• cecilkorik@lemmy.ca
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    1 year ago

    No good reason, just historical inertia and resistance to change. People stick to what they’re familiar with, either the imperial system or to common metric units. Making a “metric ton” similar in size to an “imperial ton” arguably helped make it easier for some people to transition to metric.

    Megagram is a perfectly cromulent unit, just like “cromulent” is a perfectly cromulent word, but people still don’t use it very often. That’s just how language works. People use the words they prefer, and those words become common. Maybe if you start describing things in megagrams other people will also start doing it and it will become a common part of the language. Language is organic like that, there isn’t anyone making decisions on its behalf, although some people and organizations try.

    • XIIIesq@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      The sort of person that insists on calling a ton a megagram is probably going to be the same sort of insufferable Jimmy Neutron arsehole that insists on calling salt “sodium chloride”.

      Yes you’re technically correct, but people experience food as salty, no one is going to say “this food is very sodium chloridy!” and it’s the same situation with tons and megagrams

    • XIIIesq@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      There is a good reason.

      People can picture one ton in their heads, no one can picture one million individual grams.

      You can imagine a ton bag of sand, you can’t imagine one million individual grains of sand that weigh one gram each.

      The term “megagram” does make perfect sense, but it doesn’t fit well with the way the people experience the universe around them.

      It’s the exact same reason that weight is the only SI unit where the kilogram is the standard rather than the gram. You can imagine holding a kilo in your hands (about 2.2lb if you’re American) and you could easily tell the difference between 1 and two kilos, or 1 and 0.5 of a kilo, but if you hold a gram it feels like nothing, and you probably wouldn’t be able to sense a difference between 1 and two grams etc.

      Edit: didn’t think explaining that people like to describe the universe as they experience it rather than being pedants about measuring weights to the precise gram every time would be an unpopular opinion lol

      • Shialac@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        These two words mean the same thing, why would you be able ti picture one thing but not the other?

        • XIIIesq@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          Try it, count grains of sand in your head whilst you picture them. Unless you’re a savant, it probably starts getting a little blurry around the teens, maybe a bit higher. You can use tricks like imagining a grid of ten by ten to picture a hundred etc, but it’ll still be rather blurry. Picturing a million of something is literally impossible, human minds aren’t designed for that.

          If you wanted some sand to line your new brick driveway, would you ask the builders merchant for a x tonnes of sand or a x million grains of sand? It’s the same difference.

            • XIIIesq@lemmy.world
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              1 year ago

              The point is that you can easily estimate a meter.

              Look to the horizon and estimate a kilometre and I’ll bet that your error is significant by comparison to your estimate of a meter.

              There is a big difference between imagining/understanding a concept and judging it accurately in the real world.