Friday 31 August 2012

fun re time etc


The Humble Second Derives Its Name From What Source?

1) Pope Gregory the IV
2) The Royal Society
3) 16th Century Scientists
4) 13th Century Swiss Clockmakers
Get the Answer...
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http://www.howtogeek.com/trivia/the-humble-second-derives-its-name-from-what-source/?utm_source=newsletter&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=300812



Answer: 16th Century Scientists
The history of time tracking and division extends well 4,000 years into the past–the ancient Egyptians divided day and night into 12 hours ans 2,000 years later Greek scientists in the second century were dividing the day into 24 parts–but the appearance of the second, both in measurement and in name, didn’t occur until the 16th century.
Scientists like Francis Bacon and Johannes Kepler used, in their writing, the Latin term “secunda pars minuta” or: the second diminished part. The first diminished part of an hour is, of course, the minute and a second is 1/60th of that 1/60th division. Although mentioned in scientific texts as early as the mid-16th century it wasn’t until the mid-17th century that time pieces were able to consistently and accurately tick off seconds.
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Comments (22)

  1. Mattt H
    This question could have been phrased a lot better.
  2. Ja Liu
    Why is the “second’ hand of the clock named second when it is the third?;-)
  3. Corinna
    So if seconds are called seconds because they are the second diminished part of an hour, then why aren’t hours called firsts because they are the first diminished part of an hour?
    I agree about the phrasing of the question. When I read it I had no idea what they were asking and had to read the answer before going..OH! Seconds of time!
  4. Corinna
    oops – sorry – meant to say minutes should be called firsts. My bad.
  5. nedly
    @Matt. Please elaborate extensively. |-O
  6. hopsingracer
    I’m with everyone else, I read the question and said, “What is a ‘Humble Second’?”
  7. Marklar
    Since we are delving into this topic:
    It is not clear to me why they broke it into 60 minutes and 60 seconds vs 100.
    Why are the “thirds”(or fourths as correctly pointed out by Ja Liu) measured in tenths of a second?
    How did they originally come up with 12 hours in the first place vs a nice round 10?
  8. scott
    The title is very confusing, I had no idea what a “Humble Second” was until I read the answer and realized what they were talking about.
  9. Nic In UK
    Who didn’t pay attention in English lessons then? Had the headline been capitalized properly it would have read “The humble Second derives its name…” then we would have known it was a noun and thus the author was talking about the unit of time that is 1/360th of an hour.
    If the word second had been un-capitalized it would have been clear that the author was not talking about the unit of time, but the adjective as in “second item in a list”.
  10. lesle
    However it happened, hours have 60 minutes. A minute was also further divided into 60 parts, originally called a “Second Minute.” (Second in the sense of second order.) Over time minute was elided; we now just say “second.”
    And that’s really why it’s called a second.
  11. Paul
    Nic in UK
    I am sure there are more than 360 seconds in 1 hour… 1/360th of an hour???
  12. george
    when one of the choices read clock makers…….It only took a second to figure out my second choice was regarding time and not placement. but I second that it could have been phrased better in the first place!
  13. Paul Horbury
    the babylonians about1800BC had a very well developed numerical system base on the base 60. the systemwas devised consciously and under Hammurabi became legal. Sixty can be divided by: 2,3,4,5,6,10,12,15,20,and30.
    The system has survived to the present day though its use for angular measure and time.
  14. M Henri Day
    Given the difficulties most people have in calculating in the sexagesimal system (thank you, dear Sumerians !) I’d like to see the units hours and minutes dropped and replaced by decimal multiplesof the second such as hectoseconds (i e, 100 seconds), kiloseconds, megaseconds, gigaseconds, etc. No doubt it would take some getting used to, but these terms have been employed by some science-fiction writers, and I found it surprisingly easy to adapt….
    Henri
  15. Dic
    Re capitalisation of ‘second’ in the headline, my question is: other than for the opening word, why capitalize at all?
    @Nic in UK: Only Germans capitalize their nouns. Did you learn about the use of the subjunctive in your English lessons, by the way?
  16. tilius
    Seconds, minutes, days, week, fortnight, month, leap / year – approximations of planetary movements around a star.
  17. Kazbah
    Seriously do you guys overthink everything. Call me dumb but I got the question straight up!
  18. Dic
    So did I.
  19. Johnny D
    I did not know what was the question about… And, in my opinion, bad article…
  20. Ed
    He should have stated the question thus:
    Why is 1/60th of a minute called a second?
  21. Doh
    The people here are getting dumber.

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