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Thread: The Calendar Started at Year 1!
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12-29-2009, 01:13 PM #1
The Calendar Started at Year 1!
Why are we being bombarded by "Best of the Decade" type crap from the stupid media? Are people really that retarded that they don't understand that there's still one more year left in this decade? 2010 is NOT the start of a new decade goddamnit!
Look it's simple... 2010... they even put in the number 10 to make it easier.
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12-29-2009 01:13 PM # ADS
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12-29-2009, 01:43 PM #2
Re: The Calendar Started at Year 1!
Originally Posted by Iceaxe
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12-29-2009, 01:56 PM #3
But what about 1970, was that one of the sixties or the seventies? Years from now will we think of 2010 as part of the aughties or just great vision?
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12-29-2009, 02:37 PM #4Originally Posted by erial
But I stopped trying to explain that to the average air sucking Walmart shopper long ago.
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12-29-2009, 02:50 PM #5
Re: The Calendar Started at Year 1!
Originally Posted by Iceaxe
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12-29-2009, 03:05 PM #6
So when I was born I was really age 1?
That's how the Chinese do it anyway. Just thought I'd throw that out there.
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12-29-2009, 03:13 PM #7
I think most people use the word "decade" as defined in the dictionary rather than making up their own definition. That could be the cause of your frustration, Iceaxe. Seriously, look it up, and I don't think you'll find any requirement that a decade be defined relative to any particular starting point.
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12-29-2009, 03:40 PM #8
Oh.... I think I understand now.... so you are arguing for the illogical concept of time rather than a mathematical one?
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12-29-2009, 04:05 PM #9
Re: The Calendar Started at Year 1!
Originally Posted by Iceaxe
I see what your saying, but it gets kind of confusing when you say 70's and what you really mean is 1961 - 1970. so when you throw around the word decade just insert "ten year(s)"
just found this for you.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Decade
both have there place but both are right and/or wrong depending on how they're used
a cultural reference, an ordinal reference
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12-29-2009, 06:14 PM #10
The 1970's were the 10 years that begun with the 197_'s. I don't know if there's any other way to explain it.
The argument however, is when did an imaginary 10 year period start and finish.
A decade begun on May 3rd 1973 and ended May 2nd 1983. It's still a decade.
No matter how you look at it, it has been 10 years since we entered "the year" 2000, and so December 31st 2009 at 11:59:59 pm will be one complete decade from the beginning of 2000.
As far as the argument goes, has it been 2000 years since the beginning, that's irrelevant because we measure "The Year of Our Lord" 2000, whether you're Christian or not. Before this, time was measured since other significant events like certain changes in government.
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12-29-2009, 06:53 PM #11Originally Posted by Sombeech
I'm going to include 2010 in the teens, and 1970 in the '70s. I'm not an "average air sucking Walmart shopper", but neither am I pedantic. Common usage works for me.
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12-30-2009, 05:02 AM #12
Time begins at zero, not one. For example, if I have a kid that's less than one year old, he has still acquired age, whether it's two minutes, two weeks, or two months. With that in mind, 1-1-70 would be the first day of the seventies, and 12-31-79, would be the last day of the seventies. Thus it's entirely appropriate for the best stories of the decade to be aired now.
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12-30-2009, 06:46 AM #13
..
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12-30-2009, 08:23 AM #14Originally Posted by jimflint1
The concept of zero as a number & value didn't happen until 9th century.
So which decade only had 9 years?
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12-30-2009, 08:38 AM #15Originally Posted by trackrunner
If something happened last month, the 1 year count is not in effect. The "year 1" only starts after it's been 1 year since the significant event, and in our case, "The Year of Our Lord". We could call it the Common Era, but it's still the same measurement.
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12-30-2009, 08:44 AM #16
Let's say for some reason we decided to change our whole calendar, and start counting time from some significant event, like the city of Atlantis rising from the ocean or making contact with another alien life form on March 2 2011.
On March 2 2021, it will be 10 years since.... and if we would count that as "10 years after". On another note, 10 years after, would also be "in the 11th year".
That's the real argument. Am I 33 years old, or am I in my 34th year of age?
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12-30-2009, 11:28 AM #17Originally Posted by Iceaxe
Walmart pharmacist: What?
Iceaxe: You know, whadyacallit, Niagara, the blue pill thingie.
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12-30-2009, 11:32 AM #18Originally Posted by erial
Young, single, well to-to-do, professional athlete.... yeah... the 80's were a tough time in my life....
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12-30-2009, 12:34 PM #19Originally Posted by trackrunner
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12-30-2009, 03:55 PM #20Originally Posted by jimflint1
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