Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

People Explain Which Things Make Them Think 'Who The F*ck Figured This Out?'

Record player needle
Ingo Ellerbusch/Unsplash

Reddit user jayytrip asked: 'What’s something that just makes you go “who the f'k figured this out”?'

As a society, we've come to accept things as they are without really questioning them.

But if you stop and think about it as these Redditors have, how things came to be can be a sobering discovery that will challenge your way of thinking.


To give reverence to historic trailblazers, Redditor jayytrip asked:

"What’s something that just makes you go 'who the f'k figured this out'?"

First, it starts with an idea. What follows is a lot of crazy paths that can go in unexpected directions.

Eye-Raising Origins

"Protamine sulfate is a drug used to reverse the effects of anticoagulants that are sometimes used during surgery. It was originally derived from salmon sperm." – LookWhatDannyMade

Weaving Ideas

"I saw a video of the process of making silk, and it's completely insane to me that humans somehow came up with a long list of really obscure steps to make fabric." – BallisticThundr

Preserving Sounds

"Record players. Turning microsqiggles on vinyl into perfect reproductions of people's voices and instruments? Like wtf is that witchcraft." – Gigged

Sew Impressive

"How the mechanichs under the needle on a sewing machine works to juggle the thread. That thing is just genius."

"The guy who figured out how to use addition in binary to let digital computers do subtraction." – The_Pastmaster

Frozen Images

"Cameras. How is it possible that some device is able to somehow capture the exact image it is pointed at with one click." – Upstairs-Cow2948

"I've been getting into analogue film photography and the chemistry that goes into making the films is insane. Genuinely how the f'k did they figure out which chemicals mixed in what combinations and temperatures would create the right colours."

"It's no wonder even at its peak only a handful of companies worldwide could mass produce colour films." – Elgin-Franklin

The process of ingesting things took a lot of trial and error, with a lot of error.

Wake Up Call

"There’s an Ethiopian legend that says a goat herder named Kaldi noticed his goats would become very energetic after eating the berries and that’s how humans first discovered coffee." – No_Excitement4272

"My guess is that someone was really hungry after a forest fire, found the “roasted” coffee beans, ate them, got a buzz and kind of liked the flavor, and the world has been more productive ever since." – CaptWoodrowCall

Finding Altered States

"I know the answer, but Cataloguing mushrooms. "This one killed fred, this one makes you see god for three days, and this one tastes kinda like chicken."

"The answer was a LOT of people." – Worried_Place_917

What To Eat

"Which plants and animals were edible, especially ones that are very poisonous if you aren't careful. For example, how many tries did it take to figure out that ripe ackee fruit pods are safe to eat, but that the seeds and skin are always poisonous, as are unripe ackee fruit pods? How many tries did it take to figure out how to safely eat pufferfish?" – Short-Condition-8878

Something Rotten

"Fermentation. So this vegetable rotted for a long time...smells awful, I wonder how it tastes?" – HeadFit2660

"The first person to eat a durian.... The hell you see a fruit covered in spikes, that is hard as a rock to open, that smells like a rotting corpse and you say to yourself: 'mmmmmmmmm I wonder if it can be eaten?'" – MewLalouve

These established forms of existence remain baffling concepts.

Written In The Stars

"Anything to do with astronomy. Mass of planets, distances of stars, locations of black holes. A lot of impressive brain power and technology went into all of this I'm sure." – D-Rez

The Brain Code

"Computing in general. Like the idea of converting physical stimuli into code is mind blowing to me. Like actually building a machine that is able to interpret impulses, motion, light, etc. and turn it into a language that can interpret and execute tasks is really quite amazing." – BrimfulOfLa-A

"Same. I can wrap my head around coding in an established language, and I can wrap my head about Yes and No functions doing simple operations."

"But I’ll need to read a book or five to ever understand how tons and tons of Yes/No commands can establish programming languages that eventually let me post this thought to the internet. It blows my mind." – 12345_PIZZA

Invisible Connection

"How wireless works, and radios work. I have a solid understanding of wireless, security, networking, and everything that goes with it as an IT person for the last 25 years. The fact that my computer, or cell phone can talk without any wires attached is magic. I’ve read about it, tried to understand, but how did someone figure this out??" – hooch21

Internal Investigating

"MRIs. As a med student i was (briefly) taught how these things work, and oh. my. god. how the hell did anyone think about this." – xVolt_

"As an MRI tech it’s really pretty amazing. All you’re doing is exciting water molecules in your body’s tissues with a big magnet making them point the same way, and then when you turn the magnet off, how long it takes each molecule and the chemical releases as each molecule goes back to normal determines what kind of tissue it is."

