The answer is Earth.
All the planets have temperatures that cover a larger range than that. The Earth goes from about -70 to about +55 degrees C.
-- If those are Rankine temperatures, then I could not survive either one. -- If they're Celsius temperatures, then I could not survive 75, and I would be pretty miserable at 37. -- If they're Fahrenheit temperatures, I could survive and tolerate either one, but 37 would be more comfortable. To each his own.
In the summer it is 87 f In the winter it is 37 f
According to Biologists, the optimum temperature for pepsin ranges from 37 degrees Celsius to 42 degrees Celsius which are perfect human body temperatures.
fungi can grow at a temperature of 30 degrees Celsius. they struggle to grow at temperatures of 4 degrees and below because it is too cold for them to be active and reproduce. Fungi can not grow at temperatures of 37 degrees Celsius and above either because it is too warm.
All the planets have temperatures that cover a larger range than that. The Earth goes from about -70 to about +55 degrees C.
Earth, Alaska to Death Valley
There is a range of healthy body temperatures around 37 ºC or 98.4 ºF
Earth
A clinical thermometer - is designed to measure typical human temperatures. The 'normal' temperature of a human is 37 C (98.4 F). There's no point in using a thermometer that can measure a huge range - when human temperatures fall within a very narrow range.
Earth, but does go beyond that, venus is to hot, mars is to cold
37 + 13 = 50
37 * 13 = 481
13 is 35.1% of 37.
There is no known planet with that temperature (or even temputure) range.
Multiply 13 by 37/100.
Lcd(13, 37) = 481