Yes, because your completely arbitrary temperature scale is so much better than oursBloody Americans and your backwards unit of measurement . . .
I don't have A/C, but when it's 30 degrees out, I sure wish I did.
Yes, because your completely arbitrary temperature scale is so much better than oursBloody Americans and your backwards unit of measurement . . .
I don't have A/C, but when it's 30 degrees out, I sure wish I did.![]()
What's so special about water that someone based an entire measuring system around it? Whether its Celsius or Fahrenheit I think both system work for their purposes, no matter what you think of the origins of how those systems came to be.
It's based on water under pretty specific conditions. Of course water is important. But water doesn't really have any special relationship with temperature. The freezing point of water isn't 'zero' in any more meaningful of a sense than any other temperature (aside from absolute zero) pulled out of a hat.
The usual (perfectly valid) argument about 'American' units not being easy to work with in base 10 doesn't apply either.
As far as intuitiveness goes, considering we're talking about the weather, I'd argue that puts 0/100 at "about as cold/hot as it gets outside" is more intuitive than the freezing and boiling point of water. The boiling point at least is pretty irrelevant when talking about the weather.
Are you saying the definition of Fahrenheit is not reliable or repeatable? I think Fahrenheit is officially defined in terms of water as well. Calling the freezing point 0 or 32 doesn't change how repeatable it is.It's based on water under pretty specific conditions. Of course water is important. But water doesn't really have any special relationship with temperature. The freezing point of water isn't 'zero' in any more meaningful of a sense than any other temperature (aside from absolute zero) pulled out of a hat.
The usual (perfectly valid) argument about 'American' units not being easy to work with in base 10 doesn't apply either.
As far as intuitiveness goes, considering we're talking about the weather, I'd argue that puts 0/100 at "about as cold/hot as it gets outside" is more intuitive than the freezing and boiling point of water. The boiling point at least is pretty irrelevant when talking about the weather.
Scientific repeatability and reliability is part of the point.
Also remember that metric units are based around water in areas other than temperature. Liquid water, for instance, has a density of 1 gram per cubic centimeter. This means 1 liter of water has a mass of 1 kilogram and occupies 1 cubic meter. See how nice that is?
Sure, we could've used any chemical as our basis, but water has the benefit of being one of the most abundant substances on Earth and is liquid at room temperature, which makes it very easy to measure out precise quantities.
I think that makes a lot more sense than having a bunch of unrelated units of measurement, none of them based on the same chemical or property.
A "metric system" based on something besides water could work just as well, but water's properties make it the most logical choice.
Repairman came by today. Great because today was 90F! Just a little capacitor. The repairman also said that using those high-quality filters were actually making the system over-work, that we should stick with the cheap ones and replace them more often.
I love air-conditioning! But I gotta say, it works so well, that 79-80F is cold enough when it's this hot outside.
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