I love it when ideas that have absolutely no chance of adoption get fully thought through anyway. Esperanto is a similar idea for language - too moonshotty, but complete.
Esperanto has actually been criticized for being half baked. There’s this whole website on the subject from a respected expert. In particular it’s really eurocentric.
Esperanto actually is used more than the majority of natural languages on Earth -- there's new books and magazines published in it every year. Yes, it seems like a tiny language compared to English or Chinese, but compared to most Amerind or Paupan languages it's not that tiny.
- A leap week is worse than a leap year. 7 days of birthdays that just don’t exist most years.
- No variety in day of week for your birthday. I know it’s just a cultural thing, but always celebrating a birthday on say a Tuesday sounds depressing to me.
I've been thinking about alternative calendars recently. This is quite interesting. I wonder if we will ever get to a point that we can have a "base 10" calendar (10 day weeks, 10 months in a year, etc.)
I suppose in-grained traditions that are so hard to change (birthdays, memorials, etc.) make this nigh impossible.
It's more that there are 365¼ days per solar year. and seasons happen at ¼ year intervals.
Any calendar will need need to ensure that those relationships can be represented with only minor but consistent variations, e.g. leap years). Weeks largly stem from there being roughly 28 days in a lunar month.
If we're freeing ourselves from any relation to Earth's physical progression through space, e.g. 24 hr day, ~28 day solar month, or 365¼ day year, there would need to be a compelling reason, e.g. being a largely and widespread spacefaring civilization.
I believe that the closest thing that existed was French Republican calendar [1], accompanied by decimal time [2]. The Swatch Internet Time [3] which uses decimal minute at its base is also worth mentioning - it's almost forgotten nowadays.
The ancient Egyptian calendar had 10 day weeks. And the French revolutionary calendar had something similar. But there's nothing particularly superior about a decimalised calendar.
The thing is though, our current calendar, while maybe not super logical and/or always practical, is not broken in the sense that we're dealing with major unfixable problems. So changing to anything other than what we currently have is creating more issues than it's trying to solve.
And I say that as a purist and nitpicker who loves everything being perfect and organized.
My [alarm] clock displays unix time and a count down in seconds. After a few years I've only partially got used to it. The half alseep version of me does appericate the count down a lot. I just remembered I should experiment counting the seconds of the day.
I remember in 2004 being fascinated with the tons of alternative proposals to the current calendar. Read about them on the kind of sites one can now find using wiby ;)
In my language 'month' and 'moon' are the same word and some people still don't make the connection. I once had someone ask me, when I was talking about some period of x months in antiquity, if they had months (moons) back then.
jimbob45|6 years ago
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Esperanto
toxik|6 years ago
jhbadger|6 years ago
yardstick|6 years ago
- A leap week is worse than a leap year. 7 days of birthdays that just don’t exist most years.
- No variety in day of week for your birthday. I know it’s just a cultural thing, but always celebrating a birthday on say a Tuesday sounds depressing to me.
martin-adams|6 years ago
tdoggette|6 years ago
ncmncm|6 years ago
Worldwide flag days are fatal to progress.
Thorentis|6 years ago
I suppose in-grained traditions that are so hard to change (birthdays, memorials, etc.) make this nigh impossible.
jimktrains2|6 years ago
Any calendar will need need to ensure that those relationships can be represented with only minor but consistent variations, e.g. leap years). Weeks largly stem from there being roughly 28 days in a lunar month.
If we're freeing ourselves from any relation to Earth's physical progression through space, e.g. 24 hr day, ~28 day solar month, or 365¼ day year, there would need to be a compelling reason, e.g. being a largely and widespread spacefaring civilization.
tzs|6 years ago
pndy|6 years ago
I believe that the closest thing that existed was French Republican calendar [1], accompanied by decimal time [2]. The Swatch Internet Time [3] which uses decimal minute at its base is also worth mentioning - it's almost forgotten nowadays.
[1] - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/French_Republican_calendar
[2] - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Decimal_time
[3] - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Swatch_Internet_Time
nradov|6 years ago
karimmaassen|6 years ago
And I say that as a purist and nitpicker who loves everything being perfect and organized.
unknown|6 years ago
[deleted]
trymas|6 years ago
Sounds similar, and IMHO a bit better, because every month is the same and has only one leap day, instead of a whole leap week.
kingludite|6 years ago
james_s_tayler|6 years ago
This sounds great except the fact it would be a complete nightmare for developers the world over.
Rerarom|6 years ago
wmf|6 years ago
aidenn0|6 years ago
dvh|6 years ago
saagarjha|6 years ago
Rerarom|6 years ago
lovecg|6 years ago