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5 Most Famous Science Theories - COMPLETELY WRONG!

2025-10-16 Science & Technology
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Arvin Ash
Arvin Ash
1.1m subscribers

Five Dominant Scientific Theories That Science Ultimately Overthrew

Discover five dominant scientific theories that once seemed irrefutable but ultimately failed stringent tests. Use this pattern recognition to understand how science systematically refines our understanding of reality.

Short Summary

  • The speaker details five major historical theories (Aristotle, Caloric, Aether, Corpuscular Light, Newtonian Gravity) that science actively discarded.
  • Better theories always explain more phenomena with fewer underlying assumptions than their predecessors.
  • This history reveals the structural checklist scientists use to recognize when old models deserve to be superseded.

This presentation walks through major theoretical collapses, showing that these prior ideas were not baseless but necessary stepping stones. By analyzing why they failed—often due to evidence they couldn't incorporate—you gain a mental framework for evaluating current scientific models.

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Description

Click this link https://boot.dev/?promo=ARVINASH and use my code ARVINASH to get 25% off your first payment for boot.dev TALK TO ARVIN on PATREON https://www.patreon.com/arvinash REFERENCE VIDEOS How General Relativity works https://youtu.be/tzQC3uYL67U Newton, the Greatest Scientist who ever lived https://youtu.be/MApnf7L4g44 Quantum ElectroDynamics (QED) https://youtu.be/PutOOpAkjQ4 All Physics Explained in 15 mins https://youtu.be/TTHazQeM8v8 CHAPTERS 0:00 Science is littered with bad theories 0:56 Aristotle's mechanics was really bad 2:25 The crazy heat "fluid" theory, Caloric 5:53 The Luminiferous Aether 7:53 Newton's failure: Corpuscular light 9:48 Newton's law of universal gravitation 12:05 How to spot when a theory is BAD SUMMARY Science is full of once-brilliant ideas that now seem absurd. They weren’t crazy when proposed—they were the best explanations available. Each was eventually replaced by a theory that explained more phenomena with fewer assumptions. Looking back at five major fallen theories reveals how science self-corrects and refines itself. For nearly two millennia, Aristotle’s view of motion dominated: objects required a push to keep moving; heavy things fell faster; fire rose to its natural place. The world seemed to confirm this—until Galileo realized that motion continues unless something interferes. Friction, not nature’s “desire for rest,” slows things down. Newton later formalized this in his first law of motion: an object in motion stays in motion unless acted on by a force. By uncovering hidden forces, science learned that nature’s rules are simpler than they appear. In the 18th century, scientists believed heat was a fluid called caloric that flowed from hot to cold. It explained everyday experiences, but experiments like boring cannon barrels producing endless heat challenged it. James Joule’s paddle-wheel experiments showed that mechanical work could generate heat, proving it wasn’t a substance but energy in motion. The kinetic theory of gases replaced caloric with molecular motion, leading to thermodynamics and the concept of entropy—energy’s natural tendency to spread out. Caloric theory fell because it violated energy conservation, though we still talk about “heat flow” today. #aether Nineteenth-century physicists also thought light must travel through a medium—the luminiferous aether. All waves, after all, needed something to ripple through. But the 1887 Michelson-Morley experiment found no difference in light speed regardless of direction, implying no aether wind. Einstein resolved this by asserting two principles: the laws of physics are the same for all observers moving at constant velocity, and the speed of light is constant for all of them. Space and time themselves adjust—lengths contract, clocks slow—removing the need for aether. Special relativity explained more with fewer assumptions. The concept of a universal “field,” however, survived in modern quantum field theory, where light is an excitation of the electromagnetic field filling spacetime. Even Newton, history’s most influential scientist, wasn’t always right. He pictured light as tiny particles or corpuscles, which explained reflection and refraction but not diffraction or interference. Those patterns showed light behaving like a wave. Yet the photoelectric effect revealed that light also behaves as particles—photons—whose energy depends on frequency, a discovery that earned Einstein his Nobel Prize. Modern quantum electrodynamics unifies both pictures: light is simultaneously wave and particle, depending on how it’s observed. Newton’s law of gravity—forces acting instantaneously between masses—worked flawlessly for centuries, until Mercury’s orbit deviated slightly from prediction. Einstein’s general relativity solved it by reimagining gravity as the curvature of spacetime itself. The theory explained Mercury’s precession, light bending near the Sun, time dilation, and gravitational waves, all later confirmed. Newton’s law remains a special case of Einstein’s, valid for weak gravity and low speeds. From Aristotle to caloric, aether, corpuscles, and Newton’s gravity, the same pattern repeats: old theories are absorbed into deeper, more unifying frameworks. Better theories expand scope, increase precision, unify phenomena, and recover what worked before. Science isn’t a fixed book of truths—it’s a constantly revised notebook. The losers weren’t foolish; they were necessary steps toward sharper understanding. Curiosity and skepticism remain the true engines of progress.

Top Comments (10)

@4iMRyan 2025-10-16

Wrong is Good in Science, one step closer to a Right Theory.

86 24 replies
@DanteGabriel-lx9bq 2025-10-16

It's always beautiful to see how far we've come with the sciences. I really hope I'll be alive long enough to see the innovations that science will bring to humanity. The fire of Prometheus is not yet extinguished.

26 1 replies
@BlackShardStudio 2025-10-16

Here for the phlogiston

9
@ArvinAsh 2025-10-15

Click this link https://boot.dev/?promo=ARVINASH and use my code ARVINASH to get 25% off your first payment for boot.dev

8 20 replies
@AreolaGrande94 2025-10-18

Wrong ideas are just as important as right ideas in science. The key is falsifiability.

4
@Gaius315 2025-10-17

Now you've gotta do one on the inverse: The theories that were thought crazy when first proposed but turned out to be right. Plate tectonics, germ theory, and so on.

4
@RoccoV1972 2025-10-17

Oh man, that wrist at 1:26 looks gruesome! Jeez.

4
@uncletiggermclaren7592 2025-10-16

1887 was a year before my grandfathers were born. We are only three lives of men away from "The Aether" being taken seriously.

3
@GB-rb1up 2026-01-04

Never trust someone who says "the science is settled". The more we learn, the more we realize that we have more to learn.

2 1 replies
@Ooka-lay 2025-10-17

I know, I know, the aether doesn't exist, but when I hear of quantum fields, I can't help but conceive of the totality of overlapping quantum fields as a soupy whole.

2

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