Knowledge is something that can always be improved. At the same time, it's also a thing that no matter how much effort you put in, you'll have some blind spots because it's impossible to know absolutely everything, isn't it? There are things that we are doomed to never learn about. But today's list isn't about them. Instead, it's about the things many people don't know but can learn about. And when is a better time to start than now?
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If you want to stop and have a chat, you won't die if you move out of the walkway.
A burial plot is called a graveyard if it's part of a church lot. It's called a cemetery if separate.
What a grave thing that people get wrong. But, pray tell, since I'm dying to know, are those definitions are set in stone, or if they are just a rough plot of an idea? I might have to do some digging into the topic myself though. You can't trust everything you see on the Internet, keep that in your memory (I'm sorry, but I'm an amateur dad joker).
Probably many of us have heard the saying that “knowledge is power” at least once in our lifetime. This phrase comes from the Latin aphorism "scientia potentia est" (the words can be placed slightly differently, but it doesn’t change the meaning). Commonly, it’s attributed to Sir Francis Bacon, former Lord High Chancellor of Great Britain, as the expression "ipsa scientia potestas est" ('knowledge itself is power') occurred in his book “Meditationes Sacrae” (1597).
As you can see, Francis Bacon didn’t use the exact aphorism that’s assigned to the “knowledge is power” saying. The first time this exact Latin phrase was written was in the 1668 version of “Leviathan” by Thomas Hobbes, an ex-secretary to F. Bacon.
The only difference between chemistry and biology is life. If it's alive, it's biology, if it's not its chemistry.
Scuba is an acronym, standing for self contained underwater breathing apparatus.
I swear I learnt this from a TV show...I want to say Boy Meets World but I may be wrong, something of that era!
A company called Warner Chappell Music collected licensing fees for use of the song “Happy Birthday to You” all the way until 2015. That’s why characters in movies often sing other songs like “For He’s a Jolly Good Fellow” and restaurant chains often have their own birthday songs they sing to customers.
I knew the song was still under copyright. Is it still, or did it go public domain in 2015?
Yet, even though knowledge is power, everyone carries different levels of it. And this leads to the phenomenon of the “curse of knowledge” or “the curse of expertise.” It’s a cognitive bias where people incorrectly assume that everyone knows as much as they do on a certain topic. This makes it hard for them to imagine what it’s like to not have that knowledge.
One of the most interesting experiments done about this curse, which also quite easily explains the phenomenon, was conducted in 1990 by a Stanford University psychology graduate student Elizabeth Newton. She created a game, where people were assigned roles of “tapper” and “listener.” Tappers had to tap out the rhythm of a well-known song on a table, while the listeners had to guess the song.
Out of 120 songs tapped out during the experiment, only 3 were guessed correctly. Yes, only 3! Apparently, when a tapper taps, they hear the tune in their mind along with the taps, while the listener only hears the uncoordinated tapping sounds. And due to the curse, the tappers couldn’t see why it was so hard for listeners to understand the tune.
Irukandji jellyfish grow only to about 1 cubic cm in size, but have an incredibly painful sting. One symptom of the sting is a strong impending sense of doom. Victims have begged their doctor to be killed as they were certain they would die anyways.
Mammals pee an average of 22 seconds, no matter if mouse or elephant.
My wife pees for about 2 seconds (I'm not even joking, she pisses so hard that I worry she's gonna chip the porcelain), I pee for about 2 minutes. I think both of us are upsetting the average.
This works with any other type of knowledge. Knowing some piece of information makes it hard to understand how others don’t know it, hence the curse in the phenomenon’s name.
And it’s not the only thing that's so cursed about it. In fact, this phenomenon creates quite a few problems between people:
- Makes some teachers have difficulty understanding how their students can’t comprehend a topic;
- Makes it difficult to communicate;
- Makes it hard to understand or justify your own past behavior;
- Makes it hard to predict or understand the behavior of others.
So, be aware that as you learn new things from this list, you might fall for the curse of knowledge. After all, as the question that prompted this thread suggests, the majority of people don’t know these facts, so don’t forget that!
Also, maybe you know any other facts that not many others know that weren't mentioned in this list? Share it with us in the comments! And don't forget to upvote the most interesting facts you learned from this list!
