
This is Mind Boggling

Uncle Al



The whole text is interesting but I want to point out this particular quote bubble...VoxClamantis wrote: For example, the sun is described as being created on day four. Therefore, "sunset" and "sunrise" stated of days one, two, and three cannot possibly mean a solar day. Moreover, day four would experience a sunset but not necessarily a sunrise. To me this describes a winding-up of the physical world. Perhaps it means that the matter was already distributed as it is, but gravity was slow to exert its effects on all of the solar system. The earth was neither revolving around the sun nor rotating on its axis. So one part of the earth would have sustained life but the other part would not. Then as the earth began revolving and rotating, life would have spread around the globe.
So I called my geologist friend and asked him your question. He says that revolving bodies naturally want to rotate on an axis. This is partly due to the fact that solar satellites (i.e. planets) do not usually have uniform density. One side of the planet can have a different rock substrate or mountains, or water.... So a star's gravity pulls unequally on the planet. This also true of terrestrial satellites (i.e. moons). Also, my pal says that there is a theory that a cosmic object collided with the young earth and added to the rotation. But as the crust cooled and solidified, the magma remains a gyroscopic dynamo with such mass as to make it highly unlikely that it would ever "want" to stop spinning. He then had to abruptly let me go because he had someone looking at his car.moonshadow wrote:The only issue that could come of this in the realm of scientific measure is what I underlined. That being, what set the Earth in motion?
It could, save for the fact that the lunar months don't equate well into growing seasons which are fundamental to societal formation. It would make sense for a hunter/gatherer civilisation, but not for an agrarian one. What a complex web we weave.VoxClamantis wrote:The thirteen-month lunar calendar would make so much more sense.
Even I wouldn't try to foist that one off on humanity -- and it was flawed from the get-go and was flawed for several reasons, most of which beggar the imagination in the misuse of the signed [0] 32-bit integer [1] that was picked back in the early '70s when UNIX was forming up. All in all, that would be a bad plan. 64-bit integers [2] are better.I suppose we could all run on unix epoch time!
Here we have the problem of the notion of the "starting time" for years. What do you pick? And why?So maybe it would be better to standardize our date expression as days/year as in 70.2018 or 2018.70 (March 12, 2018)
There is this, and note that I just tossed that datum out as a hypothetical talking point. Obviously, in a universe of infinite mass compressed into an infinitesimal space time could not exist as we know it, and would be dilating as the thing expanded. But we need something "better" than what we've got at the moment, although it does seem to work moderately well.The math would disagree with you. Of the 11 theorized dimensions, depth, width, and height formed nearly instantaneously with the bang (assuming we all conceive of an identical bang construct). Time, however, did not form as a dimension until much "later" (but it's hard to say "later" since there was no time prior to the time dimension's existence so it's a paradox that time came into existence both sequentially simultaneously and sequentially later).
Modern cosmology tends to disprove this as spinning and accretion seem to be fundamental to the formation of most of the structures we see in the universe today, and our own little backwater solar-system is no exception. The thinking goes that initially the proto-Earth rotated on its axis vastly faster than it does today, and the reason it doesn't now was a cataclysmic impact that spalled the moon off from the proto-Earth. The proximity of the new satellite and it remarkably large mass then slowed the rotational rate of the (still-young) planet to roughly where it is today -- and it's still slowing, mind (that's why we have leap-seconds) as the moon slowly recedes.The earth was neither revolving around the sun nor rotating on its axis. So one part of the earth would have sustained life but the other part would not. Then as the earth began revolving and rotating, life would have spread around the globe. But even then, the solar day would have been so much longer than 24 hours as it would take a while for the earth's mass to reach its rotational speed.
This is the sort of thing you run into here. Cherish it or revile it, but it happens.Yes, I'm quoting myself in this passage to marvel at how skirts brought us to this tangent. I'm not knocking it; I'm just saying that it's quite amusing.
That's what I got from the before-my-lifetime Unix stuff. LOL. They rest I understood.crfriend wrote:-. --- / --- -. . / .... .- ... / .- / -.-. .-.. ..- . / .- -... --- ..- - / - .... .. ... / .- -. -.-. .. . -. - / -.-. --- -- .--. ..- - .. -. --. / ... - ..- ..-. ..-. .-.-.-
.-. .- - .... . .-. / -- --- .-. . / - .... .- -. / -.-- --- ..- / -- .. --. .... - / - .... .. -. -.- / .- -. -.. / .. / .- -- / - .... . / --- -. . / .-- .... --- / .- ..- - .... --- .-. . -.. / - .... . / -- --- .-. ... . / .--. .- -.-. -.- . - / .--. .-. --- - --- -.-. --- .-.. / ... .--. . -.-. / - .... .- - / - .... . / .-. ..-. -.-. / . -.. .. - --- .-. / ... .... --- - / -.. --- .-- -. / .. -. / ..-. .- ...- --- ..- .-. / --- ..-. / - .... . / .. -. ..-. .. -. .. - . / -- --- -. -.- . -.-- / .--. .-. --- - --- -.-. --- .-..VoxClamantis wrote:crfriend wrote:-. --- / --- -. . / .... .- ... / .- / -.-. .-.. ..- . / .- -... --- ..- - / - .... .. ... / .- -. -.-. .. . -. - / -.-. --- -- .--. ..- - .. -. --. / ... - ..- ..-. ..-. .-.-.-
I think we see eye to eye. UNIX is not the be-all and end-all of operating systems.That's what I got from the before-my-lifetime Unix stuff. LOL. They rest I understood.
