Metrication MattersDear Pat,

I want you to know that I just received your final copy of Metrication Matters, 
I do not doubt that the message is genuine, because it would be just like you 
to continue working from beyond the grave for the goal you loved.  We promise 
you that, one day soon we will arrive at a single, global, measurement system.  
The kilometer markers along the path to that goal will surely read "Pat 
Naughtin."

In your message,  I also heard this eerily appropriate stanza from the 
unofficial national anthem of Australia:

Waltzing Matilda, Waltzing Matilda
"You'll come a-Waltzing Matilda, with me"
And his ghost may be heard as you pass by that billabong,
"You'll come a-Waltzing Matilda, with me."

 Paul R. Trusten
Registered Pharmacist
Vice President and Public Relations Director
U.S. Metric Association, Inc.
www.metric.org
[email protected]
+1(432)528-7724


----- Original Message ----- 
From: Pat Naughtin 
To: [email protected] 
Sent: 2011-08-09 11:32
Subject: metrication matters 99




              




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              Metrication matters

              2011 August 10

              Metrication matters Number 99 2011-08-10 


              Dear Paul,
              Metrication matters is an on-line metrication newsletter for 
those actively involved, and for those with an interest in metrication matters. 

              You can read all previous issues at 
http://www.metricationmatters.com/newsletter if you scroll own to the bottom of 
the page. The latest revised of the Metrication matters web page is at 
http://www.metrictionmatters.com 

              Help a friend - if you know somebody else who can benefit from 
this newsletter, please forward this newsletter to them and suggest that they 
subscribe. If a friend passed on this newsletter to you, please check the 
details of the free subscription at the end. 


              Contents
              1 Editorial
              2 Feedback - notes and comments from readers
              3 Oddities - measurements from around the world
              4 Tips - pointers and methods to make your measurements easier
              5 Signs of the times
              6 Quotations
              7 Q&A - readers' questions and answers
              8 Rule of thumb
              9 History
              10 Hidden metric


              1 Editorial
              Paradigm shifts
              Before Thomas Jefferson and George Washington joined their 
political forces in Congress to achieve a decimal currency for the USA - and 
subsequently for the whole world - they had experienced what we now know as a 
"paradigm shift" through a practical application of decimal measurements. 

              As surveyors they had changed their normal way of measuring land 
and doing calculations to decimals using the English Gunter's Chain divided 
into 100 links. This meant that they no longer had to work with mixed numbers 
or common or vulgar fractions at all, nor did they have multiple conversion 
factors. Of course Jefferson and Washington would not be aware that they had 
made a paradigm shift, as Thomas Kuhn did not define a paradigm shift until 
1962 in his book, "The Structure of Scientific Revolutions". 

              Although paradigm shifts initially referred to changes in 
science, a paradigm shift can now refer to how the beliefs and practices that 
define any area of study at a particular time can change over time. Current 
examples are: 


                a.. The USA is yet to change to the metric system. (The USA 
began their change to the metric system in about 1795 — over 200 years ago — 
and completed their change to the metric system in 1959 — more than 50 years 
ago.) 
                b.. Weight and mass are the same thing. (Sir Isaac Newton 
showed that mass and weight are quite different in his book, "Principia" in 
1786 — more than 200 years ago.) 
                c.. The words, energy and power, are interchangeable. (Energy 
and power are quite different physical realities and this was demonstrated in 
about 1800 — more than 100 years ago.) 
                d.. An upgrade to the complete use of the metric system can be 
achieved using centimetres. (This has been attempted without success in many 
places since the decimal metric system was first legalised for France in 1795 — 
more than 200 years ago.) 
                e.. An upgrade to the complete use of the metric system can be 
achieved using metric conversions (This is the approach generally taken in the 
USA since Thomas Jefferson actively promoted the use of the decimal metric 
system for the USA in the mid-1790s — more than 200 years ago.) 
              In science, examples of paradigm shifts include: 


                a.. The germ theory replaced the idea that miasma causes 
disease. 
                b.. The theory in optics that light can travel in a vacuum 
rather than the idea that light needs ether to carry the light. 

                a.. The idea that the Earth was the centre of the Universe 
rather than that the planets revole around the Sun in a very large Universe. 
                b.. The idea that life comes from life rather than spontaneous 
generation. 
                c.. Andreas Vesalius view of the human body that replaced the 
numerous errors in the thoughts of Galen. 
                d.. Lavoisier's concept of chemical reactions to replace 
phlogiston theory. 
                e.. Charles Darwin's theory of natural selection that is slowly 
replacing the previous creationist ideas. 
              Taking the acceptance among the scientific community that all 
life comes from life, which began in the 1600s, as an example. This finally 
replaced the theory of spontaneous generation following the work of Louis 
Pasteur in the 1800s — roughly 200 years later. This time lag — of about 200 
year — is typical for the scientific community. The general populace takes 
longer (and journalists and politicians seem to take longer still). 

