай бұрын
@@semaj_5022 You no doubt use all that information to keep track of the state of your body, but proprioception itself is a distinct sense with specific sensors for it in the limbs. I know someone who fell off a bike and suffered a broken arm. He said he knew it was broken because it felt like his arm was in one position, but when he looked, it was pointing off in a different direction.
@juliavixen176
@juliavixen176 Ай бұрын
If you lose your sense of balance, as many people have before, it will become immediately obvious to you that it is a distinct sense all by itself.
@josekentucky86
@josekentucky86 Ай бұрын
@@covereye5731 my friend keeps saying "tactile" "tactile" every time I've tried explaining different senses to him over the years lol. It's maddening
@pianowhizz
@pianowhizz Ай бұрын
Balance, Time, and Pain are completely unrelated to skin and touch. E.g. emotional pain caused by finding out someone cheated you or made up stories about you. So there are definitely at least 9 senses - not 5.
@85priesty
@85priesty Ай бұрын
My god, this is exactly what pissed me off beyond belief, why I was taught things one year in science, then the next year, to be told that was wrong, to be told what was actually reality, then the next year..."no this is how it is" I was like "WHY THE BLOODY HELL NOT TEACH ME THE KNOWN PHYSICS AND CHEMISTRY IN THE FIRST PLACE?????" The carrot thing I do know was a disguise when radar was invented....
@happyzahn8031
@happyzahn8031 Ай бұрын
Exactly. I can distinctly remember being quite upset about being taught election 'orbits' as how things were and then clouds later. Very distressing. I doubt that it even marginally disturbed most of my cohort though.
@dangernoodle235
@dangernoodle235 Ай бұрын
so you would want to teach 5th graders advanced quantum field theory and general relativity? You can always escalate the complexity of such a topic up and up and up more, you have to start somewhere
@85priesty
@85priesty 24 күн бұрын
@dangernoodle235 no I'm not saying that... but you definitely know that those who design the curriculum are failed teachers, it's better to lead up to something, rather than say "these are election patterns" then clouds, then basically be relearning, in no way was I suggesting Quantum Theory should be taught to 8 year olds... I'll see what happens in a few years when my kids get there...but certainly in my education it started to get a bit annoying when you could teach kids things that are relevant, and if they have a higher proficiency in certain areas, then adjust for that. But I just feel like I spent a lot of time in the sc ientific areas, that were wasted. Not that I ever studied, but it was really annoying to spend time on one thing, then next year "no, this is how it actually works, then the same over and over again" I understand if it's new understanding happening. But it's a waste of time... in my opinion I'm not a teacher, but I have the feeling that those that devise curriculums, are those that became teachers and couldn't teach. And I would have happily learned Quantum Theory as early as possible. Unfortunately my physics teacher was not what you would call a great teacher. I have always been more into biology and chemistry, and mathematics when needing to adjust imperial to metric, grains to grams. But since children I got into learning about Quantum Physics, because it seems on average from a 4 or 5 year old the 7th "Why?" Means you're at the Quantum level...😆
@85priesty
@85priesty 24 күн бұрын
@happyzahn8031 haha, it just annoyed me most because I can't study. I was later when I was about 33 diagnosed with innatentive ADHD. So yeah, most people in my class didn't care...but I did. Because I couldn't be bothered/never studied. I did get high enough grades in the end to go into medicine...but it just frustrated me that they couldn't just teach me something different, or whatever it is straight up. Because by the 4th year of that happening it was starting to be mildly irritating...but I'm sure there's things that hace changed now. I mean since I left Pharmacy I can't believe the insane policies and changes in scheduling and the supposedly safest medication has vanished... in much faster time than ever used to happen.
@keithwalmsley1830
@keithwalmsley1830 Ай бұрын
Although not exactly science related, it always amazes me that schools still teach that Christopher Columbus was the first European to reach the Americas when there is indisputable proof that the Vikings at least reached Newfoundland 500 years before Columbus.
@christopherfriede
@christopherfriede Ай бұрын
I am a high school history teacher. Even in Texas, we haven't taught the Columbus myth for at least 20 years. We do talk about the 'Columbian Exchange' that got set up in his wake, but not that he was the first European.
@Statalyzer
@Statalyzer 28 күн бұрын
That's not what was taught to me 30 years ago.
@fredwalker3978
@fredwalker3978 Ай бұрын
So people just misinterpreted an army manual that stated "WHEN FULLY CLOTHED" we lose the majority of heat through our head and neck - whoever is writing your presentations needs some help.