The Mayans were also located much closer to the equator than many other cultures. A little bit of slop didn't mean as much. It's an interesting concept, though. Did both calendars run on the same stepping? 260 isn't even close to ~365.249.As for the agrarian calendar aspect, however, the ancient Maya ran on dual civic and religious calendars, one of which was 20×13=260 and they managed to do ok.
Geologic ages, life assembling itself from the itty-bitty stuff (dust) and growing more complex and larger and so on.Best Answer: Matter cannot travel faster than the speed of light. But the expansion of the Universe is due to the expansion of *space* itself. And that can happen faster than the speed of light. In fact it did, during a short period called Inflation, very shortly after the Big Bang.
Exactly so. VAX/VMS is.crfriend wrote:UNIX is not the be-all and end-all of operating systems.
Same here. It is the most efficient form that is easily read by most people and not easily misinterpreted. Most often I use the hyphenated version 11-Mar-2018. I use the "20180311" format for almost everything but paper forms destined to be read by someone else, though: file and folder names, digital objects, etc..beachlion wrote:What can you expect from a country where the week starts on a sunday where most of the world uses a monday as a week starter. ISO has some work to do.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ISO_8601
My Dutch calendar hangs next to my wife's calendar (gift from a charity) so there is some confusion on the wall.
To be clear when filling out forms and writing cheques, I use the month abbreviated between the day and the year. 11 MAR 2018.
The problems that can arise from the DD/MM/YY and MM/DD/YY systems is at the very least confusing and at the worst outright dangerous. One of the two needs to fall out of use. This of course will take YYs if not YYYYs.Daryl wrote:We are terribly confused about this in Canada because the US notation in the slashy style is MM/DD/YYYY whereas the official Canadian standard is the more logical (ie. order-of-significance-based) DD/MM/YYYY. One often has to find an exemplar to know which standard is being used, when the day is less than 13. Such is the influence of the behemoth to the south of us.
The problem with that is that it deprives us of a full weekend. I'm a Monday guy.Any sane person knows that Sunday is the first day of the week. Who wants to jump right into work at the beginning of each week? Starting and ending each week with a day off just makes sense.
Ahem. RDOS.Exactly so. VAX/VMS is.crfriend wrote:UNIX is not the be-all and end-all of operating systems.
Couldn't, so I cheated and asked Google. Nice.crfriend wrote:OSIM [0] then arrives and it's back into the rat-race for five days.
[0] Work it out.
Doesn't Canada cover more surface area than the USA, and if so, who is the behemoth of which you speak? But I get what you mean given Canada's population of 30-40 million and the USA's population of 300+ million.Daryl wrote:Such is the influence of the behemoth to the south of us.
It's base and coarse: "Oh s..t it's Monday".VoxClamantis wrote:Couldn't, so I cheated and asked Google. Nice.crfriend wrote:OSIM [0] then arrives and it's back into the rat-race for five days.
[0] Work it out.
If you truly intended your feedback to be friendly, but poorly delivered, demonstrate that by not replying defensivelyVoxClamantis wrote:won't comment again unless pushed? What is that supposed to mean? Are you that easily manipulated? Are your buttons so sensitive that they are pushed by a gentle breeze? Give me a break. No one asked your opinion and you felt like it was you duty to take me to school, but like a peer who wants to be a teacher but does not want to punch the timeclock to do those lesson plans! The difference between a negative review and constructive criticism is the relationship between the parties. To be constructive, there must some form of rapport between the parties, either by longstanding friendship or by solicitation of the feedback. Neither of those premises existed so no, it was not constructive criticism but rather a disdainfully expressed opinion. And I for one make it a point to own my discourse so I won't color this message with that "constructive criticism" crayon. No, I'm just laying it all out there. As I live in the U.S.A., I believe the First Amendment's freedom of speech trumps all else, and as was once said, I may disagree with what you say but I defend to the death your right to say it (attribution disputed, but I choose Voltaire).