Who is the bravest person in the world
Amazingly, Fiennes was later asked back into his regiment. Ice man. For the past few decades, Ranulph Fiennes has gone looking for lost cities. In , he became the first person in history to cross Antarctica alone.
In , he attempted to reach the North Pole on his own. The expedition failed when one of his sleds encountered weak ice. He gave up and returned to England with severe frostbite on his left hand.
Facing amputation, but disliking how his surgeon was handling the matter, Fiennes went ahead and chopped off several of his own fingertips with a common saw. Running man. Four months after undergoing heart surgery in , Ranulph Fiennes ran seven marathons, one on each continent. Mountain man. But in , he seemingly overcame it in a big way by climbing Mt. Stop putting someone else's needs ahead of your own. Ask for what you want.
Say you that love someone, forgive someone, or are angry at someone. Let go. Defy the Status Quo. What is the synonym of courage? Synonyms: bravery, boldness, valor, pluck, fortitude, resolution, gallantry, fearlessness, intrepidity. How can I be brave? Uncertainty is the source of many fears. Make specific plans. It's easy to feel afraid when you don't know what you need to do. Choose to help others. Be brave for 20 seconds. Consider your decision. Don't think — act.
Fake it till you make it. Who changed the world in history? Who has changed the world the most? Bill Gates created his first computer program while still at high school, co-founded Microsoft in , and by was the richest man on Earth. Martin Luther King Jr. Nelson Mandela. Adolf Hitler. Albert Einstein. Mahatma Gandhi. During one field trip, she was spotted by a pack of wolves and lay in the grass for an hour to draw them closer. Elsie Widdowson. Biochemist who studied at Imperial College London.
Widdowson and her colleague, Robert McCance, endured minimal diets for long periods to study the effect of calorie restriction on health. Widdowson advised the British government on the nutritional needs of those who had suffered extreme starvation in Nazi concentration camps.
Craig Jordan. Jordan is known as the "father of tamoxifen", for being first to discover that the drug could be used to prevent breast cancer. Mike Stroud.
British physician at Southampton General Hospital. The thinking man's Ranulph Fiennes. Stroud is an expert in human endurance and extreme environments. He accompanied Fiennes on several polar expeditions, during which he took muscle biopsies from his own leg without anaesthetic.
In , he joined Fiennes to run seven marathons on seven continents in seven days. Jerri Nielsen FitzGerald. American ER doctor. FitzGerald was working at a research station at the South Pole in when she found a lump in her breast. A medical evacuation was impossible, so FitzGerald used ice and a local anaesthetic to perform a biopsy on the tumour. Samples of the tissue were assessed by videolink, but the results were inconclusive. When doctors monitoring her condition from afar decided she needed chemotherapy drugs, they were air-dropped at night onto a stretch of ground lit by fires.
She spent the last ten years of her life giving lectures around the world on cancer and its impact on her life. There were so many nominations for individual astronauts who trained as scientists or engineers that it seemed fairest to give them a group nomination.
Leonid Rogozov. Another physician who performed self-surgery at the South Pole. Rogozov was stationed at a Soviet research station in when he developed peritonitis and decided to remove his own appendix. The two-hour operation revealed that it was perforated. Rogozov was back to work within a fortnight. Cicely Williams. One of Britain's first female doctors. Williams specialised in children's diseases and developed life-saving high-protein diets while working in Africa.
During the second world war, Williams was captured after the fall of Malaya and was held in two different Japanese prison camps, where she continued to treat patients despite coming close to death herself. Amanda Feilding.
The Countess of Wemyss was 27 years old when she donned a pair of dark glasses, cut a neat patch of hair from her head, and pressed a whirring dentist's drill into her skull.
Feilding lost almost two pints of blood in the act of self-trepanation, which took so long she had to dip the drill in water from time to time to cool it down. She believed the hole might give her brain more room to move and produce a heightened state of consciousness. Feilding is not a scientist, but was nominated on the strength of her experiment.
John Stapp. A former US air force flight surgeon, Stapp became known as the fastest man on Earth following a series of adventures in a rocket-propelled sled designed to assess the greatest deceleration that a human could survive.
Stapp survived at least 45g. During his test career, Stapp suffered broken bones, a detached retina and various other injuries.
Timothy Leary. The American psychologist once described by Richard Nixon as "the most dangerous man in America", he was infamous for his enthusiastic consumption of psychedelic drugs, often, but not always, in the name of research. Sir Isaac Newton.
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