Oddlet · 2 min read
Feb 11, 2026 · Updated Feb 20, 2026

Oddlet · 2 min read
Feb 11, 2026 · Updated Feb 20, 2026
🇬🇧The Worm Who Rewrote Physics
The four equations that power every phone on Earth were written by a man who lived on granite blocks and signed his letters W.O.R.M.
Every physics student alive learns Maxwell's equations — four elegant lines that describe how light, electricity, and magnetism behave. What most of them never learn is that Maxwell didn't write them. Not like that. Maxwell's original formulation was a tangle of twenty equations in a notation so dense it was nearly unreadable. The person who compressed them into the form on every classroom wall was a partially deaf, self-taught former telegraph operator named Oliver Heaviside.
He had left school at sixteen. He taught himself calculus, differential equations, and German. He independently invented a form of operational calculus so far ahead of its time that mathematicians rejected it — not because it was wrong, but because he couldn't explain why it was right. He predicted the existence of the ionosphere.
Then the world forgot about him.
Heaviside spent his final decades in a crumbling house in Torquay, alone, in poverty. He removed his furniture and replaced it with granite blocks. He painted his fingernails cherry-pink. Opened cans of food sat scattered across the rooms. He signed his letters W.O.R.M.
The equations never changed, though. They still sit at the foundation of every electrical system on Earth — every radio signal, every power grid, every phone in every pocket. Four clean lines, written by a man who lived on stone and signed his name as a worm, and whom the world did not bother to remember.
Know someone who’d love this?
- Wikipedia - Oliver Heaviside — Confirms basic biographical details, Maxwell equations reformulation, granite blocks replacing furniture, pink fingernails, and 'W.O.R.M.' signature. States he became partially deaf as a young man.
- MacTutor History of Mathematics - Heaviside Biography — Details his self-education, telegraph work, poverty in later life, and eccentricities. Notes he left school at 16 and learned Morse code, Danish, German, and mathematics independently.
- IEEE - The Maxwellians: Heaviside — Scholarly source on Heaviside's reformulation of Maxwell's equations and development of vector analysis for electromagnetic theory. Confirms his work was initially controversial among mathematicians.
- Nahin, Paul J. 'Oliver Heaviside: The Life, Work, and Times of an Electrical Genius' — Definitive biography. The 'W.O.R.M.' signature interpretation varies; some sources suggest 'Worms of the Omnipresent Ether' but this remains uncertain. Pink/cherry-red fingernails confirmed as factual eccentricity.

The Chemist Who Tasted Everything
Carl Wilhelm Scheele discovered oxygen, chlorine, and more elements than almost anyone in the eighteenth century. Working alone in Swedish pharmacies, he identified each substance by tasting it. Mercury compounds. Arsenic. Hydrogen cyanide, which he found pleasantly sharp. His hands swelled. His joints ached. His body filled with what he'd catalogued. He died at forty-three, notebooks open, descriptions precise. The poisons tasted exactly as he said they would.

The Man Who Boiled His Own Urine and Found Light
Hennig Brand was a 17th-century alchemist who spent both his wives' fortunes chasing gold. In 1669, he collected 1,500 gallons of urine, let it rot, then boiled it down and heated the paste for weeks. What came out wasn't gold — it was a waxy substance that glowed in the dark and burst into flames on its own. He'd discovered phosphorus, the first element ever isolated by a named individual. He went looking for gold in the most preposterous place imaginable and found light instead.

The Woman Who Practiced Madness in a Mirror
In 1887, Nellie Bly practiced deranged expressions in a mirror for one night, then got herself committed to a New York asylum. She spent ten days documenting rotten food, ice baths, and patients tied together with ropes. Her exposé triggered a grand jury investigation and forced the city to overhaul its asylum system. The doctors who had unanimously declared her insane never explained how a twenty-three-year-old reporter had fooled them all.
Wonder, delivered.
A fresh oddlet in your inbox every weekday morning — true, strange, and under a minute.
Free forever. Unsubscribe anytime.