10 Mad Scientists Who Made History

As Martin Gardner, writer of recreational mathematics and popular science literature, would say, “modern science really should encourage in all of us a humility in the face of the immensity of the unexplored and tolerance for hypotheses crazy.”

Just as great scientists made discoveries that changed the way we see the world, they also carried a crazy personality, guided by their own pace. Next, we will present 10 hyper-intelligent and super original figures who made history in an unusual way.

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  1. Johann Konrad Dippel

The 17th-century alchemist, born and raised in Germany's Frankenstein Castle, came to be known as the inventor of 'Prussian Blue', one of the first synthetic chemical dyes. However, his name became even more famous for his characteristic of searching endlessly for elixirs of immortality. It is said that the inspiration for the legendary character of Mary Shelley, who took the name of the castle, came through experiments with human corpses.

Johann Konrad Dippel
Johann Konrad Dippel
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  1. Robert Oppenheimer

Robert Oppenheimer was responsible for the Manhattan Project, which developed the American atomic bomb. His lack of sympathy for socialism and his mixed feelings about dropping the atomic bombs compromised his academic and political power.

Robert Oppenheimer
Robert Oppenheimer
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  1. Wernher Von Braun

This unusual figure, aged 12, loaded his toy car with some kind of firework and shot it down a busy street in Germany.

The truth is, his brains were behind Hitler's V-2 rocket program that reached United States as a prisoner of war and became the champion of space and lunar exploration in the country. Von Braun also mastered scuba diving and philosophy while sending people to the moon.

Wernher Von Braun
Wernher Von Braun
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  1. Freeman Dyson

Freeman Dyson was a nuclear physicist and prolific writer. This figure believed that extra-terrestrial life existed and that, within a few decades, contact would be made with them. In the 1960s, he was advocating the idea that future humans might need to build a structure artificial, now called Dyson Sphere, that would encircle the entire solar system and make maximum use of energy of the sun.

Freeman Dyson
Freeman Dyson
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  1. Jack Parsons

In between his errands, Jack Parsons helped found the Jet Propulsion Laboratory and practiced magic. His peculiar and mysterious features showed his rebelliousness and the size of his natural talent.

Parson had no formal education, but he managed to develop a rocket fuel that guided the United States through Second World War and through space. His last breaths were taken during a laboratory experiment in his home, where he heard an explosion, in the year 1952.

Jack Parsons
Jack Parsons
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  1. Richard Feynman

This figure became one of the most important scientists of the late 20th century. The physicist was a member of the Manhattan Project's team of geniuses. His didactics were very diversified, far from being a typical conventional teacher. His soul was free and explored the diverse resources of music and nature.

Richard Feynman
Richard Feynman
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  1. James Lovelock

Lovelock was a modern environmental scientist, who invented the Gaia Hypothesis. Under his eyes, the world was seen as a superorganism. Throughout his contributions to science, he has come up with dire predictions about climate change on our planet, which in many cases have come true.

James Lovelock
James Lovelock
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  1. leonardo da vinci

Leonardo da Vinci became known for paintings of his masterpieces that were some of the most revered in the Renaissance. Even in the midst of his artistic work, he found time to explore the eccentricity within himself.

leonardo da vinci
leonardo da vinci
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  1. Nikola Tesla

Tesla was born during a violent electrical storm in 1856 and is best known for inventing the radio and alternating current generators that started the age of electricity. This figure is also remembered as a magical genius who slept little and loved to put on a good show, often using his own body as a conductor in public performances.

Nikola Tesla
Nikola Tesla
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  1. albert einstein

Starting with his hair, Einstein was a crazy guy. As is well known, he is considered one of the most celebrated scientists of the last century, who turned physics upside down. down through his theories of relativity, in addition to having made enormous contributions in the areas of gravitation and theory quantum.

albert einstein
albert einstein
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