this post was submitted on 22 Jun 2025
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Actually it was originally based on the freezing temperature of a brine and human body temperature.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fahrenheit
No I'm pretty sure it was crickets.
Ah, so 32° is when an unknown concentration of human brine freezes, and 98.6° is the average human temperature
What am I even reading any more
I think the brine probably froze at 0° F, which ended up correlating to 32° F for regular water. And the body temperature at 100° F ended up correlating to 212° F for water to boil. That's the way I understand it anyway.
What the hell was the brine that it required it to be 32° below the freezing point of water? Even salt water would have frozen by that point.
Source from a quick Google search: https://gregable.com/2014/06/temperature-scales.html
Really it was "find something that is different to the reseller scales"
It was actually based on an existing scale called the Rømer scale