• Val@anarchist.nexus
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    4 hours ago

    A year is a rotation of seasons. It has nothing to do with the day-night cycle. That should absolutely be separate.

    And the 365.2422 isn’t a math error. It’s a mathematic ratio, rotation around the sun / rotation around itself. and it should absolutely be upheld.

    • Clent@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      4 hours ago

      The mathematical error os not basing our time counting on that ratio. The number is only 365.2422 because our second, hours, days are too long/short.

      We can just decide we want one rotation to be exactly 366 units and then work backwards from there to determine new units.

      • brsrklf@jlai.lu
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        3 hours ago

        So you’d support a “day” unit of time that has no relation with the times the sun is rising and setting?

        if your “day” is exactly a 365th or 366th of a year, you’ll have to work with with the fact a specific hour like 12PM would gradually deviate to be any time from sun’s zenith to the middle of the night.

      • moonshadow@slrpnk.net
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        3 hours ago

        Days are defined by a different natural cycle, that of the earth’s rotation around its axis. That happens 365.2422 times every time we go around the sun. You can’t just assign the length of a day to something more convenient

      • Val@anarchist.nexus
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        3 hours ago

        A day is defined as a single rotation around earths axis. A year is a single rotation around the sun. The 356.2422 is the result of those two definitions. Earth takes 356.2422 rotations around its axis to rotate around the sun. That is a fact. You could define a unit to be 366th of a rotation around the sun, you could even call it a day, but as a result you lose the reason a day is a useful unit: It’s the time it takes for earth to spin around its axis, a far more useful definition than 366th of a year.

        • erusuoyera@sh.itjust.works
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          32 minutes ago

          I propose we make the calender a nice round 360 days, then have a roughly 5-6 day holiday for new New year around the spring equinox.