Big brain Memes

Posts tagged with Big brain

The Negligible Genius

The Negligible Genius
Einstein says intelligent people ignore, and chemistry students took that advice too literally! The meme brilliantly captures that moment in chemistry calculations when you decide intermolecular forces are just... optional. Big brain energy until your professor marks your answer wrong because those "negligible" forces actually determine whether something's a gas, liquid, or solid at room temperature. Whoops! It's basically the chemistry equivalent of saying "friction doesn't exist" and then wondering why your car won't stop. Those tiny attractions between molecules might seem insignificant, but ignore them and suddenly your calculations are as accurate as a meteorologist predicting sunshine during a hurricane!

Thus Big Brain Time

Thus Big Brain Time
The mathematical hierarchy of intellectual flexing is beautifully illustrated here! While normies impress with π (3.14159265358979323846...), true intellectuals know Euler's number e (2.71828182845904...) is where it's at. But the galaxy-brain move? Knowing the 4th digit of the mathematical constant g (9.80665 m/s²) - that sweet, sweet 6 after the decimal. It's the mathematical equivalent of ignoring mainstream constants for the obscure physics flex that makes you the coolest nerd at the party. The progression from glowing brain to transcendent consciousness perfectly captures how mathematicians and physicists judge each other at departmental mixers.

The Intelligent Physicist's Guide To Problem Solving

The Intelligent Physicist's Guide To Problem Solving
The ultimate physics flex! Taking Einstein's wisdom about intelligent people ignoring problems and applying it to... ignoring air resistance in physics problems. Because nothing says "big brain energy" like pretending friction doesn't exist while calculating trajectories. Physics students everywhere nodding knowingly while their professors sigh. The green brain meme perfectly captures that smug satisfaction when you simplify a complex problem by just... pretending real-world factors don't exist. Theoretical physicists have been doing this for centuries - why stop now?