Skull Memes

Posts tagged with Skull

Who Do You Think Designed Said Roman Roads?

Who Do You Think Designed Said Roman Roads?
This meme brilliantly skewers the logical fallacy in engineering criticism! The grid shows identical human skulls labeled with different characteristics (man, woman, gay, straight, etc.), implying our fundamental biological equality—until the punchline. The final skull is hilariously deformed, representing "people who say engineers are bad because Rome made better roads without engineers." What makes this extra funny is the historical inaccuracy of the claim itself. Roman roads were absolutely engineered! The Romans had dedicated engineers who designed sophisticated multi-layered road systems with drainage, cambered surfaces, and foundations that have lasted millennia. The title "Who Do You Think Designed Said Roman Roads?" drives this point home perfectly. It's basically the STEM equivalent of "tell me you failed history without telling me you failed history."

It's An Important Part Of Your Skull

It's An Important Part Of Your Skull
The pun is strong with this one! The meme shows a person made of puzzle pieces with one piece missing from their skull, while holding the "occipital bone" piece. The occipital bone protects the visual cortex of your brain, which explains why some people just can't see what's wrong with their reasoning. Next time someone makes a bafflingly illogical argument, don't blame them—they're just missing their occipital puzzle piece and literally cannot see the bigger picture.

My First And Last Flash Card Of The Night

My First And Last Flash Card Of The Night
The grand academic delusion: thinking you'll meticulously document every bone in the skull for Bio 241, only to end up with a blue blob that vaguely resembles a frontal lobe. That detailed anatomical drawing on the left? Pure first-day optimism. The blue puddle on the right? That's reality setting in faster than calcium loss in osteoporosis. Nothing captures the trajectory of academic motivation quite like watching your scientific illustrations devolve from "potential textbook material" to "my nephew could do better and he's four." The brain apparently shrinks proportionally with your will to study.