The Imperial System is Inferior to the Metric System
The debate is finished. The distribution of the voting points and the winner are presented below.
After 2 votes and with 8 points ahead, the winner is...
- Publication date
- Last updated date
- Type
- Standard
- Number of rounds
- 5
- Time for argument
- One week
- Max argument characters
- 10,000
- Voting period
- One month
- Point system
- Multiple criterions
- Voting system
- Open
Is the metric system better than the Imperial System? American patriotism says no, but basic logic and reason says yes. Let's talk about that.
First, we have the unit for length. The unit for length is defined as a ten millionth of the distance from the equator to either of the poles.
The inch is one twelfth of a foot, and is equal to two things: 1. the length of the average man's thumb. 2. three grains of barley laid end to end. So, alternatively, instead of using your feet to measure things, you could also use your thumbs to measure things.
Despite all of these things, people will still use precise rulers to measure things in Imperial measurements, because again, it's only a certain type of person that will be able to easily use their body to measure things. It's only good for approximate values, not precise ones. If you want precise values, you're going to have to use rulers, which beat the entire purpose of the Imperial System. Not to mention, converting between units is a nightmare.
[A] mile is defined as 5,280 feet. WHAT??? What kind of random and specific number is that? Sure, the ancient people have their reasons, but we are not the ancient people, and we shouldn't have to deal with these kinds of numbers.
I must clarify that when I was defining the magnitude of each unit within the systems of measurement and what they represented, I was explaining what their original definition was. We simply changed the definitions, but kept the units exactly the same (except for a bit recently when they changed the kilogram, and apparently some others). As far as I'm aware, they never did that with the Imperial System though, and so the magnitude of the units have remained the same. It's just their modern definitions that are different.
If I introduced [Papua New Guineans] to the metric system, what could be done. . . is define the prefix "deca" as five instead of ten, define "hecto" as 25 (which is their hundred), define "kilo" as 125 (which is their thousand), and so on.
We live in a modern world now where approximate values of regular human activities aren't very good definers of units of measurement, which is why 1,000 paces isn't that great of a basis for a unit of measurement in today's modern world.
Further, a foot is 12 inches for a good reason. 12 is an 'antiprime' number, a natural number with more divisors than any smaller natural number. So, a third of a foot is 0.3333.... feet, but you can convert to inches and just write 4 inches. The decimal terminates when you convert the units. This is impossible under the metric system.
And, as for time, there actually isn't any metric/Imperial specific time, both America and most others use seconds, minutes, and hours, which is why I didn't even bring it up. I'm not sure why you decided to bring that up, because both systems use it.
Sure, converting from feet to miles or vice-versa might not be easy to do in your head, but how often is it actually necessary? The distances that tend to be measured in miles are rarely well-represented in feet. If I say the distance from New York to Chicago is roughly 711 miles, are you going to complain that you can't figure out in five seconds that that's 3,754,080 feet? No, because why would you measure that distance in feet? The metric system, however, does require you to state that the distance is about 1.144 million meters. It just allows you to say 1,144 km for short.
We can easily imagine a system wherein a minute is 10 or 100 seconds, and an hour is 10 or 100 minutes, and perhaps even define a day like so. But, would such a system actually be better? Would most people want to switch over to such a system? I believe the answer to both questions is no, for a simple reason: Our definition of time is made to be easily divisible into fractions and fits our Earth day well.[...]To be sure, there is a bit of a trade-off between having conversion factors that are highly composite and having conversion factors that make mental math easier. The imperial system focuses on the former, while the metric system prioritizes the latter. However, I would argue that the former is actually more important. After all, humans invented systems of measurement specifically so that they could do math with them and describe things precisely. If you are measuring, you are doing math. Maybe it is slightly easier to multiply by 10 than by 3, but does that make a system that focuses entirely on 10 inherently, innately superior? My opponent seems to think so, but he doesn't provide a justification for this belief. I believe that focusing on divisible units is more important, as it allows you to create a system with different units that are tailored to different purposes, and still express a fraction of one unit as a whole number of a different unit. This is very useful when it comes to measuring things!