@whythetechnot5655
@whythetechnot5655 Ай бұрын
I actually remember that from my time in the service. They taught that but with an asterisk on it, depending on environment and situation here are the basics
@finished6267
@finished6267 Ай бұрын
sure. that's where the disinfo came from. Some super influential guy misinterpreted an army manual. Thanks for straightening that out for us.
@jgrenwod
@jgrenwod Ай бұрын
But how much of that heat loss is through respiration. I would think the majority. Strange it wasn’t considered.
@tealkerberus748
@tealkerberus748 Ай бұрын
Makes sense. When most of your body is covered in insulative clothing, most of your heat loss will be through the bit that isn't covered. Hardly controversial - until someone oversimplifies it to nonsense!
@tolkienfan1972
@tolkienfan1972 Ай бұрын
Veins look blue through the skin because more blue wavelenghs are reflected. This is NOT an illusion. When blue light reaches your eye, we call it "blue", because it's blue. It's not difficult.
@keenanarthur8381
@keenanarthur8381 Ай бұрын
In ayurveda, the six tastes are bitter, salty, sour, sweet, pungent (which includes spices and foods like garlic and onions), and astringent (e.g. pomegranates or black tea).
@ceilingfan12345
@ceilingfan12345 Ай бұрын
I certainly don't think of pomegranates and black tea as having similar taste.😂
@jonadabtheunsightly
@jonadabtheunsightly Ай бұрын
@@ceilingfan12345 Technically, they're both (mildly) acidic.
@derKuchen1
@derKuchen1 Ай бұрын
As a german i realy appreciate the attempt of pronouncing the title "Zur Psychopyhsik des Geschmackssinnes". The later half definitely put a smile on my face. :) By the way, love your content!
@Raye938
@Raye938 Ай бұрын
Uh. What? "blue wavelengths are more easily absorbed by the skin and blood" We don't see absorption, we see reflection.
@semaj_5022
@semaj_5022 Ай бұрын
I think he means that since blue's absorbed more easily by everything that isn't a vein, it's really the main color reflected by veins which is why they appear blue to our eyes. I agree it could have been worded better, though.
@sand0can1
@sand0can1 Ай бұрын
The skin is not a mirror. Wavelengths are absorbed to a degree (as with anything around that you perceive colored). Red apple reflect more of the red spectrum, but of course not 100%
@stephanieworkman5110
@stephanieworkman5110 Ай бұрын
3:31 That’s not what he said. He said that red wavelengths are absorbed more by the skin, and the blue wavelengths penetrate the skin. The light that is able to go through the skin is no longer white light, as some of the wavelengths have been absorbed. When it hits the flesh-colored vein, the vein looks bluer than it would in white light.
@danielabbey7726
@danielabbey7726 Ай бұрын
My favorite scientific myth from high school: being taught that electrons were little colored balls orbiting different colored balls in the nucleus.
@KT-dj4iy
@KT-dj4iy 12 күн бұрын
I was chatting to a high school physics teacher friend of mine; we were talking about how cool it was that science had advanced in so many ways since we ourselves were in high school. I said, laughing, _"For example, remember how they used to teach us that electrons were little balls that flew around the nucleus like planets around the sun!"_ He looked at me, genuinely confused, and asked, _"Right; and what's wrong with that?"_ PHYSICS! He was a high school _PHYSICS_ teacher! 🤯 To be fair, his degree was in Chemical Engineering. But still!
@pooryorick831
@pooryorick831 Ай бұрын
My biggest takeawy here is that Spock's blood should have been blue rather than green. They took the bit about copper based hemoglobin but they said it was green for some reason. Dang...
@FurtiveSkeptical
@FurtiveSkeptical Ай бұрын
Wouldn't he have had "cupriglobin" then? ....as "hemo" implies iron by definition.🤔
@rowdyriemer
@rowdyriemer 16 күн бұрын
Smell and taste are really the same sense. When you smell, you're just tasting the air.
@frocat5163
@frocat5163 Ай бұрын
The idea that you'll catch a cold if you go outside in cold weather with wet hair is tricky. Obviously, simply entering a cold environment with wet hair won't make you ill. However, putting yourself in a situation where your body has to expend a greater portion of your energy to stay warm does have a negative impact on your immune system. Couple lowered immune system efficacy with spending more time in enclosed spaces with other humans, and you have the perfect combination of factors to catch an illness like a cold. So, sure, going outside in the winter with wet hair won't give you a cold...but it can certainly make it much easier for you to catch a cold.
@sargon6000
@sargon6000 Ай бұрын
This one is tricky, since while you cannot catch a cold by being exposed to cold (common cold is caused by viruses), there is a seed of truth in that "myth". When our body extremities are exposed to cold air for a certain period of time, your body will start limiting blood blow to the extremities, which also includes the nose and the sinuses. Since a cold nose is a dry nose, the cold virus particles can no longer be retained by the mucus and may reach all the way to the inside of the nasal cavity and up until the lungs, causing respiratory infections. This is why people with diabetes and compromised immune system get fungal infections so easily, the nose capillaries are atrophied, meaning less blood flow, less immune cells and lower tissue temperature, allowing fungus to grow.
@castleanthrax1833
@castleanthrax1833 Ай бұрын
Simon: "Your veins only appear blue. This is just a by-product of how the white light interacts with the pigments in your skin." Isn't the colour of EVERYTHING just a by-product of how white light interacts with it?
@avrillavignefanclub1927
@avrillavignefanclub1927 Ай бұрын
no, colors are the lengths of light waves, but the pigment interacting with skin is like a collaboration of these two
@castleanthrax1833
@castleanthrax1833 Ай бұрын
@@avrillavignefanclub1927 You've just rephrased what I wrote, but you did it in a very confusing manner.
@xjunkxyrdxdog89
@xjunkxyrdxdog89 Ай бұрын
​@castleanthrax1833 How do you think a laser works? What color light do they emit? Where in a laser diode is the "white light" and what is it interacting with?
@castleanthrax1833
@castleanthrax1833 Ай бұрын
@@xjunkxyrdxdog89 What has that got to do with what I said?
@xjunkxyrdxdog89
@xjunkxyrdxdog89 Ай бұрын
@@castleanthrax1833 "Isn't the colour of EVERYTHING just a by-product of how white light interacts with it?" Lasers are included in "everything". Now do you intend on answering any of my questions or are you just going to deflect?
@PeerAdder
@PeerAdder Ай бұрын
And "alpha male" isn't something you're taught in school, unless you think social media clickbait and newspaper headlines constitute learning materials.
@nowt2957
@nowt2957 Ай бұрын
What is the name of the sense that allows one to see Bruce Willis?
@nqgamer
@nqgamer Ай бұрын
Very underrated comment. GG my learn-ed friend.
@georgebailey8179
@georgebailey8179 Ай бұрын
You mean in the film The Thirty-Fourth Sense?
@FurtiveSkeptical
@FurtiveSkeptical Ай бұрын
Clairvoyance....I imagine it'd be difficult to see or meet with Mr Willis these days.
@davelordy
@davelordy Ай бұрын
_"Your veins are not blue, it's an optical illusion"_ It's not an optical illusion, you seem to be conflating way light works (in particular absorption) with some unseen 'true' colour . . . nope, if light stimulates the blue cones in your eye, the light is - definitionally - blue.
@Jayjay-qe6um
@Jayjay-qe6um Ай бұрын
Senses used by non-human organisms are even greater in variety and number.
@aldunlop4622
@aldunlop4622 Ай бұрын
Such as...
@starburst98
@starburst98 Ай бұрын
The senses one sounds like it was more a redefining of what a sense is. Since Aristotle probably knew that people could feel pain, but didn't think of it as a sense as we understand them.
@juliavixen176
@juliavixen176 Ай бұрын
The "taste of metal" is the taste of electricity flowing through the battery you just made with the saliva in your mouth acting as the electrolyte, and the metal acting as an anode or cathode.
@ThePhysicalReaction
@ThePhysicalReaction Ай бұрын
If a person has any gold amalgam tooth backings, putting any dissimilar metal in the mouth is very uncomfortable :)
@ferociousgumby
@ferociousgumby Ай бұрын
@@ThePhysicalReaction That's why you should never chew tinfoil.
@locbigt5708
@locbigt5708 Ай бұрын
I used to drive forklifts in a -10F degree freezer for 12 hours a day. One day I forgot my thermal knit hat, yea it was definitely more of a 10% difference of how cold I was. Never forgot my hat again.
@pobsdad
@pobsdad Ай бұрын
We're told at school that rainbows are caused by sunlight being refracted through rain drops, but this is one of those over simplified 'lies' Simon was talking about. It begs the question of why we see one great big stationary rainbow (ok, sometimes two) instead of a million tiny ones that follow a rain drop down to the ground? The REAL answer is far more complex than a 7 year old is prepared for, so we go with the simple version.
