Aeolius
Adventurer
Seule said:...basically, it's two arbitrary numbers, and an arbitrary scale between them.
What are hours, minutes, and seconds then?

Seule said:...basically, it's two arbitrary numbers, and an arbitrary scale between them.
Also an arbitrary scale (although the start and end points aren't), the main difference is that it has a REALLY large installed user base, i.e. almost everyone.Aeolius said:What are hours, minutes, and seconds then?![]()
Seule said:And Kelvin takes the size of the degrees from Celsius, thus proving it to be the superior system... it's got subsystems (Kelvin)!
S'Mon said:Being fairly familiar with both systems, I find Metric vastly superior for calculations, but Imperial is more organic, being based off measurements of the human body...
Kemrain said:Really? I find a measurement based on the states of water to be fairly arbitrary. Kelven is based around absolute zero, right? I think that's more intuitive than a water based system.
I guarantee that this is entirely cultural. The fact that imperial units are based on someone's human body doesn't make them any more (or less) intuitive. Being used to either is the only factor. A kilo is the amount ot pasta you buy. A hecto (100 gr) is the amount of cheese. A liter is a small bottle (and it weighs 1 kg), two liters is a large one. A half is what you order for a beer. A quarter is what you order for wine at a restaurant. A millimeter is just big enough to be seen clearly. Zero celsius is where you have to be careful while you drive, 100 is when you put the aforementioned pasta into the water. Give me any system, and I can find you any number of instances where its units are "more useful". Everyday life is composed of such a huge number of things that whatever you're measuring them with, you are bound to find something that has, less or more, length/weight/whatever "1".S'mon said:Being fairly familiar with both systems, I find Metric vastly superior for calculations, but Imperial is more organic, being based off measurements of the human body - inches are less fiddly than cm, a pound is a more useful weight than a kilo, a pint is a more sensible drink than a liter (although I'm persuadable there)- feet & yards are more useful than meters, stone are more useful than kilograms, miles are easier to deal with than km - a mile is the distance you can walk before you're 'on a walk'. Although the US apparently doesn't use stone, and measuring people's weight in pounds seems very awkward to me.
KaeYoss said:They're right. My pocked calculator says so (it has a handy sticker with metric conversions on the inside of the lid)
As for the money, we're even more medieval than that. We don't really have coins show up that much. We use the values more for accounting than for what the characters are actually finding, which would tend to be things like furs, ingots, jewelry, silks, etc. With the languages, we certainly do it that way. There are a few <i>linguae francae</i>, but nothing like Common.Gez said:For everyone who say feet and pounds get the medieval feel better, I have to say...
Why do you use platinum/gold/silver/copper, then? You should use pounds, pence, and shillings for coins (1 pound=20 shillings=240 pence), and guineaus, crowns, sovereigns, halfpennies, and farthings, etc. And financial money (the one used for accounting, loans, debts, etc.) was different and disconnected from the coinage.
Then, to be even more medieval, if you move a two week walk away from a place, you arrive in a land where people speak a different language, or at least a different dialect of the same language. Common? What's this?
Cor Azer said:How worn is your pocket calculator? Note that mathematically, the formulae:
degC = 5/9(degF - 32)
and
degC = 5/9 degF - 32
are not equivalent.
Hmm. Or Diablo II with its "Holzkopf Baumfaust"?KaeYoss said:Neither did I, but I know a couple of people who do. That's where I found out that they translated blackguard with "Finsterer Streiter" (which always reminds me of "wer hat Angst vor'm Schwarzen Mann") And a couple of other atrocities.
That's why I got the US Version of NWN, too. Ever since that "Gleich gibts mächtich ähn off de Rübe" voiceset in Baldur's Gate, I prefer the English versions of D&D CRPG's.
You mean I should remember - but I don`t.KaeYoss said:But you must remember that the Imperial pound is not 0.5 kg, but 0.4536 kg.
KaeYoss said:The shorter imperial units inch and foot are easy enough: 1" = 2.5cm (not exactly, but close enough for converting a character's height), and the feet/10*3 = meters rule is easy enough, too.
LazarusLong said:Remember that the original definition of "one meter" was "one ten-millionth of the distance measured on the Earth's surface from the north pole to the equator, through Greenwich, England." Personally, I think "the distance light travels in 1/299792458 of one second" is slightly less arbitrary, but it's arbitrary nonetheless.