"The computer reads this and displays the appropriate tissue on your screen depending on the minuscule differences in what it detects. And no radiation!" – TriscuitCracker

Eye See You

"Contact lenses. It seems space age to me that there are these tiny flexible lenses I attach directly to my eyeballs every day to correct my vision. How the hell? Yes I know I can Google it." – AggravatingCupcake0

Fathers Of Math

"I'm an applied mathematican with a PhD from a top tier school. Holy f'k, I cannot even begin to imagine how these dudes 300 years ago cooked up math theory/tools that are commonly used now in applications that these people could never imagine. So far ahead of their time."

"Things like Fourier Series, Galois Theory, etc. Like read about Evariste Galois (super interesting). Created, as a teenager, this profound theory. Then died in a duel because he was also a trouble maker. So yeah, abnormal brains making breakthroughs that are light years ahead of peers." – chickcockgo

We may never know the thought process behind the genesis of the things we benefit from today.

But it will always remain a fascinating mystery how inquisitive people came to find their respective discoveries that forever changed the course of history.

More from Trending

Pedro Pascal; JK Rowling
Toya Sarno Jordan/Getty Images for Disney; Dave J Hogan/Getty Images

Pedro Pascal Opens Up About Why He Called Transphobe JK Rowling A 'Heinous Loser'

Actor Pedro Pascal recently explained why he said Harry Potter author and anti-trans activist JK Rowling behaves like a "heinous loser," and suffice it to say he has absolutely no regrets.

The comment came in reference to Rowling gloating over the U.K. Supreme Court's recent decision to define what exactly constitutes a "woman" in the eyes of U.K. law, a decision that subjects trans people to violence, among other problems.

Keep ReadingShow less
JD Vance
Johannes Simon/Getty Images

Vance Dragged After Making Cringey Middle Finger Joke About 'Pink-Haired People' At GOP Dinner

Vice President JD Vance was criticized profusely after he attempted to make a joke mocking liberals during his appearance at the Ohio Republican Party dinner this week—only to have people calling out his lack of class for holding up his middle finger as he delivered the punchline.

Vance was in the middle of giving the event's keynote speech when he said the following:

Keep ReadingShow less
Donald Trump
Beata Zawrzel/NurPhoto via Getty Images

Trump Ripped After Posting Disturbing Parody Music Video About His Attack On Iran

President Donald Trump is facing harsh criticism after he shared a music video featuring the 1980 song "Bomb Iran"—a parody of The Regents song "Barbara Ann" that is best known for being covered by the Beach Boys—amid a ceasefire between Israel and Iran that could further inflame tensions in the Middle East.

The controversial parody song by Vince Vance & the Valiants plays over footage of B-2 stealth bombers, the same aircraft used to drop 14 GBU-57 bunker-buster bombs on Iranian nuclear facilities, including the Fordow enrichment plant, Natanz complex, and Isfahan site.

Keep ReadingShow less
Donald Trump; Zohran Mamdani
Omar Havana/Getty Images; Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images

Trump Just Tried To Slam Zohran Mamdani's Looks And Voice—And It Was Projection At Its Finest

President Donald Trump lashed out at Zohran Mamdani after the 33-year-old democratic socialist handily defeated former New York Governor Andrew Cuomo in New York City's Democratic mayoral primary on Tuesday—only to be called out for projecting his own feelings of inadequacy onto the star candidate.

Mamdani ran a campaign centered around economic populism, arguing that the city, a global financial center, has grown unaffordable for everyday residents, citing soaring rents and grocery prices, and outlining policies aimed at reducing the cost of living.

Keep ReadingShow less
salad
Anna Pelzer on Unsplash

Doctors Explain Which Seemingly 'Healthy' Foods Aren't All That Good For Us

Every day it seems like some new health fad pops up.

Eat this, don't eat that.

Keep ReadingShow less