Comment on Don't fix the problem just change the parameters
Warl0k3@lemmy.world 10 hours agoNo, I mean the progression towards the equinoxes - historically the equinoxes were the common way to demark calendar dates, and as a result they’re a useful reference point. Not universal, of course, but still frequently used enough to be useful.
I get you’re arguing because, well, this is the internet and I contradicted you. That’s how it works, our egos are too tied up in our comments alone and it’s too easy to read any tone into a comment that we’d like. We get heated. So in that spirit, let me be explicit that I’m not trying to be rude to you when I say this: You’re oversimplifying the metaphor to make your point.
For example: I’ve been sitting around for a full day, but the damn clock says only twelve minutes have gone by.
You adjust a sundial in the morning, and then can read it from there (assuming it hasn’t been jostled) - but you still have to be aware of the rules and conventions of the system, and work within it’s boundaries. If we arbitrarily dismiss critical parts of it’s operation, there will be no meaning in anything we have to say. The territory of things like “clocks don’t measure time, they measure circles and everything we derive from them is thence wild and baseless speculation”, literally true and I can defend that position until we both die of carefully-measured old age, but so over-reduced as to be completely meaningless.
wischi@programming.dev 8 hours ago
Do you have a link or something that explains “progression towards the equinoxes”. I never heard of that and can’t find anything about it.
Warl0k3@lemmy.world 8 hours ago
You understand that it’s just a description, right? It’s not a term.
wischi@programming.dev 8 hours ago
You can’t just make stuff up and then say “it’s just a description”. It looks like you just remembered precession of the equinoxes wrong and doubled down once somebody called you out on it?
If it’s a description of something, what does “progression of the equinoxes” describe? Astronomically it’s complete gibberish, so I’m not sure what it’s describing.
Warl0k3@lemmy.world 8 hours ago
The significance of the equinox in premodern calendar systems is pretty well established - stonehenge is an easy example of how it was taken into consideration, and was used to mark out significant dates.
I think you might be overthinking what I said. To highlight the absurdity of your question: One day comes after another day. Eventually, on one of those, days the arrangement of celestial bodies wherein the length of the day equinox will happen. From wikipedia:
We’ll reach that arrangement again as time progresses. The progression of time, will bring us to the point in which that arrangement occurs. If you would prefer, “progression towards the equinoxes” is a slightly less florid way of expressing the same concept.