@johnparry9313
@johnparry9313 Ай бұрын
Rainbows are caused by the colours within sunlight being refracted through rain drops. We see one big rainbow because the rainfall acts like one curtain of water formed from millions (actually more like billions) of rain drops. A single raindrop does not produce a rainbow, it splits an incident ray into colours and if youi could see that from several miles away it wouldn't be an image like a bow. The reason the rainbow does not fall to the ground with the raindrops is that its position depends on the sun which obviously is not falling to the ground (or at least not in the timescale of the minutes during which a rainbow is visible), and on your position and you are probably not falling. To understand the rainbow image requires a geeometrical diagram showing the position of the sun, the observer and the falling rain, combined with ray-tracing of the incident and refracted rays of liight in their different colours. It's very complex and cannot easily be imagined or visualised but the physicists and science teachers have got this one right.
@pobsdad
@pobsdad Ай бұрын
@@johnparry9313 I know how it works. My point was that we don't go into complex explanations for 7 year olds. We give them the simplified 'lie'.
@Statalyzer
@Statalyzer 28 күн бұрын
That's not what "begs the question" means.
@Icazify
@Icazify Ай бұрын
If you go outside with wet hair, you might not catch a cold, but to some extent save on hairgel tho
@InekoBK
@InekoBK Ай бұрын
<a href="#" class="seekto" data-time="178">2:58</a> Simon has done so many of these videos, he seems to have developed multiple brains😄
@stuartwestley8636
@stuartwestley8636 Ай бұрын
I thought I was the only one who heard that! 😛
@The_Real_Kyrros
@The_Real_Kyrros Ай бұрын
I think that might just be a British-ism... like how they refer to math as 'maths'
@bythelee
@bythelee Ай бұрын
@@The_Real_Kyrros "Maths" is because the British are aware this is a contraction of "mathematics". Their mistake is in not calling it "math's" with the apostrophe signalling the removed letters. "Do the mathematic" is not right, so "do the math" is equally not right. But it has become a commonly accepted convention despite that. The use of "maths" without the apostrophe is an equally accepted convention in the UK.
@louisfrancisco2171
@louisfrancisco2171 Ай бұрын
@@The_Real_Kyrros He meant to say "through your veins" and said "brains" instead.
@The_Real_Kyrros
@The_Real_Kyrros Ай бұрын
@@bythelee Thank you for reminding me of the things I already knew 😜
@magistrumartium
@magistrumartium 26 күн бұрын
There can't be life on Mars, said my 6th-grade teacher, because living things need oxygen and Mars lacks oxygen. I said maybe there are life forms that don't need oxygen.... She said, "Well, as far as we know, all living things need oxygen." That answer was fair enough in 1972 but i was very pleased to learn about anaerobic organisms, some years later. My 11-year-old imagination was vindicated.
@seantlewis376
@seantlewis376 Ай бұрын
I feel like I've seen this before. Maybe Simon did a similar segment elsewhere, or some other commentator, or maybe I just picked up this info along the way of life.
@h0n3stlym3
@h0n3stlym3 Ай бұрын
I had deja vu for this episode also.
@Gotenhanku
@Gotenhanku Ай бұрын
He definitely has done most of the things in the videos before on other videos and even this exact premise before.
@wolle8182
@wolle8182 Ай бұрын
Simon had a video about scientific principles being portrait "to easy" where he mentioned the tongue story at least. But since 80% of the KZbin traffic goes back to our lord and saviour it should be quite often that stuff comes up double
@stellarfortressnemesis
@stellarfortressnemesis Ай бұрын
When we speak of senses, we're talking about our perception of the outside world beyond our own body, in other words,external senses. Sense of pain, proprioception, time, and balance are internal senses. Temperature is part of touch. Seeing light and seeing color are obviously part of sight. It doesn't even make sense to separate them from sight. Why would you do that? That would be like calling rough and smooth as separate from touch. Likewise, internal perception is not part of the external senses. You gave no information whatsoever to alter the 5 external senses.
@TheKalaxis
@TheKalaxis Ай бұрын
How many times is Simon gonna make basically the same video? I swear he's already made this or similar at least 3 times in recent months
@captainspaulding5963
@captainspaulding5963 Ай бұрын
Until it stops getting views.... does nobody pay attention when he speaks? "We are creatively bankrupt and we'll make the same videos over and over if people keep watching".
@creative-renaissance
@creative-renaissance Ай бұрын
Are you sure you are not watching the same video over and over?
@luisgentil
@luisgentil 22 күн бұрын
I clearly remember reading in a school textbook that you could verify the taste map at work by touching salt with the tip of your tongue and you wouldn't feel the saltiness. I tried it and, well, maybe it was a placebo saltiness? Science can't be wrong can it?