              Paradigm shifts require changes in the basic assumptions, or 
paradigms, within the generally accepted beliefs in any area of study. The 
beliefs listed above were, and are, held very deeply even though they have been 
shown to be demonstrably wrong by even the simplest levels of research. 
Obviously, paradigm shifts are slowed down as they have to compete with 
established false beliefs and the political structures that support these false 
beliefs. 

              You might like to think about paradigm shifts as you plan your 
metrication upgrade programs. One way to reduce the time for paradigms shifts 
is the use of action plans for change such as those developed by John P. Kotter 
at Harvard University; see http://www.kotterinternational.com 

              Remember metrication is a practical matter not an academic study. 
Recall how Thomas Jefferson and George Washington achieved the paradigm shift 
to decimals by using decimal methods for measuring and calculating all day 
evert day for their surveying. When you use practical measuring with whole 
numbers in your approach to a metrication upgrade you are assured of very fast 
success (unless you use centimetres or metric conversions). 


              2 Feedback - notes and comments from readers
              Sally Mitchell wrote to say: 

                When my oldest son was in 8th grade, the state exam in math 
asked the question "How many yards are in a foot?" His response was "I don't 
care." He received a 99 on that test. 
              Sally commented: 

                The funny thing is: He didn't know how many feet make up a 
yard, so how could he answer that question? My question is: Why was this 
question asked? 

              3 Oddities - measurements from around the world
              In the USA, the Food and Drug Administration's LD50 drug test 
involves testing a new pharmaceutical chemical as a poison in a concentration 
that will kill 50 % of the experimental animals. LD50 is an abbreviation for 
'Lethal Dose 50 %'. The LD50 replaced even older "measures" such as the "Cat 
unit". In 1910, a method of assessing standard levels of pharmaceuticals, the 
'cat unit', was defined as the amount of chemical, measured in grams, 
milligrams, or micrograms needed for a fatal dose per kilogram of cat. See 
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/jps.3080270410/abstract for an 
example of the use of the 'cat unit'. 


              4 Tips - pointers and methods to make your measurements easier
              Recently I visited http://www.nightingale.com/mission_select.aspx 
and here is my first draft of my mission statement: 

                My purpose with my metrication work is to express my capacity 
to speak in public, to develop my knowledge of metric system measurement and 
specifically the metrication process, and my ability to write and to edit. I 
will achieve my purpose by speaking to more and larger groups, by participation 
in more radio and television interviews, and by helping people, especially 
journalists and politicians all over the world with their research, writing, 
and speaking about metrication issues. 
              5 Signs of the times
              Of the measurement standards used in the International System of 
Units (SI), the second of time is the most precisely defined SI Base Unit. The 
National Institute for Standards and Technology (NIST) in the USA together with 
scientists in Russia have now announced an improvement that will make the 
definition of the second even more precise. In future time will be realised 
(reproduced in reality) to about 1 second in every 40 000 000 000 000 000 000 
seconds. At http://www.nist.gov/pml/div684/bbr-050611.cfm they write: 

                Although small, the correction could represent a big step 
towards atomic timekeepers' longstanding goal of a clock with a precision 
equivalent to one second of error every 32 billion years—longer than the age of 
the universe. 
              Precision timekeeping is one of the bedrock technologies of 
modern science and technology. It underpins precise navigation on Earth and in 
deep space, synchronization of broadband data streams, precision measurements 
of motion, forces and fields, and tests of the constancy of the laws of nature 
over time. 


              6 Quotations
              Knowing that the USA is fully metric but that this is not 
generally known makes this quotation from George Orwell timely: 

                In a time of universal deceit, telling the truth is a 
revolutionary act. 

              7 Q&A - readers' questions and answer

              Question:
              How did the metric system develop into its modern form? How is it 
different to other systems? 


              Answer:
              The only measurement "system" ever invented and developed, in the 
world, at any time, was the "decimal metric system". There were not then, there 
have never been, and there are no other measurement "systems" that cater to all 
measures for all activities. 

              The metric system is the only system that ever existed: 

              "For all time, for all people." 
              Bishop John Wilkins in 1668 invented a "system" that he called a 
"universal measure". This then developed into the "decimal metric system" as 
the legal measures for France in 1795. 

              It took about 170 years (1795 to 1960) for the "decimal metric 
system" to evolve into the International System of Units (SI), which is often 
referred to as the modern metric system. During that time, the metric system 
took several forms, and these can, in hindsight, be thought of as evolutionary 
stages, as each of these metric systems was an improvement on previous metric 
systems. 

              The initial idea for a "universal measure" came from Bishop John 
Wilkins in 1668. 

              The "decimal metric system" was developed and organised in 
France, by an international committee, during the 1780s and early 1790s. The 
"decimal" part was from the USA, the word, "metric" was from a translation of 
Wilkins words, "universal measure" into Italian, and the "system" was from 
Bishop Wilkins original idea for a "universal measure". 

