Advertisement

These 20 Venn Diagrams Are Gonna Make Your Week Due To How Close To Home They Hit

The diagrams are always the most enjoyable aspect of any presentation. Diagrams are the ideal tool for summarizing someone's results in a straightforward, dense, and efficient manner since humans prefer to learn words through visuals.
Because drawing diagrams is so enjoyable, Venn diagrams have actually evolved into amusing meme templates. Venn diagrams are used by those who make memes to illustrate surprising connections between individuals and objects, highlighting how foolish some people can be or how unfair life can be. For everyone to enjoy this format, Imgur user ParallelParkingInABurka has been collecting these memes for some time. We added even more of the best ones the internet has to offer.
Even if you are unfamiliar with the term Venn diagram, you have undoubtedly seen it. According to Investopedia, "A Venn diagram is a visual representation that makes use of circles to highlight the connections between different objects or limited groupings of objects. Circles that overlap share certain characteristics, but circles that do not overlap do not."
These kinds of diagrams "help to visually represent the similarities and differences between two concepts” and they have been used since the mid-20th century. Even though they became more widely spread during this period, they existed quite some time before that.
The diagram first gained popularity in the 1880s thanks to English mathematician, philosopher, and logician John Venn. In fact, there is where the name as we presently know it originated.
Even though the design bears the name of the person who made it popular, comparable diagrams were developed in the 1700s and were known as Eulerian circles since they were developed by Swiss mathematician Leonard Euler. The name was altered by Clarence Lewis in his work A Survey of Symbolic Logic published in 1918, adding to the misunderstanding.

#1


#2


#3


#4


#5


#6


#7


#8


#9


#10


#11


#12


#13


#14


#15


#16


#17


#18


#19


#20

Share this article
Advertisement
 
Advertisement