Squirrels run faster up trees than on flat surfaces.
It's probably more difficult for anyone to run up a flat surface.
Font describes the variation in style in which something is written: size, italic, bold, all caps etc.
Typeface is the variation in the style of letters (Arial, Times New Roman, Comic Sans) that most people refer to as fonts.
Most the people involved in the Hindenburg disaster lived.
the last survivor of this disaster died 08 nov 2019, Werner Gustav Doehner. hr was 8 years old when he was on her.
The Amazon River is over 4,000 miles long and doesn't have any bridges that cross it.
Technically, False. But also true. The Amazon river proper does not have any bridges. However, there are many small bridges crossing the distributaries, which are still part of the same river (as they leave and re-join the river). I know this for a fact because I have crossed them, just outside of Iquitos, Peru.
SONAR stands for SOund NAvigation and Ranging.
Yes. also RADAR means RAdio Detection And Ranging. LASER stands for Light Amplification by Stimulated Emission of Radiation
The amount of [crimes] that happens on cruise ships. Most of them unresolved too.
An 18 inch pizza is more than two 12 inch pizzas.
And to do the math, the surface area of a circle is pi x r squared.
Pi is the constant. 18 in pizza has a 9 in radius, or r. 12 inch has
6. 9 squared is 81, 6 squared is 36. 36 x 2 is 72. 81 is greater than 72.
Kysman95 said:
When you get killed by army ants it's not the poison or biting that kills you. >!But the invasion of lungs!<.
IHateThisDamnWebsite explained:
Ants crawl down your mouth and you suffocate as they get to your lungs.
If your nerve is broken in the wrong way, the nerve will send a pain signal to the brain and it won't stop.
My best friend's daughter has extreme nerve damage in her stomach area, and is literally in constant pain. She's outlived doctor estimates from sheer cussedness.
Same with my cousin--she was trampled by her horse and the doctors told her she probably wouldn't walk again, especially with all the nerve damage. I think she forced herself to walk again out of pure spite.
Load More Replies...I've got cauda equina. I've a lot of nerve damage. I'm numb from my buttock to my toes on one leg and I'm numb in my undercarriage. The pain is constant and my nerve damage is permanent. I can't remember what it's like to not feel pain and this only happened to me last November. I love coming on here to read the funny sarcastic and interesting comments. Takes my mind away for a little while
And if it's broken in the RIGHT way... ??? A textbook case of "factoid removed from all relevant context." And "break"? Do you mean "sever", or "rupture", or.."stretch beyond capability" or...
Yeah, clarification is needed. It's called complex regional pain syndrome. Horrible pain. For me, it happened during surgery.
Load More Replies...Yes, I have that and trigeminal neuralgia. Extremely painful shocks in the face.
Load More Replies...I seem to recall another BP article that said it was the lack of signal that caused the pain. I'm a bit fuzzy on it but the gist as I recall is that your brain is used to receiving a constant signal from any given nerve and having that signal disconnected is perceived as pain. It seems counter intuitive to me so the answer is probably deeper than that. It was part of an article about why people with amputations feel 'pain' in their hand / foot / whatever that is no longer part of their body.
Basically, pain is strange (heck there’s even a book about pain called that). Chronic pain is classed as nociceptive pain - there is no structural damage to nerves or tissue/bone, but the CNS has become sensitised and so produces pain before there is any need to protect by pain.
Load More Replies...If a broken bone is misaligned when first treated, it may need to be broken the right way to reset it. You could call that a Medical Mulligan... or not, depending on who's in the room.
Load More Replies...Compressed nerves can also make you itch, and there won't be a rash or hives, so it's sheer insanity coping--and trying to get a doctor to listen to begin with.
I had to get stitches on my wrist a few months ago and I still don't have feeling back. I thought it was weird but maybe it's not?
I had surgery on my neck, titanium plates and cadaver disc's from c3 to c7 in 2006 and still have numbness in my neck and shoulder.
Load More Replies...My friend has CRPS and the pain and experiences is excruciating. Look it up, it’s higher on the pain scale than giving unplanned birth or having a finger amputated.
