sciences
Explanation
This comic presents a series of panels showing how different scientific fields originated. Biology is described as "correcting ideas about life, classification, and how it comes into being" -- correcting Aristotle's wrong ideas. Physics is "correcting ideas about motion, gravity, and the nature of the world" -- also correcting Aristotle. Chemistry is "correcting ideas about elements, transmutation, and translation" -- again, correcting Aristotle.
The bottom panel shows a character saying "So every field of science derives from a different thing Aristotle was wrong about," delivered as a "Fun Fact."
The humor lies in the observation that while Aristotle is revered as one of history's greatest thinkers, an enormous amount of modern science exists specifically because Aristotle got things wrong. His ideas about physics (objects fall at speeds proportional to weight), biology (spontaneous generation), and chemistry/alchemy (four elements) were all influential for centuries and all turned out to be incorrect. The comic reframes the entire history of science not as humanity's noble quest for truth, but as an ongoing project to clean up after one prolific ancient Greek philosopher's mistakes. It is an affectionate jab at both Aristotle's legacy and the nature of scientific progress.