Wikipedia tells me it was come up with in 1923, long after both global trade and the industrial revolution. You need all the countries to agree on the same calendar system or commerce is really hindered. It was way too late to change in 1923.
The French tried to change the calendar to something more sensible and closer to metric after the French Revolution. It did not last long.
Things seem to work just fine with the calendar we have anyway.
I was responding to you saying humans seem to always divide by 7. It’s an interesting point you make that it’s been done for a long time but we are saying two things.
You actually made me think of something I’m gonna go ask the Hebrew specialist, did 7 days in the Hebrew Bible mean 7. I know 7 is their number for a lot just like 10,000 in Chinese. :)
It would have worked if the rest of the world (or at least the major European powers) were on board. But since most of them were still ruled by kings, that wasn’t going to happen.
And Christianity being a major religion in Europe which teaches a 7 day week, and I believe Islam in the east does the same. China also used the 7 day week at this point, too.
Wikipedia tells me it was come up with in 1923, long after both global trade and the industrial revolution. You need all the countries to agree on the same calendar system or commerce is really hindered. It was way too late to change in 1923.
The French tried to change the calendar to something more sensible and closer to metric after the French Revolution. It did not last long.
Things seem to work just fine with the calendar we have anyway.
programmer’s eye twitches
I meant in terms of commerce. You IT people are on your own.
Oh we know lol
I don’t think the french calendar would have ever worked, as humans seem to always divide their working into 7 day weeks.
It was never popular even in France, for a simple reason: the week became 10 days but the weekly rest day was still only 1.
That’s a bold statement. This was a western invention that spread from Greece around the 5th century. Not always
It’s literally recorded in the Torah, which was at least 1000 years before that
The Torah is still in the west dog. You think the whole world is Europe and the Middle East? China divided them into weeks of ten.
Thought you were talking about in general, my bad
I was responding to you saying humans seem to always divide by 7. It’s an interesting point you make that it’s been done for a long time but we are saying two things.
You actually made me think of something I’m gonna go ask the Hebrew specialist, did 7 days in the Hebrew Bible mean 7. I know 7 is their number for a lot just like 10,000 in Chinese. :)
My lemmy client only shows the comment without context, so unless I have a good memory, etc.
lol, I have a horrible memory so I get you. Kind of you to explain! :)
It would have worked if the rest of the world (or at least the major European powers) were on board. But since most of them were still ruled by kings, that wasn’t going to happen.
And Christianity being a major religion in Europe which teaches a 7 day week, and I believe Islam in the east does the same. China also used the 7 day week at this point, too.