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Comment by Dalewyn

3 days ago

This sums it up. Metric is nice and clean tenths, but the real world is seldomly easily expressed in clean tenths.

Another example: The feet is cleanly divisible in thirds, quarters, and twelfths, which is greatly appreciated in industry and particularly construction.

Also to be bluntly mundane, almost everyone can just look down and have a rough measure of a foot which is good enough for daily use.

Also, the "sterility" of metric doesn't do it any sentimental favours. Japan loves measuring size/volume in Tokyo Domes, for example.

Not really, I have no idea what a foot is. But I can just look at yhe tiles and know they are 1*1 meter

  • Who cares? It's what the indicator says, I don't need to visualize feet to do calculations and talk to the tower about them.

    If you can see a 1x1m tile from the cockpit, you're dead.

  • If you're an amputee I truly am sorry for you and hope the handicap hasn't disrupted your life too much.

    Jokes(...?) aside though, your absolute deference to precision is an example of why metric flies over people's heads. Feets, Tokyo Domes, arguably even nautical miles and so on are relatable at a human level unlike metric which is too nice and clean.

    • This sort of argument is odd to someone in a country which uses both, where a yard is intuitively "a bit smaller than a metre", a pint corresponds to a pint glass or "about half a litre" rather than anything meaningful and I'm aware that a rod and a furlong are things but have absolutely no idea what they correspond to. A foot is comfortably bigger than the average foot size, and an inch really isn't an easier unit to approximate than a centimeter

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    • One meter is about one long step for an adult. To approximate the length of a field, you just walk along it with big steps and count. It will not be correct, but pretty close. A cm is a little bit smaller than the width of your index finger. It's all bout what you are used to. Metric doesn't "fly over people's head" where metric is the standard way to measure things, but inches, feet, gallons, pounds, miles fly over our head because we are not used to it so don't have any frame of reference.