This is topic To Hades with Leap Years in forum Books, Films, Food and Culture at Hatrack River Forum.


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Posted by kaioshin00 (Member # 3740) on :
 
quote:
Astronomer proposes replacing leap year with Newton Week
By Alex Dominguez, Associated Press
BALTIMORE — An astronomy professor is hoping to convince the world to switch to a new calendar that would take the guesswork out of when Christmas and other holidays fall each year.

Replacing the extra day added to the calendar every Leap Year with a week every five or six years that professor Richard Henry calls "Newton Week," in honor of Sir Isaac Newton, would make every day of the year fall on the same day of the week.

And New Year's Day 2006 would be the perfect time to start the new calendar, he says, because in both the current calendar system and on his new calendar, that day falls on a Sunday.

Henry acknowledges he is a "bit of Grinch" because he designed his calendar so that Christmas and New Year's Day would fall on Sundays.

"You know what happens toward the end of the year. A lot of people like the mess at the end of the year because it gives them time off," he said.

Henry said he knows he doesn't have much hope of succeeding. But, he argues, the new calendar would save countless hours of work worldwide.

"You'd have one calendar on your wall and you'd never change it," he said.

Henry said he knew he could not get rid of the seven-day week in the interests of efficiency because of mandates in the major religions for a weekly sabbath.

Instead, he decided to shorten the year to 364 days. The months would remain the same, although every third month would be 31 days and the rest 30 days long. The week that would replace the extra Leap Year day would be inserted between June and July every five or six years, depending on a rotation Henry has worked out until the year 9998.

Members of one religion might find reason to object. Druids, who keep careful tabs on the solstices, the shortest and longest days of the year, would find those days varying under Henry's calendar.

"That never occurred to me," Henry said. "Here I pay all this attention to the Jews, Christians and Muslims, and I forgot about the Druids."

Henry, who said he was raised a Protestant but does not practice any religion, said simplifying the scheduling of classes he teaches, and not religion, was the motivating factor in developing the new calendar.

"Usually, it's the same course and the next year the homework is going to be due on different dates. I have to go through this every time and redo it because the calendar shifts around," Henry said. "I said, 'Is this really necessary?' And, to my astonishment, I discovered it really isn't."

One objection, however, has been hard to overcome, he said.

"Some people really don't like the idea their birthday will fall on the same day of the week," he said. "They like the variety."

Maya Dewan, 22, is one of those. The AmeriCorps volunteer said she wouldn't mind if her birthday fell on a Friday or Saturday.

"It would be just depressing if you had your birthday on a Monday, or a Wednesday," she said while sitting at a Baltimore coffee shop with friends.

Her friend, Leila Ahoor, 21, agreed. "It seems so unnecessary, is scheduling that difficult?"

Henry's calendar reform proposal has a Web site at henry.pha.jhu.edu.

Lazy teachers [No No]
But Newton did do a lot of stuff.
 
Posted by eslaine (Member # 5433) on :
 
What a load. [Roll Eyes]

Tolkien had a much better calendar.
 
Posted by Jhai (Member # 5633) on :
 
I personally enjoy the playing card calendar developed by Jostein Gaarder in The Solitarie Mystery; anything with a thirteen-month calendar just makes life simpler.
 
Posted by Tatiana (Member # 6776) on :
 
All we have to do is wait. The earth's rotation is slowing down ever so gradually. In a few millennia, maybe, there will be exactly 365 days in a year. Or maybe in a million years or so. Eventually the Earth might slow down so much that it presents always one face toward the sun, the way the moon does toward the earth. But don't be alarmed, the sun will most likely explode before that happens. [Smile]
 
Posted by Tatiana (Member # 6776) on :
 
"Currently the change in the rotation rate increases the length of day by some 2.3 milliseconds per day per century."

So to lose 1/4 of a day (roughly) over the course of a year it should take some ...

24/4 * 3600 / 2.3e-3 / 365 centuries or 2.5 million years. See? Nothing to worry about!

[ December 30, 2004, 06:04 PM: Message edited by: Tatiana ]
 
Posted by mr_porteiro_head (Member # 4644) on :
 
Well, I'm comforted.
 
Posted by Tater (Member # 7035) on :
 
quote:
depending on a rotation Henry has worked out until the year 9998.
Am I the only one that doesn't think time will last that long?

I think this idea stinks. [Mad]

[ December 30, 2004, 06:02 PM: Message edited by: Tater ]
 
Posted by Stan the man (Member # 6249) on :
 
I think he has waaaaay too much time on his hands. If he's a professor, why doesn't he teach? That soundds like a much more beneficial idea.
 
Posted by Dagonee (Member # 5818) on :
 
The tsunami may have sped up the earth's rotation by 3 microseconds.
 
Posted by Da_Goat (Member # 5529) on :
 
Well...I like the idea.
 
Posted by Tater (Member # 7035) on :
 
Tell why you like the idea.

All I see is a waste of time. But, my schedule never presents me with huge problems.

I suppose I could be open to this if I looked at it from another angle. I'm just not seeing any other angles here. [Dont Know]
 
Posted by kaioshin00 (Member # 3740) on :
 
A waste of time ... are we punning?
 
Posted by Tater (Member # 7035) on :
 
If there are puns here, I missed 'em.
 
Posted by TomDavidson (Member # 124) on :
 
"Tell why you like the idea."

Well, in all fairness, it IS clearer, more consistent, and more efficient (which is a bad thing for people looking for free holiday time) than the current system. It's not as useful as the many time reckoning systems posited by sci-fi authors, who generally do away with tradition altogether, but it's actually an interesting compromise between the two extremes.
 
Posted by MidnightBlue (Member # 6146) on :
 
I don't know that I mind the proposed system either. Holidays would always land on the same days, and if you got a planner for your birthday and didn't need one for that year you could still use it the next. Plus, every few years you get an extra week of summer vacation.
 
Posted by Tater (Member # 7035) on :
 
Yea.. but what if your birthday was on a wednesday? Blah. [Razz]

or, I know a guy born on Friday the 13th. What if it was ALWAYS Friday the 13th. Talk about your bad luck! [Razz]

Okay, so maybe I don't have very good reasons to be against it.. hmm.. i'm gonna try to think of some..
 
Posted by MidnightBlue (Member # 6146) on :
 
If my birthday was on a Wednesday, my (future) coworkers would have to buy me presents because they would be sure to see me.
 
Posted by Tater (Member # 7035) on :
 
and they wouldn't see you monday tuesday thursday friday?
 


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