              The "decimal metric system" was made legal in France in 1795. 

              The first major suggestion for improvement came from Karl 
Frederick Gauss who proposed that new electric units should be based on the 
millimetre, the milligram and the second in 1832. 

              In 1873, the British Association for the Advancement of Science 
(BAAS) also realised that new units were needed to measure electrical 
properties. They proposed new electrical units based on the centimetre, the 
gram and the second. Historically, this became the cgs system when the first 
Congrès International d'Electricité formally adopted this system in 1881. 

              By the end of the eighteenth century, divisions had developed 
between scientists and engineers. Scientists, such as chemists, were quite 
comfortable using centimetres and grams, but the engineers wanted to use much 
larger units such as kilograms or tonnes. One particular area of difference 
involved electromagnetic units (emu), based on the cgs system, which were 
opposed to the electrostatic units, also based on the cgs system, and both of 
these were opposed to the international electrical units that are based on the 
mks system. 

              Giovanni Giorgi, an Italian engineer, proposed a compromise in 
1901. Giorgi's system was based on the metre, the kilogram and the second and 
he suggested that an electrical unit would need to be chosen to construct a 
fully coherent system of units. In the meantime, engineers in France were using 
- and lobbied for appropriate laws - a system based on the metre, the tonne, 
and the second. The mts system could be used legally in France from 1919 to 
1961. Engineers, all around the world, also devised another metric system based 
on the metre, the kilogram of force (not a kilogram of mass), and the second. 
From these competing systems, the Commission Electrotechnique Internationale 
adopted the Giorgi mks system, in 1935. 

              Subsequently, in 1948, The Giorgi system was also adopted by the 
Conférence Générale des Poids et Mesure (CGPM) and the ampére was selected in 
1950 as the electrical unit. This system then became known as the mksA system. 

              Considerable work followed to further develop the mksA system 
until 1960, when, with the addition of several other new units, the modern 
metric system was named the 'Système International d'Unités (SI)' or, in 
English, the 'International System of Units (SI)'. The modern metric system is 
officially designated, and it is known in all nations, and in all languages, by 
the initials, 'SI', pronounced 'ess-eye'. 

              The progress of the International System of Units (SI) still 
continues. 


              8 Rule of thumb
              One Mickey (named after the cartoon character Mickey Mouse) has 
been defined as the length of the "smallest detectable movement" of a computer 
mouse. One Mickey is about 100 micrometres. 


              9 History
              In 1989, a metrication specialist from Australia, (not-named as 
he prefers not to be contacted) visited NASA where for three days he consulted 
with many people including the German rocket engineers Werner von Braun and his 
principle assistant, Ernst Lange. 

              Before leaving NASA, the Australian metrication expert had 
afternoon tea with the President of the Marshall Space Center, Bob (R. J.) 
Schwinghammer where the Australian offered to "dictate a memo to his secretary 
to get NASA started on metrication." Bob Schwinghammer replied, "That won't be 
necessary - I think we can manage". The Australian responded by saying "Well, 
Okay - but when you go, you go!" - meaning that when you go metric you go 
metric - you don't just half do it. 

              Later we learned that Mars Climate Orbiter space craft is out 
there some-where, but nobody knows where - most of their gear had been supplied 
in metric, as requested, but some of it hadn't. This led to the total loss of 
the Mars Climate Orbiter that is believed to have crashed on the surface of 
Mars in September 1999? See 
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mars_Climate_Orbiter#The_metric.2Fimperial_mix-up 


              10 Hidden metric
              On 2011, a BBC report described a new SpaceX rocket as having a 
factory area the size of a tennis court and a cargo capacity the size of a 
double-decker bus. The true dimensions — mass 53 tonnes, height 70 metres, 
thrust 17 meganewtons and so on — can be found at 
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-12975872 

              Pat Naughtin 

              Geelong Australia



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              Pat Naughtin is a writer, speaker, editor, and publisher. 

              Pat wrote and edited the original Australian apprenticeship 
modules for the bricklaying, carpentry, electrical, fitting and machining, 
furniture making, plumbing, and welding trades. He was also the lead writer for 
the 'Wool' chapter in the Kirk-Othmer Chemical Engineering Encyclopaedia. He 
speaks regularly to small business owners, professional and business groups. He 
is a metrication consultant to several businesses. 

              Pat edited the measurement section for the Australian Government 
'Style manual: for writers, editors and printers' and he is a regular 
contributor to 'Australian Style' magazine. He has been recognised by the 
United States Metric Association as a Lifetime Certified Advanced Metrication 
Specialist, and he contributes to the USMA newsletter, 'Metric Today'. 

              Copyright notice: This material is copyright (c) Pat Naughtin. 
All rights reserved. Copying for any purpose, whether in print or any other 
media, requires permission. Contact: [email protected]. 

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              Metrication Matters
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              PO Box 305, Belmont, Geelong, 3216, Australia
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