>“It was contended," says Dr. Peacock, " by Paucton, in his Mẻtrologie, that the side of the Great Pyramid was the exact 1/500th part of a degree of the meridian, and that the founders of that mighty monument designed it as an imperishable standard of measures of length.
>Newton was trying to uncover the unit of measurement used by those constructing the pyramids. He thought it was likely that the ancient Egyptians had been able to measure the Earth and that, by unlocking the cubit of the Great Pyramid, he too would be able to measure the circumference of the Earth.
Probably because 12 is a much better base than 10. 12 can be divided by 2, 3, 4 and 6 and still results in whole numbers, which helps a lot when doing rounding and fraccional numbers. The only reason we use base 10 is because is much easier to count with our fingers.
Because it traverses the distance twice would be my guess. If you show someone a pendulum going through 3 periods and asked a group of people a generic question like “how many times did it move” without clarifying what you meant I would bet maybe half the people would say 6 as long as everyone counted correctly.
https://www.ukbiblestudents.co.uk/Great%20Pyramid/chapter%20...
>“It was contended," says Dr. Peacock, " by Paucton, in his Mẻtrologie, that the side of the Great Pyramid was the exact 1/500th part of a degree of the meridian, and that the founders of that mighty monument designed it as an imperishable standard of measures of length.
https://www.theguardian.com/science/2020/dec/06/revealed-isa...
>Newton was trying to uncover the unit of measurement used by those constructing the pyramids. He thought it was likely that the ancient Egyptians had been able to measure the Earth and that, by unlocking the cubit of the Great Pyramid, he too would be able to measure the circumference of the Earth.
A standard free measure for distance? Sounds dubious.
No. The other way around. Two seconds is the period of a pendulum with a length of two Sumerian cubits.
(One meter is thus two Sumerian cubits, but that's an artifact due to us still using Sumerian time measurements.)
P.S. I don't know why Sumerians used a factor of two. Americans still divide the day into two 12 hour spans, according to Sumerian fashion.
P.P.S. One second is 1/(2*12*60*60) of a solar day. 12 and 60 were "round numbers" in Sumer; they used sexagesimal counting.
Probably because 12 is a much better base than 10. 12 can be divided by 2, 3, 4 and 6 and still results in whole numbers, which helps a lot when doing rounding and fraccional numbers. The only reason we use base 10 is because is much easier to count with our fingers.
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Because it traverses the distance twice would be my guess. If you show someone a pendulum going through 3 periods and asked a group of people a generic question like “how many times did it move” without clarifying what you meant I would bet maybe half the people would say 6 as long as everyone counted correctly.