@anthonyperno1348
@anthonyperno1348 Ай бұрын
Swimming cramps after you eat.
@alexanders562
@alexanders562 Ай бұрын
To be more accurate: radioactive carrot seeds make carrots that give you super eye sight. (reference) Gilligans Island
@Samicus
@Samicus Ай бұрын
They're less taught and more just talk amongst peers that gets perpetuated down the grades forever lol
@captainspaulding5963
@captainspaulding5963 Ай бұрын
What do you mean? I quite literally learned that we have 5 senses and that the taste buds on your tongue have different zones from books in the late 80's and early 90's. They were most definitely things that were taught
@avrillavignefanclub1927
@avrillavignefanclub1927 Ай бұрын
​@@captainspaulding5963 i was born in 2000 so maybe thats why, (im also from europe) but i wasnt taught most of these things, teachers even was explaining at school why these topics are incorreact
@captainspaulding5963
@captainspaulding5963 Ай бұрын
​@avrillavignefanclub1927 yep, which is why I included the phrase "things that WERE taught". Gotta look for clues when reading in order to gather the whole story before commenting.
@stackflow343
@stackflow343 Ай бұрын
@@captainspaulding5963 That's the only one he covered in the list that I remember being taught to us in school (80s/90s), the rest were just myths passed along socially or perpetuated in media. Edit: I do remember being told we lose heat through our head, but this was from recess staff warning us to wear beanies before going outside. It wasn't like, part of the class or anything.
@Samicus
@Samicus Ай бұрын
@@captainspaulding5963 oh shut up you sanctimonious muppet
@realname2490
@realname2490 Ай бұрын
That army manual clearly stated a FULLY clothed person loses most heat from head and neck area 😂
@CoughitsKath
@CoughitsKath Ай бұрын
the first time a teacher explained evolution to me she said it wrong!! she implied that traits gained during life will be passed down (like if i lift weights my kids will be swole). years later when properly learning about evolution, we also covered how Darwin and subsequent genetic understanding literally proved those kinds of theories wrong and it made me retrospectively angry at that first teacher
@RoonMian
@RoonMian Ай бұрын
What you're describing is Lamarckian evolution... Did you perhaps go to school in the Soviet Union? There was a whole push of Lamarckian evolution for ideological reasons, people like Alexander Lysenko were involved... So maybe your teacher was a leftover of that?
@CoughitsKath
@CoughitsKath Ай бұрын
@@RoonMian I wish!! it was actually when learning about Lamarck that i had that "flashback" and was like... wtf.?? but no, neither the teacher nor i were from the ussr or the early 1800s. she just felt the need to explain evolution to her class of children but clearly had no idea what she was talking about and we were like 8 so no one could call her on it 😂 it wasn't even a science class
@RoonMian
@RoonMian Ай бұрын
@@CoughitsKath Very weird.
@RavenMobile
@RavenMobile 21 күн бұрын
I am self-taught and I always hated how school taught that there were 5 senses. I already knew from personal experience over a dozen, so I was like "wtf are they talking about?". It's ridiculous. Just as a few examples: sense of direction (whether you're tilted/up/down etc.), feeling static electricity fields around you, feeling heat (it's not touch), feeling changes in air pressure (related to touch, but it's not touch), sensing when someone is watching you (has been scientifically demonstrated, but not explained how it happens), feeling the movement of a gyroscope, etc.
@faarsight
@faarsight Ай бұрын
The "lose body heat from you head" one is incredibly popular in Sweden. The number I had always heard was more like 10-20% though which seems pretty much correct.
@bythelee
@bythelee Ай бұрын
That's the number I knew too, from education in Southern Africa where it's not that cold. Seems like this "80%" myth is indeed geographical (Anglo-American, perhaps?)
@user-zn2pt6pu8d
@user-zn2pt6pu8d Ай бұрын
You will have fun telling wine snobs about the tongue, they actually shape wine glasses so when drank it targets parts of the tongue based on the flavor profile of the wine. LOL
@SirSpenace
@SirSpenace Ай бұрын
I got a good one. We're taught that biological sex is a strict dichotomy with very few examples of folks who break it. In reality, it's a pretty loose bimodal distribution and it's extremely common for folks to display primary or secondary sex traits of the "opposite gender". Gynecomastia in men is wayyy more common than most cis men want to believe, so is facial/belly hair on cis women.
