Re: The EVIL Metric system taking away my HERITAGE
Dave, on host 209.244.1.161
Tuesday, April 4, 2000, at 14:32:12
Re: The EVIL Metric system taking away my HERITAGE posted by Darien on Tuesday, April 4, 2000, at 13:11:41:
> Those aren't really what the units are based on. >The only units I'm familiar with the origins of >offhand are distance units - inch, foot, mile. >The inch is the width of three barleycorns placed >end to end - and, yes, the barleycorn *is* >uniform in size. Any three barleycorns will give >you more or less and inch. The foot is thirty-six >barleycorns. The mile, on the other hand, was >arrived at more arbitrarily. The mile is the >Roman mile (five thousand feet) plus the British >furlong (280 feet).
Wow, that sounds about as convenient for everyday folks as "one ten-millionth the distance from the North Pole to the Equator". ;-)
About the only thing I wish the metric system included is a convenient unit of measurement in between the centimeter and the meter. A centimeter is too small and a meter is too big for most "everyday" measurements--imagine only having the inch and the yard to make measurements in. I don't know if the foot seems "convenient" because I"m used to it, or if it really is more convenient. But I still wish there was one. I remember being tought something about a 'decimeter' or something like that, which was, I think, ten centimeters. That's a little better, but the fact that nobody seems to use it doesn't help.
> > > I was at the DMV last week getting my Colorado >>license, and this hispanic girl next to me was >>having problems figuring out how tall she was. >>She knew exactly how many meters/centimeters >>tall she was, but had no idea how that equated >>to feet/inches (I guessed in my head that she >>was 5'2", and when she and the teller finally >>got it figured out, she was 5'3" -- familiarity >>strikes again ;-) Same thing with her weight. >>She knew what it was in kilograms, but had no >>clue how that equated to pounds. > > Erm... your argument seems to be about the same >as the argument for putting road signs up in >Spanish and English - namely, that foreign >immigrants can't manage under our system. Well, >that's their problem, really. They have two >choices - learn the system being used in this >country (be it the English language or the >imperial measurement system) or don't exepct to >be able to get along in this country. It sounds >harsh, but it makes zero sense to do anything >else.
That wasn't really my point. I agree with what you say, in principle. My point was basically to refute the implied point that eric brought up, which was "even in those metric countries nobody actually *thinks* in metric". This woman obviously did, and was obviously pretty comfortable thinking in metric units. So there's no mystical reason why most of us feel 'comfortable' with Imperial units--it's just what you know.
> > > I guess I sort of agree with both sides of the >>argument. It's silly to say that it's "better" >>to measure your weight in kilos rather than >>pounds. > > Except that kilos aren't a measure of weight. >;-}
Yeah yeah yeah. Go mass something in slugs.
> > > And this whole "taking away my Heritage and my >>Culture" argument is so bogus. Cultures change. >>It's *right* that they change. It's *good* that >>they change. It's *neccesary* that they change. > > You're right, cultures do change. But it's an >evolutionary process that happens *slowly.* If >the government steps in and demands that the >culture change *immediately,* more often than >not, that leads to revolution. Not that I'm >saying it's necessarily right or wrong - just >that people don't like having cultural changes >dictated to them and will probably respond >unpleasantly to any such attempt. This has to be >thought about in terms of public relations - the >government can't force the people to change their >culture, simply because culture is a stronger >force than government, and will likely prevail.
But the government is our friend....
-- Dave
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