this post was submitted on 24 May 2025
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Showerthoughts
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A "Showerthought" is a simple term used to describe the thoughts that pop into your head while you're doing everyday things like taking a shower, driving, or just daydreaming. The most popular seem to be lighthearted clever little truths, hidden in daily life.
Here are some examples to inspire your own showerthoughts:
- Both “200” and “160” are 2 minutes in microwave math
- When you’re a kid, you don’t realize you’re also watching your mom and dad grow up.
- More dreams have been destroyed by alarm clocks than anything else
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Do some people think Pluto actually got smaller and thats why it's not a planet?!
I wouldn't put it past an awful lot of people given the stupidity I see on a daily basis.
Pluto is a strange relic that basically got considered a planet only due to the time and method by which it was observed. It was speculated that the perturbations in Neptune's orbit indicated there was another body beyond it which everyone naturally assumed to be a planet. Clyde Tombaugh looked in the location where such an object was believed to be and found Pluto. It was assumed that this was indeed the planet in question.
Pluto was the first thing of its kind that was discovered, but it turns out that there are a lot of things in the solar system that are about the size of Pluto or even larger. And Pluto is too small to be the thing that was actually influencing Neptune's orbit, whatever that may be. We just didn't observe any more of those planetoid bodies until later. But after doing so, that would require us to either declare there are dozens and dozens of planets or, the slightly more sane avenue, come up with a more specific definition of what a planet actually is, which by necessity also excludes Pluto.
All the hype about is basically just down to people refusing to change what they learned in elementary school. But the thing about science is that it changes and is refined over time as we gain understanding of the universe and how things work. This is what makes science science. Anything less is simply dogma.
And it's baffling because how does that even affect anyone in any way unless they work in astronomy? People don't know and don't care about the difference between solar system, galaxy and universe, but Pluto being recategorised is STILL causing them intolerable agony?
All because of a cartoon dog.
I don't think they'd care if Neptune and Pluto swapped names.
Well, someone said this was knowledge important to have in general education, so people learned it in school.
Now people are told what they learned in school is either wrong, or not important, so they shouldn't concern themselves with it.
This raises some important implications about education and its purposes, how things are taught, how "dissent" is handled during eductation and the role of schooling in manufacturing consent in Democracies, the question of how much an individual should trust the state and so on.
If you cannot express or understand these properly or if they contradict other core ideological believes of you, ending up with arguing about Pluto rather than these issues, is normal.
Here's the thing with "facts". Every scientific explanation is just our current best explanation. They're not all perfect and as we learn more the explanations change.
The lesson of Pluto is that science evolves and you have to stay up to date. They'll be a bunch of stuff you learned as facts that has now been revised, corrected, reclassified or revoked. The other obvious one is how much the appearance of dinosaurs has been revised over the last few decades.
Is that aspect taught in school properly?
Because i mostly remember the teachers telling me to shut up (at best) if i questioned the veracity of what they were teaching. I also got thrown out of math class for saying the method of the teacher is more complicated than what is needed.
Exams are designed so that you regurgitate mostly what you have been told. Maybe you get lucky to have a good teacher in the humanities who is open to individual thoughts and teaches how to think about things critically. Most of the time it is "here is the official and only correct interpretation of event X, place Y, article Z..."
School for the largest part leaves no space to teach about ambiguity and evolving knowledge. Even if the curriculum allows for it, the class size usually doesn't.
Which brings me back to my hypothesis. People criticizing the changed status of Pluto are feeling betrayed by school.
The explanation I heard back then was that Pluto wouldn't qualify as a planet, EXCEPT that it has a moon. I'm not sure why that exception would apply, but it seems it's no longer good enough.
Well, there are seven other known sub-planetary bodies (dwarf planets) in the solar system that also have moons: Eris, Haumea, Makemake, Gonggong, Quaoar, Orcus, and Salacia. Eris in particular is larger than Pluto. So then Eris would have to be promoted to being a planet, too. Along with the other six, plus any more we might discover later. At the time of its discovery I don't think anyone had yet observed that Pluto has a moon, and it wasn't discovered until even later that Pluto actually has five moons.
That was an attempt to preserve the order of planets, but a failed one since there are other non-planets with moons. https://xkcd.com/3063
The modern definition doesn't depend on moons. Which is good because not all planets have them.
I mean, there are literal flat-earthers out there… But for anyone curious about why Pluto is no longer classified as a planet - and what its size has to do with it - Pluto is now considered a dwarf planet because, while it’s large enough to be spherical, it isn’t big enough to dominate its orbit and clear out other objects in its path.
And also because if we included Pluto, we'd have to include another half dozen Pluto-sized dwarves we've discovered since.
But, yeah, my understanding is that it's really about dominance. Pluto is too submissive. Not alpha enough, if you will.
That's correct by definition, but the reason the definition was changed to exclude pluto was because our knowledge changed.
We found more Pluto-like objects and it became clear they weren't the same thing as the other 8 planets. They needed their own classification. So we created one (Dwarf Planets) and put Pluto in it along with its brethren.