^Exactly. The choice of which borders to emphasize was made for cultural reasons. If Indians had become the great navigators and globally pervasive culture that made the maps everyone ended up using, then maybe India would be counted as a separate continent and Europe wouldn't. But since Europeans made the maps, they wanted to define themselves as separate from Asia.
And the Ural Mountains weren't the originally defined border between Europe and Asia; that convention is only about 150 years old at most. For much of history the border was placed further west by European mapmakers. But Russian/Soviet cartographers insisted on shifting the border to the east because they wanted Russia to be seen as part of Europe.
And there's no really good geological reason for why (most of) Turkey and the Arabian Peninsula are called part of Asia while countries directly north of Turkey are called part of Europe. That's just geopolitics.
Anyway, on your other point, I've never understood the notion that there's some reason to "feel sorry" for Pluto just because its definition was refined, or that becoming a dwarf planet was a "demotion." Before, Pluto was the last and least of the planets, an afterthought in a category that few astronomers seriously thought it belonged in. Now, it's the original and archetypal member of a whole new category of objects, the champion of its weight class. It's no longer a leftover that astronomers are awkward about, but the stepping stone to an exciting new period of discovery. That's a step up, not a step down.
And the Ural Mountains weren't the originally defined border between Europe and Asia; that convention is only about 150 years old at most. For much of history the border was placed further west by European mapmakers. But Russian/Soviet cartographers insisted on shifting the border to the east because they wanted Russia to be seen as part of Europe.
And there's no really good geological reason for why (most of) Turkey and the Arabian Peninsula are called part of Asia while countries directly north of Turkey are called part of Europe. That's just geopolitics.
Anyway, on your other point, I've never understood the notion that there's some reason to "feel sorry" for Pluto just because its definition was refined, or that becoming a dwarf planet was a "demotion." Before, Pluto was the last and least of the planets, an afterthought in a category that few astronomers seriously thought it belonged in. Now, it's the original and archetypal member of a whole new category of objects, the champion of its weight class. It's no longer a leftover that astronomers are awkward about, but the stepping stone to an exciting new period of discovery. That's a step up, not a step down.
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