#1

The maintenance requires vitamin C.
If you become deficient, the scar tissue will dissolve.
Don't get scurvy.
#2

EDIT: As a bonus legal fact, in Longyearbyen, Norway, you are required by law to own a large-caliber rifle to defend yourself against polar bears.
#3
According to Scientific American, human beings’ desire to learn new things is partly a preference for novelty. “We tend to seek out new information and experiences, and that adds to what we know. We also like to reduce uncertainty. Information can bring food, safety, relationships, and other physical rewards.”
In a nutshell, curiosity, though dangerous at times, encourages exploration, promotes survival, and allows us to build more accurate models of the world we live in.
However, beyond that, we don’t just enjoy learning for the immediate payoff. We are, fundamentally, curious about the world. We have an innate urge to learn.
#4
I look at the empathy and social responsibility displayed everywhere and don't feel particularly optimistic about malaria not becoming endemic again within my lifetime in the USA.
#5

Ubeube_Purple21:
It's the fact they are almost indestructible that makes them scary.
WakingOwl1:
We had a patient with CJD in our nursing home once. It was incredibly sad. Definitely not a way I’d want to go.
kitarchive:
To make prions even scarier: standard hospital autoclave sterilization (the high-pressure steam used to clean surgical tools) does not reliably destroy them. If a patient with an undiagnosed prion disease (like CJD) undergoes brain surgery, those exact same surgical instruments can potentially transmit the misfolded proteins to subsequent patients, even after being 'sterilized' by normal medical standards.
#6
People blame poor people for having bad health because they eat bad or make bad decisions but really it's all because of how unequal society is.
Human beings are especially driven to learn more about the things that we already know a little bit about.
“You can think of curiosity as the process that guides the acquisition of knowledge,” said neuroscientist Celeste Kidd, from the University of California, Berkeley.
“If you feel positive after learning something, then you now understand the joy of learning, which motivates you to learn next time,” adds educational psychologist Kou Murayama, from the University of Tübingen, in Germany.
Meanwhile, Pierre-Yves Oudeyer, from the French research institute Inria, in Bordeaux, emphasized that people ought to “focus on learning activities that are neither too easy nor too difficult, the ones where you have maximum improvement in speed, which will progressively get you to more and more complicated and yet learnable activities.”
That way, there is a positive feedback loop between curiosity and learning.
#7
In a media environment designed to capture and direct attention to create engagement, the skill of focusing relies heavily on latent cognitive activity. The long term consequences is a stunted ability to control attention.
Modern advertising isn’t about selling a product but creating engagement. Everytime someone states something wrong or controversial, the engagement between the multiple parties is ultimately the product they’re selling.
This means the cognitive dissonant, the controversial, and the belligerently ignorant are the perfect attributes for a profitable media “star”.
So profitable, outright lying can generate enough engagement for profiteers.
#8

#9

For me it's the scariest because I was told my condition makes it higher chance.
SereniaKat:
It can even happen to otherwise healthy children. We had a family friend whose 12yo daughter had a bad headache all day. No fever or anything, so her parents gave her Panadol and put her to bed. She crawled into bed with them a bit later, fell asleep between them, and never woke up.
It's so frightening because there wasn't anything they really could have done differently. A one-off headache doesn't seem like it needs an ER visit.
Which of these science facts genuinely made you feel a bit uncomfortable?
How do you find the time and energy to stay curious about the world, despite being so busy in your day-to-day life?
What are the most interesting, weirdest, or spookiest things that you recently learned about the world? Share your insights in the comments below with all your fellow readers.
#10
You’re not experiencing reality directly as much as you think you are.
#11

#12

#13

This can happen at any time. Your spinal fluid will be leaking out the hole into your body and you won't know. You'll get debilitating headaches from standing or sitting up because your brain isn't floating on enough fluid, but they'll go away if you lie down. It takes forever to diagnose and then most of the time they'll just wait to see if it heals on its own. (They can do a blood patch, which they do after an epidural or a spinal, except they don't know where the hole is so they don't know where to send the patch.)
Any sneeze, anytime. The human body is so broken.
#14

As a result, meds can be more or less effective or with higher negative effects. Some meds could have been flag as infective but could have been great on women's body, etc. (Also not even talking about the effect of hormones and hormonal fluctuations on the results).
From a quick Google search for example, I've found that a recent study from last year noticed that beta blockers prescribed after heart attacks aren't effective on women.
#15
Yellowstone last erupted about 640,000 years ago. Given that supervolcanoes like this blow every 600,000 years or so, there's no telling how close we are for the next one.
This was from A Short History of Nearly Everything by Bill Bryson.
#16
#17

#18
It's hard to get an accurate number due to the random nature, but they have an estimate: in the Milky Way alone, rogue planets outnumber the stars 7 to 1.
What's even more wild, rogue planets weren't discovered until the year 2000. (Or late 1999) Not only are they hard to track and study, we've only been recording data about them for a little over 25 years.
#19
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