@tinymutantsquid
@tinymutantsquid Ай бұрын
Primary or secondary sex traits don't determine sex. No matter how many atypical sex traits are expressed, actual sex remains unaffected. It's all about gametes. You either make the big ones or the small ones. And yes, females have hair on their bodies as they are in fact mammals. Although they typically don't have as much as males, it doesn't mean they aren't female. Total misogyny. Turns out you didn't have a good one.
@SirSpenace
@SirSpenace Ай бұрын
@@tinymutantsquid 😂 Nothing you said argues against my statement, genius lmfao And you're wrong about sex determination. Gametes don't determine sex either, it's possible for a body to produce both or neither. Chromosomes also don't determine sex, as there are people with XY's who have given birth and males have been born without a Y.
@SirSpenace
@SirSpenace Ай бұрын
@@tinymutantsquid Sex is determined by the individual, not by a grab bag of traits and/or genetic expression.
@tinymutantsquid
@tinymutantsquid Ай бұрын
@@SirSpenace Cool emoji. No need to argue against points I didn't make, it's super boring. Chromosomes don't matter. Humans only produce 1 set of functional gametes. An individual’s sex is defined by the type of gamete their primary reproductive organs are organized to produce. Pointing out super rare intersex conditions are not only exceptions proving the rule, in those cases one set doesn't function, leading us back to my simple and straight forward assertion. As far as your grab bag comment, I agree, that's what I said, although I have no idea why you decided to argue against your first position. I guess you're confused, hence emoji instead of substance. Which makes your 'sex is determined by individual' comment make sense... you think you can just believe hard enough, and with enough emojis, you can change reality.
@SirSpenace
@SirSpenace Ай бұрын
@@tinymutantsquid @tinymutantsquid Ohhhh there it is. The transphobia. You "there are only 2 sexes, cope" types always circle back to it. Congratulations on taking the most words I've ever seen to do it, I'm sure it makes you very proud of yourself 🤩 Here's a trophy🏆 I'm not arguing against myself. And using an emoji doesn't discount anything I've said, the fact that you're resorting to such a logical fallacy is very telling 😂This is the internet, if you can't handle emojis maybe you should stick to books. My comment about chromosomes was only because your gamete hypothesis is a hair's breadth away from "XX=Female//XY=Male" stereotype. And it's cute that you like to pretend that variations in things such as gamete production and chromosome expression don't come attached to very real humans, but they do. You can't poopoo away their experiences and feelings just because you want to be an absolutist about sex determination. There are quite literally millions of examples alive today, it doesn't matter how rare or exceptional it is. Those are still people who deserve to reserve the right to determine their own sex. Unless of course you're advocating for "corrective" surgery on infants. Which, by the sounds of your disgust towards the sexual deviance, would seem to be a logical assumption.
@Ozie1981
@Ozie1981 Ай бұрын
“It’s easier to fool a man than to convince him that he’s been fooled”. -Mark Twain
@corner_store_bill
@corner_store_bill Ай бұрын
<a href="#" class="seekto" data-time="198">3:18</a> why the hell are they draining horseshoe crabs!!??
@broccanmacronain457
@broccanmacronain457 Ай бұрын
medical research
@unknown5150variable
@unknown5150variable Ай бұрын
I googled it: "Its blue blood is harvested for medical researchers and used by drug and medical device makers to test for dangerous impurities in vaccines, prosthetics and intravenous drugs. The crabs are used by fishing crews as bait to catch eels and sea snails."
@castleanthrax1833
@castleanthrax1833 Ай бұрын
Mr Spock required a transfusion.
@rickt10
@rickt10 Ай бұрын
They have copper (blue) blood.
@Benson_aka_devils_advocate_88
@Benson_aka_devils_advocate_88 Ай бұрын
The blood is used to test IV medications for bacteria. I know there's a Today I Found Out video on that one that goes into detail about how it is used.
@Flatrocker512
@Flatrocker512 Ай бұрын
-Elementary school: we’re preparing you for middle school. Middle school: we’re preparing you for high school. High school: we’re preparing you for college. College: everything you know is wrong.
@bradleyfitzik2447
@bradleyfitzik2447 Ай бұрын
What about the actual size of Greenland and Antarctica. Flat maps make both look gigantic when they're not nearly that big
@benozer3406
@benozer3406 Ай бұрын
some flat maps do that because they have to warp something in order to get a round surface to be flat. they make the land masses closer to the poles bigger. but there's also a version that just makes everything looks super long.
