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The 5 Most Ridiculous Lies You Were Taught In History Class

By S Peter Davis
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High school was hard enough, what with all the video games and boobies to distract us from our homework. What makes it even harder is having to unlearn all of the stuff they taught us in elementary school that turned out to be utter bullshit.

To this day you can even hear some adults repeating these "amazing" historical tales that, years ago, somebody just pulled out of their ass:

#5.
Columbus Discovered the Earth is Round

The story we heard:
In 1492, a Spanish ponce by the name of Christopher Columbus won his long-standing feud with the monarchy and the Catholic church to get funding for a voyage to East Asia. They were afraid that he would fail spectacularly, because everybody knew that the Earth was a flat disc, and the direction Columbus was sailing in would cause him to fall off the edge and into the mouth of the giant turtle that supported it.

Columbus, as we were told, did fail to reach his destination, but not because the world was flat--it was because he crashed into the future greatest nation on Earth, baby! Thus, Columbus proved the world was round, discovered America, and a national holiday was born.

The truth:
In the 1400s, the flat-earth theory was taken about as seriously as the Time Cube theory is today, if not less so. The shape of the world has been pretty much settled since the orb theory was first proposed by the ancient Greek philosopher Pythagoras, around 2,000 years before the existence of Spain.

In fact, the navigational techniques of Columbus' time were actually based on the fact that the Earth was a sphere. Trying to navigate the globe as if it was a flat plane would have fucked up the trip even more than it was.


Artists' representation

The Spanish government's reluctance to pay for Columbus' expeditions didn't have anything to do with their misconceptions about the shape of the world. Ironically, it was because Columbus himself severely underestimated the size of the Earth and everybody knew it. The distance he planned to travel wouldn't have taken him anywhere near Asia. Nevertheless, he eventually scraped together enough funds to embark on his ridiculous adventure, and the clusterfuck that was the Columbus voyage has been celebrated annually in the Americas and in Spain ever since.

So where did the myth come from? It began with author and historical charlatan Washington Irving, who wrote a novel about Columbus in 1838. The novel was fiction, but some elements managed to creep into our history textbooks anyway, probably by some editors who wanted to spice it up a bit. Who's going to read a history book that's just filled with a bunch of boring shit anyway?

#4.
Einstein Flunked Math

The story we heard:
Motivational speakers love to tell this tale, inspiring underachievers with the story of this German kid who was just like you! Despite his sincerest efforts he could never manage to do well in his math exams, and struggled desperately with physics while working as a lowly patent clerk.

That muddled kid grew up to be Albert Fucking Einstein! And if he can do it, then so can you!

The truth:
Well, no you can't. As it turns out, Einstein was a mathematical prodigy, and before he was 12, he was already better at arithmetic and calculus than you are now. Einstein was in fact so fucking smart that he believed school was holding him back, and his parents purchased advanced textbooks for him to study from. Not only did he pass math with flying colors, it's entirely possible that he was actually teaching the class by the end of semester.

The idea that Einstein did badly at school is thought to have originated with a a 1935 Ripley's Believe it or Not! trivia column.


Not the actual column

There's actually a good reason why it's a bad idea to include Robert Ripley among the references in your advanced university thesis. The famous bizarre trivia "expert" never cited his sources, and the various "facts" he presented throughout his career were an amalgamation of things he thought he read somewhere, heard from somebody, or pulled out of his ass. The feature's title probably should have been: Believe it or Not! I Get Paid Either Way, Assholes.

When he was first shown this supposed expose of his early life, Einstein allegedly just laughed, and probably went on to solve another 12 mysteries of quantum physics before dinner. By the time he finally kicked the bucket in 1955, it's entirely possible that "failure" was the one concept that Albert Einstein had never managed to master.

Of course, this just reaffirms what we have always suspected, deep down: success really is decided at birth, and your life will never be better than it is right now. Sorry about that.

#3.
Newton and the Apple

The story we heard:
You've probably heard of Isaac Newton. He's pretty much the Jesus of physics. In the late 17th century, Newton practically fucking invented science. The discoveries we can thank him for include the laws of motion, the visible spectrum, the speed of sound, the law of cooling, and calculus. Yes, all of goddamn calculus. One wonders if anybody in history ever had a thought before Newton.

Probably his most famous discovery, however, is the law of gravity. The story goes that Newton, a modest mathematician and professor of physics, was sitting under the shade of an apple tree one sunny day, when an apple dropped from a branch and bopped him right on the head.

While most people would merely think "Ouch! Son of a bitch!" and stare warily upward for 10 minutes, Newton's first instinct was to formulate the entire set of universal laws governing the motion of gravitating bodies, a theory so sound that it went unchallenged and unmodified for over 200 years.

The truth:
Newton never mentioned the thing with the apple, and in fact it was another guy named John Conduitt who first told the story some 60 years after it supposedly happened. Even then, he was decisively vague about whether Newton actually saw an apple, or whether the apple is a metaphor that he used to illustrate the idea of gravity for people less intelligent than he was (read: everybody):

"Whilst he was musing in a garden it came into his thought that the power of gravity (which brought an apple from the tree to the ground) was not limited to a certain distance from the earth but that this power must extend much further."

You'll notice that even then we don't get the thing with the apple actually hitting Newton in the head, it got added somewhere along the line to add the element of cartoonish slapstick to his genius life.


Future versions will say that Newton then vomited in agony.