CRPS is fascinating (although not if you have to live with it) because of the physiological changes that take place in the affected area/limb. Hair growth changes and nail growth changes, the limb is a different colour/temperature. There’s been recent research investigating the role of immunoglobulins in causing it (injected into mice who developed symptoms, they’ve also demonstrated that with fibromyalgia too)
Load More Replies...One guy's hand clenched so tight that it caused so much pain that he had his arm amputated - unfortunately, his phantom limb still still hurt the same amount. He got some relief with a mirror set up to convince his mind that his other hand was the missing hand - he would unclinch his real hand convincing his mind that his missing hand was unclinching; this gave him relief for a couple weeks before the pain returned.
It CAN be stopped, but you'd need to see pain management for it. We did nerve blocks and radio frequency ablations to cauterize those nerves when I worked in pain management. Pain relief could last anywhere from weeks to a year or more.
There's a wrong way to break a nerve? What, pray tell, is the right way?
Nerve pain sucks. Read up on trigeminal neuralgia, all the neuralgia sucks actually
I’m being tested for that. Waiting for insurance to approve MRI. Fun stuff. Not.
Load More Replies..."Phantom" pain is different - it refers to pain in an organ or limb that is no longer part of the body. Nerve damage, which can take many forms, is "real" pain (I'm using quotation marks because I don't want to dismiss the genuine pain amputees etc can feel). You may be thinking of the sensitisation pain some people experience after nerve damage or chronic neuropathic pain, where the body gets the pain signals out of proportion and continues to relay extreme pain messages even if the physical damage has healed.
Load More Replies...Centralia PA, Its a ghost town in Pennsylvania. Somehow they managed to set a coal mine on fire and its been burning since 1962. There are still a few people living there apparently but there are noxious fumes venting out of the ground so the government doesn't allow new people to go there.
The difference between a million and a billion, is approximately a billion.
Note that this is a metric billion (1000 million); imperial billions are 842 million (US) or 876 million (UK)
The bow-wow theory of language (aka the onomatopoeic theory), which states that our imitation of natural sounds is the basis of language development.
Everything is made of chemicals and every single one of them will kill you with a sufficient dose.
Your eyes have a separate immune system from the rest of your body. If they get damaged in such a way that it affects anything other than your eyes, your regular immune system can attack the damage and will not recognize them, meaning your own body can permanently blind you.
What's worse, your body cannot tell the difference between either eye. If one of them gets infected or damaged, your immune system can attack your healthy eye and take away your sight entirely.
Sharks predate trees.
bull sharks are the only dangerous species of shark that can acclimate to fresh water. a bull shark was caught in 1995, 930 miles up the mississippi river near st. louis! and in australia, carbrooke golf course has a large water hazard/lake on the 14th hole that has several bull sharks that were swept into the lake from a river that overflowed its banks.
The chances of a good recovery after CPR is abysmal.
CPR is to keep oxygen circulating until you can get actual medical help to restore a rhythm (if they even can). CPR alone isn't going to fix someone. Just keep someone's brain from dying from lack of oxygen.
The only Spanish-speaking country in Africa is Equitorial Guinea. Its capital, Malabo, is on an island slightly northwest of the country’s mainland.
Water doesn't conduct electricity.
Edit cuz I should probably explain; pure water doesn't conduct electricity. Getting water to that level of purity is relatively costly however.
If you get a tooth abscess on the maxillary (top arch) canine to canine. It needs to be taken care of ASAP. The area is called the triangle of death when it comes to abscess or infections.
Source: Dental Hygienist
Also
i honestly thought that mirror was actually a hook that was pulling the teeth up. Yikes
Migatte-no-Blakae said:
A broken clock is right twice a day, but a clock ticking in reverse is correct FOUR times a day.
peckx063 explained:
Start one at midnight going forward and one backward. After six hours they'll both be at 6, after another six hours they'll both be at 12, after another six hours they'll both be at 6,after another six hours they'll both be at 12.
You can collapse your lungs from laughing.
Not quite right. People with certain conditions can suffer a form of attack as a result of laughing (such as an asthmatic having an asthma attack, and narcoleptics falling asleep), and smokers can have a phlegmatic attack which can cause blockages in the lungs and airways. The act of laughing forces air from the lungs (including stale air), which is why a good laughing session always includes a large intake of breath. The collapsing of a lung occurs when air gets trapped between the lung and chest wall, which would not occur when laughing. *Unless there was another force/injury, such as a broken rib, which is rare, but possible.
The human body has no means of sensing "wetness", and thus doesn't know what "wetness" is. It can only sense temperature and pressure. Put on a latex glove and submerge your hand in water, and it will feel wet.
The movie The Fifth Element is the only movie to reach general audiences, in which the protagonist and antagonist are never made aware of one another, let alone meet on screen.
Domestic cats have what's known as a "Non-Fatal Terminal Velocity". Which means that, provided they are of healthy age and weight, you could punt one out of a 747 at cruising altitude and it would hit the earth with no measurable damage.
To temporarily reduce, or remove entirely, the symptoms of tinnitus, cover your ears with your palms as hard as you can, and ensure you middle fingers are touching behind your head, then rapidly tap the entire length of your fingers against the base of your skull.
You may own your phone, as in the piece of hardware in your hand, but you own exactly none of the things it can do. Remember that when texting, taking pics, posting online, or anything else you do.
Your immune system has at least 1 cell to combat every single infection that could ever exist. Your T-cells are cells that, when created, go through a sort of training phase in the thymus where they are allowed to change their genetic code at random, in order to be able to battle 1 random very specific disease. During this, the body also kills any T-cells that are accidentally adapted to kill human cells. Then the T-cells are sent to lymph nodes, to be found later by presenting an antigen (a part of a pathogen) to it. Basically you have something for everything in your body, the problem is just finding it, as it takes a good few days for your body to locate the specific one.
Would have been nice to have some fact-checking before reposting this lot, as most are either total b******t or pretty trivial.
Agreed. Please do your own tradeable and don't just believe this as facts
Load More Replies...Fact checking is a thing. If it isn't a fact didn't post it as one.
'Anyone can write on Bored Panda. Start writing!' That appears pretty obvious when you read this load of garbage. Most of it is inaccurate, at least the parts that were actually finished before posting it.
Fun fact: Humans are capable of natural flight, as long as they strongly disbelieve in the concept of gravity. That disbelief can be achieved under moments of extreme stress but also extreme ignorance and youth. Scientists have almost achieved results by dropping babies off of the Empire State building in a series of tests in the 1950s. Unfortunately due to the ratio of success/failure and the optics of the situation, they did not publish any of their research. Anti-flight authorities are still looking for them to this day. Believe it or not.
Just in case, I have to publicly state that this is complete sarcasm and should not be taken seriously. No babies have been harmed for this joke, but some intelligent people have hurt their eyes by rolling them.
Load More Replies...Wut? Tarantula owners are absolutely paranoid about dropping them because they have a tendency to break open when they hit a hard surface and this is inevitably fatal.
Load More Replies...Holy s**t bp. This wasnt your usually rubbish and often repeated fact.
Oh. They're never happier round here than when they're having a good whine about something or picking holes in it.
Load More Replies...Would have been nice to have some fact-checking before reposting this lot, as most are either total b******t or pretty trivial.
Agreed. Please do your own tradeable and don't just believe this as facts
Load More Replies...Fact checking is a thing. If it isn't a fact didn't post it as one.
'Anyone can write on Bored Panda. Start writing!' That appears pretty obvious when you read this load of garbage. Most of it is inaccurate, at least the parts that were actually finished before posting it.
Fun fact: Humans are capable of natural flight, as long as they strongly disbelieve in the concept of gravity. That disbelief can be achieved under moments of extreme stress but also extreme ignorance and youth. Scientists have almost achieved results by dropping babies off of the Empire State building in a series of tests in the 1950s. Unfortunately due to the ratio of success/failure and the optics of the situation, they did not publish any of their research. Anti-flight authorities are still looking for them to this day. Believe it or not.
Just in case, I have to publicly state that this is complete sarcasm and should not be taken seriously. No babies have been harmed for this joke, but some intelligent people have hurt their eyes by rolling them.
Load More Replies...Wut? Tarantula owners are absolutely paranoid about dropping them because they have a tendency to break open when they hit a hard surface and this is inevitably fatal.
Load More Replies...Holy s**t bp. This wasnt your usually rubbish and often repeated fact.
Oh. They're never happier round here than when they're having a good whine about something or picking holes in it.
Load More Replies...