@avrillavignefanclub1927
@avrillavignefanclub1927 Ай бұрын
it is just impossible to present a globe on a flat regtagle map without streching some places, it causes incorrect size of continents
@danicorvin
@danicorvin Ай бұрын
Teach told us about map distortion first time she showed the world map
@bradleyfitzik2447
@bradleyfitzik2447 Ай бұрын
@@danicorvin good I'm happy to hear that. Because when I was in primary school they did not explain that. At least it sounds like it's getting better then 🤷
@Hytheter
@Hytheter Ай бұрын
@@avrillavignefanclub1927 It is possible to make a map that doesn't have incorrect sizes. It will just have incorrect shapes instead.
@Treking
@Treking 19 күн бұрын
The Bohr model of the atom was known to be incorrect since at least 1913. Max Plank had the basis of Quantum mechanics published back in Dec 1900, and it was mostly fleshed out by Dirac, Heisenberg and Schrödinger by 1930. Yet here we are over 90 years later, and they still teach the Bohr model in high school physics and chemistry, with no word of it being a simplification.
@StevenMatthewsTFI
@StevenMatthewsTFI Ай бұрын
Either you're republishing videos, or you're recycling facts from different videos. Either way, I'm not a fan of that. I distinctly remember you talking about the five senses factoid before.
@Sammael251
@Sammael251 Ай бұрын
I think the last time he brought that up was in a Today I Found Out video, so I think it's a case of different writers from different channels overlapping.
@van_trippin5260
@van_trippin5260 Ай бұрын
@@Sammael251 Thank you, thought i'd seen this recently. You'd think Simon would remember!
@captainspaulding5963
@captainspaulding5963 Ай бұрын
​@van_trippin5260 he's explained MULTIPLE times that he retains next to no knowledge from the scripts he's reading. You shouldn't expect him to remember anything
@StevenMatthewsTFI
@StevenMatthewsTFI Ай бұрын
@@captainspaulding5963 then he can EXPECT me to click off a video if he repeats himself.
@StevenMatthewsTFI
@StevenMatthewsTFI Ай бұрын
@@Sammael251 I don't think so. I'm fairly certain I saw the thing about the carrots and the blue blood too.
@amberm9853
@amberm9853 Ай бұрын
I was taught the first one in middle school. My teacher also said that arterial blood was red because it had more oxygen, but other veins were blue. I've had so many people tell me that there's no way a teacher taught me that and that I'm clearly remembering wrong. I'm super glad to see that I wasn't the only one who was taught this.
@iRunKids
@iRunKids Ай бұрын
Chemistry: Nah that Bohr model was all BS, actually, the orbital theory was all BS, actually, atoms have an infinite size but only probabilistically exist in this tiny area… why couldn’t we just skip all the BS, it’s not like anyone understands that either
@nemanjapetrovic4566
@nemanjapetrovic4566 Ай бұрын
The 5 senses myth has been touched on in like 4 videos by Simon already..
@Edyime
@Edyime Ай бұрын
all of these have been mentioned already
@simonmeadows7961
@simonmeadows7961 Ай бұрын
Slight slop of tingue at <a href="#" class="seekto" data-time="219">3:39</a> . It's not that the blue wavelengths are absorbed. It's the fact that they are reflected that gives the appearance of something being blue.
@craigfurlong7981
@craigfurlong7981 Ай бұрын
kerricting peeples speach shul b dun korectli.... " slight slip of the TINGUE?"
@captainspaulding5963
@captainspaulding5963 Ай бұрын
Also misspelled "slip"
@castleanthrax1833
@castleanthrax1833 Ай бұрын
​@@craigfurlong7981Correcting an incorrect fact differs from making written errors.
@captainspaulding5963
@captainspaulding5963 Ай бұрын
​@castleanthrax1833 still, if you are going to be pedantic, you should make sure you are correct, in all aspects of your response.
@castleanthrax1833
@castleanthrax1833 Ай бұрын
@@captainspaulding5963 Getting facts correct is not an example of pedantry... especially when the video itself is about getting facts correct.
@Dark-Helmet
@Dark-Helmet Ай бұрын
For the heat loss one I think it mostly comes from misinterpretations. I was taught in school (though I don’t have scientific data to back this) that when wearing appropriate winter gear, 80% of the remaining heat loss was through your head. Keep in mind a lot of that heat loss comes from the air expelled from your lungs. What percent goes out of the top of your head, where a hat could help, would obviously be less and dependent on factors like having hair.
@not_that_person
@not_that_person Ай бұрын
I think in your explanation of why veins appear blue, you used the wrong word. You said blue wavelengths are more easily absorbed by the skin and blood, but I think you meant transmitted and reflected, because if it was more easily absorbed it would disappear.