We like to think complex discoveries happen this way, with a sudden light bulb popping on over our head. Kind of makes it seem like it could happen to us one day, the next great idea will just occur to us while we're wasting the afternoon on a park bench. In reality, Newton spent the best part of his life formulating and perfecting his theories.

When we have kids, we're going to tell them the truth, dammit. Just Newton, hunched over his piles of papers covered with clouds of tiny numbers. Just months and years of tedious, grinding, silent, lonely work, until he had a nervous breakdown and finally died years later, insane from Mercury poisoning. Welcome to the real world, Timmy.


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195 Comments

I heard somewhere that Benjamin Franklin pleasured 6 women at once, it was a record at the time. That's how he became famous.

Posted on 5/11/2008 4:18:38 PM

First of all, Indians lived in America before Columbus 'discovered' it, and secondly, the viking Leif Eriksson went to New Foundland around 1000 AD which has been proved by carbon dating human remains

Posted on 5/10/2008 2:58:33 PM

ehh.....

Posted on 5/7/2008 6:22:58 AM

wow that timecube site has the most moronic blabbering I have ever read. What a royal fuckwit. $50 says he wears a foil helmet

Posted on 4/29/2008 9:33:39 PM

Interesting factoid: Besides being a liar, Washington was also somewhat of a prick. He used force people to serve in the army despite their not having food or clothes or woman to fuck (most historians assume that they ate the woman).

Posted on 4/16/2008 5:22:56 AM

the one about Franklin was proved to be wrong on mythbusters

Posted on 4/14/2008 10:39:02 AM

Also: The "six women at once" isn't that far off. There's some great portraits of Ben ruthlessly cavorting with French women easily a quarter of his age. Multiple. At the same time. (The article you linked, of course, being just a tiny fraction of his likely conquests). It was actually part of his diplomacy. Diplomacy through fucking.

Posted on 4/12/2008 1:42:22 AM

Great article. Just a few comments. Newton only ARGUABLY invented calculus. There was a well-known row between him and Leibniz on the topic. In any respect, like a lot of sciences, they were sort of finishing off things people had begun thinking about earlier. Descartes, for example, spends a lot of time talking about how tennis balls work, an early precursor of some of Newton's material. These scientific discoveries don't arise out of a vacuum, as you note. (I still love how in the 17th-19th centuries you could have books with 30 word titles that spend at least ten pages after coining "Cogito ergo sum" talking about fucking tennis.) There's a lot of evidence to support the notion that Einstein was dyscalculic. It took him a bit of time to really get accepted in the scientific world, and to get into its groove. A lot of the concepts he advanced, he did so not least by means of clever metaphors: People on a train, moving away from a clock at light speed, etc. etc. There was a certain spiritual or metaphorical light to his work. Also, the guy was the archetypal Nutty Professor. He really was sort of useless aside from, well, being a paragon of scientific genius, having a part in the early thought process of the Manhattan Project, and advancing pacifism and idealistic Zionism. Okay, so not useless, but I can do something he couldn't: Wear socks that are the same color, and in fact wear two socks. Take THAT, Al!

Posted on 4/12/2008 1:37:48 AM

God 2.0? WTF happened to God version 1?!?!?!

Posted on 4/10/2008 12:55:33 PM

Hey don't take my name in vain!

Posted on 4/9/2008 9:53:21 PM

Except that kids don't actually have to be raped to write Cracked articles. Which is, you know, nice. Swearing however is considerably less harmful than rape, and I'm all in favor of it, especially as it makes soda explode from my nose when well executed.

Posted on 4/8/2008 6:13:17 PM

PS: I think God is neato!

Posted on 4/8/2008 12:33:45 PM

To: GodisAwesome. Wow...I'll bet God is glad you're on his side, or else he'd go shithouse for sure. Hey...for your 2 cents: How about kids get their education in FUCKING schools and we leave site's like this for those that may be looking for a laugh or a bit of escapism humour. Cracked.com is like Child Porn. If it bothers you...don't watch it.

Posted on 4/8/2008 12:33:17 PM

To: 'GodisAwesome'... go fuck your Mother (we all have), whist she reads that drivel from 'The Good Book!' THEN send her this: http://www.neilsnotes.com/index.php?page=13&catid=12&sku=ENGL-CD00409

Posted on 4/8/2008 9:25:01 AM

Einstein wasn't successful in his later years...in fact, he WASTED THE SECOND HALF OF HIS LIFE trying to find the theory of everything i.e. combine quantum mechanics with the theory of relativity (source: A Short History of Nearly Everything by Bill Bryson, Ch. 9)

Posted on 4/7/2008 10:34:01 PM

There is a picture of him punching a tree in half. How is that not badass?

Posted on 4/7/2008 6:14:56 PM

How come you guys describe George Washington as an average Joe here, yet in another article hail him as one of the five most badass presidents of all time? Hm....

Posted on 4/7/2008 12:01:05 PM

Howard Zinn JUST released an illustrated version of "A People's History of the United States." The original is one of the best books I've ever read, and I read A LOT. It will open your eyes wider than the red pill.

Posted on 4/7/2008 6:00:32 AM

Despite all the achievements and breakthroughs of Greeks like Pythagoris, European civilization and technology went about 1000 years back when the Catholic Church took over. Big surprise eh? In other words, the fact that earth was round was NOT common knowledge in that time.

Posted on 4/6/2008 7:20:10 PM

If you ever want an eye-opening look at history, read "A people's history of the United states" That book is a classic, and tells of the REAL history of the United States, and not the bullshit you are fed in school.

Posted on 4/6/2008 7:17:04 AM

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