Time talk
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time/time.md
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time/time.md
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#!/bin/env slides
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# Time
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I'm Bruce and this is a talk about time.
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--------------------------------
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# Time Is a Social Construct
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I'm gonna be talking about years and hours and
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minutes and days and stuff.
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Turns out time is pretty weird, and not a
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real thing that exists in the universe.
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Mostly this is just gonna be a bunch of
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fun facts about the history of time.
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---------------------------------
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# In the Beginning
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Since the dawn of time, time was dawn.
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People used day/night cycles and seasonal
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variations to keep track of the passage of time.
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---------------------------------
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# Hours
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In ancient Egypt, they thought the constellation
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**Sirius** was cool because it could be used to
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predict the flooding of the Nile (very important).
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Sirius has **12 stars**, so the Egyptians thought
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it was a cool timey number and divided the night
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into 12 intervals.
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Everyone else in the wider region copied them
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(Babylonians, Greeks, Romans, etc.)
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---------------------------------
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# Unequal Hours
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Originally, there were 12 hours of daytime
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and 12 hours of nighttime.
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If you lived near the equator, this works pretty well.
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If you don't, it means that a winter daytime
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hour is shorter than a summer daytime hour.
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Where I grew up (Seattle), this means that
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an hour would be:
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- **42 minutes** long on December 21 during the day
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- **80 minutes** long on June 21 during the day
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---------------------------------
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# Unequal Hours
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## Downsides
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- The same thing takes a different number of hours
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in different seasons.
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- Need to think about what season it is.
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## Upsides
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- Easy to measure with a sundial.
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- Kinda useful to talk about fractions of
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available daylight time.
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- No one wants to do anything during winter,
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so the hours are correspondingly wimpy.
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- Very human.
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---------------------------------
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# Minutes and Seconds
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- Invented in the Islamic golden age
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- First **minute** division of an hour
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- **Second** minute division of an hour
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- 60 is a cool number (thanks Sumerians)
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- Is divisible by 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 10, 12, 15, 20, 30
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---------------------------------
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# Calendars Are Hard
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People historically kept track of the seasons using
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an awkward combination of lunar cycles and solar
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cycles, which was complicated and kept drifting out
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of sync (not an even number of moon cycles in a year).
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- **Julius Caesar** was a **pontifex**
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- Good for electoral shenanigans
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- But had to perform a religious ceremony to adjust the calendar
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- Too busy doing imperialism to bother adjusting the calendar
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- Got way out of sync
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- Invented the **Julian Calendar** to get out of the job
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- Solar calendar, so no drift
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- Later **Pope Gregory** adjusted the calendar
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- The "**Gregorian Calendar**"
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---------------------------------
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# Weeks
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- 7 days because, uh, 7 celestial bodies I guess?
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- Sun, moon, 5 other planets
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- Days of the week named for the celestial bodies:
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- Saturn day
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- Sun day
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- Moon day
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- Then the Norse got involved somehow
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- Tyr's day
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- Wotan's day (Odin)
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- Thor's day
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- Frigg's day (gotta get down on Frigg's day)
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---------------------------------
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# Astronomy Sucks as a Clock
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Very sloppy, filing a bug report now:
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- Can't tell time when it's cloudy
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- Daylight hours change seasonally
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- Latitude and longitude
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- Earth wobbles, so latitude and longitude are also bullshit
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- Continental drift
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- Not an integer number of lunar cycles in a year
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- Not an integer number of days in a year
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- 365.2422 is a lame number (not easily divisible)
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- Drifts over time because we live in a fallen world
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---------------------------------
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# We Can Make Better Clocks
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I mean, not at first. Old clocks sucked.
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- Water clocks
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- Dripping in a bucket at constant-ish time
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- Candle clocks
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- Put nails in the side of the candle to loudly fall out
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---------------------------------
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# Imperialism and Capitalism
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Two of the main driving forces for making better clocks
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were imperialism and capitalism (name a more iconic duo)
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## Imperialism
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- How do we keep time across a world-spanning empire?
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- How do you know how far you are across the ocean
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with no landmarks?
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## Capitalism
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- How do you make workers show up on time?
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- How do you make workers work longer?
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- How do you keep a train schedule between cities?
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---------------------------------
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# Time Zones
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Once trains got fast enough, you'd actually notice
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time differences between cities.
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Every city ran on **local solar time.**
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Railroads hated it, so they pushed for the adoption
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of hour-bracketed **time zones.**
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Synced up with **Greenwich Observatory** as the standard time.
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---------------------------------
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# Time Balls
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Greenwich Observatory had a **time ball** that they dropped
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at exactly 1pm.
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Ships saw it drop and set their clocks accordingly.
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Some random guy saw one and thought it would be a cool party
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event for the NYT opening a new HQ in Times Square in 1905.
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---------------------------------
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# Clocks and Watches
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Invented for navigation and religious purposes,
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repurposed for industrial factories.
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Previously people came in to work when the sun
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came up, left when the sun went down.
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Factory owners introduced clocks to remove all
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slack from their workers' lives.
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Major labor clashes over workers being fired
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for not arriving at exactly the right time,
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but also factory owners cheating the clock.
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Workers forbidden from having their own watches.
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---------------------------------
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# What Is Time?
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Once clocks started getting accurate, it raised
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the question: "what is a second?"
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**Not:** 1/(12 * 60 * 60)th of a day
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Earth's rotation changes (tidal deceleration).
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The French standardized the definition of a second:
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- Originally based on an **average** day length
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- Then based on the year length of 1900 (?!) "ephemeris second"
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- Then bombarding ammonia with radiation till it radiates
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- Then caesium radiation frequency (atomic clocks)
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- In 2022, redefined to use optical clocks
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---------------------------------
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# Problems for the Future
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Oh god, there's relativity too.
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- Synchronizing time across planets is hard
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- Time is subjective
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- Time dilation
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- Your time is not my time.
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- Relativity of simultaneity
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- What even is "now"?
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I give up.
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# Time's Up
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Okay I'm done.
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