@timleber2257
@timleber2257 Ай бұрын
As a Scout leader I actively promoted the 80% of your body heat loss through your head myth, knowing it was a myth. The reason was because I didn't have to get them to put on a coat or gloves, but hats were always a sticking point. Using this little white lie I could get them to put on a hat and greatly reduce the amount of whining I heard about kids being cold.
@petergunn551
@petergunn551 Ай бұрын
you forgot an important one... "solids are incompressible" how then is a sphere of solid plutonium compressed in a nuke??? i actually know the answer to this question, but let's see if you can find it... (hint, it's in documentaries online).
@Robbyrool
@Robbyrool Ай бұрын
What was said about red and blue light is wrong and makes no sense. Red light with longer wavelengths penetrates deeper than blue. If something absorbs a color then it does not reflect it as much. So if skin or veins or blood absorb blue then they would not appear blue. They must reflect blue to appear blue.
@RobCooper-Bachatador
@RobCooper-Bachatador 17 күн бұрын
The one that gets to me is that despite Gravity no longer considered a force that it is taught that way via Newtonian Physics without enough understanding of Einsteinian physics. They could at least highlight the basic concepts of Einstein's theories without getting into the complexities of it and informing the students that most calculations only require Newtonian. Note: A lack of emphasis on the more basic concepts of Einsteinian physics also produces other similar issues, like being taught heliocentrism uncritically.
@ytmndan
@ytmndan Ай бұрын
The survival manual doesn't say anything about 40-45%, but it does say, "When fully clothed, a MAJORITY" of heat is lost through the head and neck. Well, when fully clothed, the only other exposed skin is your hands,, so that makes perfect sense.
@ianstopher9111
@ianstopher9111 Ай бұрын
"...so instead are taught an oversimplified lie..."..."atoms are the smallest thing in the universe" proceeds to show a picture of an atom with a humongously large nucleus compared to the electron orbitals.
@satevo462
@satevo462 22 күн бұрын
In the 80's I was taught in school that the Blue Whale was extinct.
@anyawillowfan
@anyawillowfan Ай бұрын
The carrot eyesight myth can at least partially be blamed on WW2 as the UK government pushed the idea that carrots could improve eyesight (a necessity for pilots and blackouts) to encourage civilians to 'do their duty' and eat homegrown vegetables.
@Kaede-Sasaki
@Kaede-Sasaki Ай бұрын
Going out in winter "with just a hat and buck naked. This doesn't make a 😏TINY bit of sense. " Package may shrink in cold weather.😏
@Kaede-Sasaki
@Kaede-Sasaki Ай бұрын
...
@Kaede-Sasaki
@Kaede-Sasaki Ай бұрын
Error 404
@whopito422
@whopito422 Ай бұрын
My high school chemistry teacher taught us this. Is your water green on the outside hose before it leaves the tap? Same thing as blood
@SeverityOne
@SeverityOne 9 күн бұрын
Another myth that they teach you in school is that gravity exists. They'll even give you a constant (9.81 m/s²) and a formula for it. But it's not real. What really happens is that a large mass bends spacetime. So if you're travelling in a spacecraft in a straight at constant speed, and you come near a large celestial body, it doesn't pull you in. Instead, what is does is bend spacetime, so that you're still travelling in a straight line, but spacetime is no longer straight.
@nobetternickname
@nobetternickname Ай бұрын
OK... but the bigger question is... does Simon Whistler lose 80% of his body heat through his head? 🥚🥚🥚🥚🥚 it's OK, I am also bald
@ReboyGTR
@ReboyGTR 17 күн бұрын
*But i was told to "trust the science". And i was also told Anthony Fauci is a synonym for science.*
@RavenMacGowan
@RavenMacGowan 4 күн бұрын
Actually, the conversion of beta-carotene into Vitamin A is extremely poor in humans, and many can not convert it at all. This is why people who eat a lot of carrots turn orange. Retinol from meat is actually converted by humans into bioavailable Vitamin A.
@PeerAdder
@PeerAdder Ай бұрын
Again, no-one teaches that humans have ONLY five senses.
@pmgn8444
@pmgn8444 Ай бұрын
Having a head of cold wet hair isn't really an issue for our boy Simon.
@tronconesgym
@tronconesgym Ай бұрын
An optical-filtering effect is not concretely just an illusion. A sunset appearing red due to filtering of shorter/blue wavelengths serves as an example of the same physics at work. In each case, the wavelengths arriving to the eye are not incorrectly perceived or interpreted.
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