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CHAP. XIII - OF THE CALENDAR

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  29 August 2010

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Summary

(627.) Time, like distance, may be measured by comparison with standards of any length, and all that is requisite for ascertaining correctly the length of any in. terval, is to be able to apply the standard to the interval throughout its whole extent, without overlapping on the one hand, or leaving unmeasured vacancies on the other; to determine, without the possible error of a unit, the number of integer standards which the interval admits of being interposed between its beginning and end; and to estimate precisely the fraction, over and above an integer, which remains when all the possible integers are subtracted.

(628.) But though all standard units of time are equally possible, theoretically speaking, all are not, practically, equally convenient. The tropical year and the solar day are natural units, which the wants of man and the business of society force upon us, and compel us to adopt as our greater and lesser standards for the measurement of time, for all the purposes of civil life; and that, in spite of inconveniencies which, did any choice exist, would speedily lead to the abandonment of one or other. The principal of these are their incommensurability, and the want of perfect uniformity in one at least of them.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2009
First published in: 1833

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