Your first point is technically correct, but 24-hour days and 7-day weeks are a de facto global standard at this point in history. There are outliers, like the Javanese 5-day week or the experimental 5-day Soviet calendar, but they are few and far between.
I think it was the Babylonians that created the hour/minute/second and a precursor of the meter on the process. It’s high-tech bronze-age innovation, that got hyped-out so much that it took the entire Old-World by storm, so the Egyptians got them too.
Number of days in a week (or the existence of weeks at all) aren’t universal, though. And technically not even hours.
Only the length of the day, year and moon cycle are universal (or earthiversal).
Your first point is technically correct, but 24-hour days and 7-day weeks are a de facto global standard at this point in history. There are outliers, like the Javanese 5-day week or the experimental 5-day Soviet calendar, but they are few and far between.
kinda surprised someone in lemmy knows about the javanese calendar system a.k.a “weton” :O
Well now there are two plus me, and this is fantastic content for role playing
Hum… I think the week is more widely adopted than the solar year.
But neither is universal. AFAIK, the length of the day is.
Didn’t the Egyptians figure it out? Or someone before them was like “SHADOWS! SHADOWS THEN! SHADOWS NOW!”
I think it was the Babylonians that created the hour/minute/second and a precursor of the meter on the process. It’s high-tech bronze-age innovation, that got hyped-out so much that it took the entire Old-World by storm, so the Egyptians got them too.
Oh neat, that makes sense given the Babylonians base-60 numbering system
omg the babylonians, fielded the best footie team in all of existence, except for other examples.
Meter was recent (historically speaking). They defined the circumference of the world as 40,000 km.