Arguments: Con wins this one too, not by a lot, but still won. I don’t want my votes to look reflective of both debaters performances, both did very good, but Con won by a little in each category, so I have to award points for that. Con won this category specifically through refutations. Pro started out strong with the point that it is easier to do calculations, but Con was able to refute lots of these other points, like the units accuracy and the base 10 numbering system.
Sources: Con won this one. They had more sources, but also from some more credible places. This isn’t a debate that really needs a lot of sources, but Con still did win.
Legibility: I’m just going to waive this category because there wasn’t any excessive mistakes that hurt readability, and I think unless someone really screws up, it’s kinda pointless.
Conduct: I really didn’t want to award this point to anybody, because you both were great here, but to quote the voting guidelines: “The disrespect of even a single forfeiture necessitates this penalty unless there is reason to withhold it.”. I don’t believe pro meant anything by the forfeiture, but I don’t really have a choice here.
Thank you for voting!
Did you mean to put argument points and accidently did source points?
Also why do you think con won?
Yeah, I just kinda forgot about the Fahrenheit and Celsius. The logical integrity of the Celsius scale is that water freezes at 0 and boils at 100, but the advantage of Fahrenheit is that the range of temperature is larger, so it's easier to refer to the weather in ranges of ten. Overall interesting.
Thanks again for the debate. It was an interesting one. I can honestly say this is the only metric vs. imperial debate I've ever seen where the barleycorn and the typographical point got mentioned more than Fahrenheit and Celsius, lol. Usually, that becomes a major point of contention, but in this debate it hardly came up at all. I mentioned Fahrenheit and Celsius briefly in round 1 and then they never got brought up again. I can honestly say I wasn't expecting that, though I was totally prepared to defend Fahrenheit.
GG, I'll be done debating for a while.
Bibliography
(1) https://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/Geo4/5/74/contents/enacted
(2) https://web.archive.org/web/20200609181755/https://qz.com/1458672/the-history-of-the-international-prototype-kilogram/
(3) https://www.nist.gov/pml/wmd/metric/upload/frn-59-5442-1959.pdf [NOTE: opens a pdf]
(4) https://web.archive.org/web/20180224003632/http://www.sf.airnet.ne.jp/ts/language/number/ndom.html
(5) https://wals.info/feature/131A#2/33.1/146.4
(6) https://www.bipm.org/en/committees/cg/cgpm/26-2018/resolution-1
(7) https://www.etymonline.com/word/kilo-#etymonline_v_35298
(8) https://www.etymonline.com/word/centi-#etymonline_v_27865
(9) https://iopscience.iop.org/article/10.1088/1681-7575/ac6afd
I'm very sorry you did that. You're going to lose a conduct point now.
I completely forgot about this debate, I was doing other stuff
My parents went camping for memorial day weekend. I went to visit them on Saturday. Other than that, I just chilled at home for the most part.
By the way, you're running out of time to post an argument. I figured I'd let you know.
Like every other weekend, except my parents went on vacation for a couple days this week and last week, but we stayed home.
That makes sense to me, considering it was a bit shorter than your other rounds. I meant to have my R3 arguments up earlier, but I didn't quite get around to working on it.
How was your Memorial Day weekend?
That latest one I wrote on my phone.
Honestly, you're not even wrong
Bro is a PHD procrastinator :skull:
Yeah, I didn't get my argument posted when I had wanted to. It's not because I was trying to trick you or anything, though, I'm just really, REALLY bad when it comes to procrastination. Even in my adult life, I haven't quite managed to kick the habit. That being said, I promised I wouldn't forfeit and I fully intend to keep that promise. I am sorry for making you wait longer than necessary. However, you did agree on the one week time limit, and that benefits you as much as it benefits me, so I'm not quite sure how I could even 'trick' you in the first place.
It's Monday now. You're running out of time. But just so you know, I'm not falling for the "Wait until they can't respond" trick.
Thanks for accepting my offer. I'm at work rn (on break) but I'll try to get my opening argument published by Friday. Though, depending on how busy I am, it might have to wait until Saturday.