Because every other SI quantity has "an obsession with round numbers". And the second already defines the SI units Ampere and Metre, so the cleanest solution would be to adopt the second + the usual SI prefixes as the sole unit of time. As for the epoch, maybe zero could be the second the change takes place - that way negative time is "old system era", and positive time is "metric time era".
It's marginally more sane in the same way that the SI is marginally more sane than the US customary system.
Sorry, but I do not think you understand.
The issue is not the system of measurement, the issue is what is being measured.
The day is a unit of time, yes. But it is also a cycle that is pretty intrinsic to human life. Why obliterate it to fit in with your entirely arbitrary measurement system?
I do not restate my height as a meter just so that it can be a round number.
Round numbers in actual reality are pretty much nonsense. So why move away from a relevant measurement just to fit in with a round number or a prefixed version of an SI measurement?
Because it's "marginally more sane"? I am sorry. You may like the idea, but it seems like anything but sane to me.
And traditional dates and time are not necessarily as bad as the imperial system, the problem with which is the totally inconsistant measurements and silly benchmarks (like Farenheit. I hate Farenheit).
The reason that days and years are shaped the way they are, is because they correlate to relevant events. A date counting up from an arbitrary epoch in arbitrary units does not.
Despite some internal inconsistancy, the fact is that traditional time works. It works as a system of timekeeping and a means to set dates. Converting in some instances is annoying, but there are alternatives and for high-precision scientific uses for example, a more exact system can be used. But there is no need to force said system on greater society just because you think the idea is cool.
And seriously, if I were to define a universal base unit of time, I would base it on the day, because the day is a pretty relevant cycle.
Except... whoops! The second
is based on the day. So wait: you're proposing we abandon the day, for a decimal derivative of an arbitrary time unit based on the day.
Marginally sane? :beathead:
You'd learn to think in terms of kiloseconds instead of hours and megaseconds instead of dates eventually, and the generation that grows up with the system wouldn't even miss the old one.
I am positive I would miss it, when my clock tells me to go to sleep because it's the "sane" kilosecond to do so, but it is midday outside.
Also, it is generally more important to me whether something is during a particular day or not, not whether it is during the 45th or 120th hour of the week.
Kiloseconds are too short to describe days, megaseconds far too long.
And also something you should be pretty scared of: the day, the "minute" and the "hour" are accepted for use with the SI.
(as long as they aren't tidally locked)
Do you see any tidally locked planets around here?
I don't. I see even fewer people living on them.
Discrete time zones are useless enough as it is.
Why then, does everyone use them? :dry: