-36 Our bodies at 37 degrees feel normal to us but anything else that is 37 degrees feels hot to us, amirite?

by Ok_Delivery 2 weeks ago

your core is 37C, but your skin is cooler, acting as a radiator to dissipate that heat (approx 100W at idle). body temperature air means you aren't dissipating your body temperature core heat as efficiently and you feel hotter as a result (because you are getting hotter)

by Anonymous 2 weeks ago

Not if you're American.

by Anonymous 2 weeks ago

It 104 degrees farenheight. It's not too difficult, multiply the Celsius by 2 and add 30, that's your answer in farenheight.

by Anonymous 2 weeks ago

"It's not that difficult" yet you get the answer wrong lmao

by Anonymous 2 weeks ago

37 times 2 is 74 plus 30 is 104, no I didn't lol.

by Anonymous 2 weeks ago

37 Celsius is 98.6 Fahrenheit. What are you on about?

by Anonymous 2 weeks ago

Damn chalk me up as being a dumb American. I didn't get the math wrong I got the formula wrong. Sorry if I spread any misinformation.

by Anonymous 2 weeks ago

You're using a good rule of thumb but the more exact formula is to multiply by 1.8 and add 32.

by Wkling 2 weeks ago

37 c is 98.6 f

by Fast_Worldliness797 2 weeks ago

Yeah - because you cannot feel the temperature of anything - you feel the transfer of heat. That's why if you have a fever, things feel colder and if you are suffering hypothermia things feel warmer. The transfer of heat can be used to extrapolate temperature in your brain - though it is a random process and it is possible to touch a burning stove and it feel cold with an insanely unlikely possibility if heat just transfers from you faster than it transfers to you.

by sage42 2 weeks ago

37c is 98f for those of us that don't do celsius.

by Anonymous 2 weeks ago

At 37 degrees, I've been dead and in a cooler for a while.

by Anonymous 2 weeks ago