[LEAPSECS] drift of TAI
Rob Seaman
seaman at noao.edu
Mon Sep 15 13:12:15 EDT 2008
On Sep 15, 2008, at 9:52 AM, John Cowan wrote:
> Rob Seaman scripsit:
>
>> Decimal and sexagesimal notation persist because over centuries and
>> millennia lay people have demonstrated the ability to reach a minimal
>> level of competency. Which is to say that, for whatever reason, they
>> are better tailored to our purposes.
>
> That's vulgar Darwinism. Base 10, like English spelling and the
> QWERTY
> keyboard, are good enough, and may even constitute a local minimum.
> But it's absurd to suppose that they are necessarily a global minimum.
Which was the point of some of my earlier comments.
Binary is, however, not good enough for day-to-day human purposes.
And to bring this back to the topic of the mailing list, "good enough"
civil timekeeping requires a close mimicry of mean solar time. Vulgar
or not, Darwin certainly recognized the selective value of mimicry.
> Do you suppose that the reason that francophones go on speaking
> French is
> because in some sense French is better suited to those particular
> people
> than English, or Dogon, or Mandarin Chinese? Hardly. They continue
> to speak French because children continue to acquire French from their
> francophone parents and peers.
And do we expect society to be show any less inertia in its diurnality?
Rob
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