There are many timekeeping traditions across many cultures.  For most, the move 
to mean time and the implementation of hours of uniform length were the breaks 
from tradition.  A good demonstration of this is Japanese clocks before and 
after 1873.   

During Pope Gregory's life, there were many different ways of reckoning 
hours--Italian hours, Nuremberg hours, French hours, and canonical hours.  For 
many clocks of that period--particularly the complicated guild masterpiece 
clocks, sidereal time and astrology for purposes of calculating natal charts 
was as important as solar time.  Our time system is not a product of tradition 
but relatively recent choices. 

Yet, since the history of timekeeping tends to be told in terms of the 
techniques and technologies that were adopted rather than those that were 
discarded, it looks like there is great historical depth and tradition to our 
current system.  If one takes into account all the timekeeping techniques and 
preferences that have fallen by the wayside, then the only traditions seem to 
be ongoing discussions and arguments about how to reckon time.

In that sense, the leap second debate, not leap seconds, is traditional.

Cheers,

Kevin






________________________________________
From: [email protected] [[email protected]] on 
behalf of Brooks Harris [[email protected]]
Sent: Sunday, February 16, 2014 2:14 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [LEAPSECS] Definition of Standard time - Brooks Harris

On 2014-02-16 10:39 AM, Warner Losh wrote:
> On Feb 16, 2014, at 11:20 AM, Brooks Harris wrote:
>> Only a comprehensive plan which aims to fix the obvious and well known 
>> problems is going to head off the "kill Leap Seconds" movement.
> I think the momentum and general conservatism of the powers that be will do 
> more to kill the plan than any other comprehensive plan. the status quo is 
> powerful enough and works well enough that people are unwilling to risk a 
> change.

Maybe. But we're still left with vague and difficult implementations
that have known problems.

>
>> Or will we just roll over and watch 4500 years of timekeeping tradition 
>> evaporate?
> The kill the leap second stuff doesn't kill 4500 years of timekeeping 
> tradition. Leap seconds broke with tradition my making minutes longer than 
> 60s. It accepted there's an error between the time in London and the time we 
> coordinate on and that's OK. The leap second moved one step away from the sun 
> by averaging out the noise into discrete steps.
Right. Well I see it slightly differently. For centuries timekeeping
sought to align the observed positions to some "absolute time
reference", long recognizing the days length didn't divide into a year.
Pope Gregory (partly) fixed that. Then when atomic clocks could keep
very accurate time and astronomical observations were extremely precise
we were finally in a position to quantify the difference between
absolute time and observed rotational position. Integral seconds (Leap
Seconds) was deemed accurate enough to solve the problem for general
purposes. So I see UTC as the latest and greatest version of 4500 years
of timekeeping tradition.

>
> Moving to atomic time doesn't undo 4500 years of timekeeping tradition. In 
> fact, it restores the tradition of all minutes being the same length.
I think it abandons the long sought goal of aligning civil time to the
position of the Sun. The "tradition of all minutes being the same
length" was the best anybody could do. Everyone knew it wasn't exactly
right. UTC solved that.

-Brooks

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