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Why the metric system matters - Matt Anticole

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    What does the French Revolution
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    have to do with the time NASA accidentally
    crashed a $200 million orbiter
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    into the surface of Mars?
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    Actually, everything.
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    That crash happened due to an error
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    in converting between
    two measurement systems,
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    U.S. customary units
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    and their S.I, or metric, equivalence.
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    So what's the connection to
    the French Revolution?
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    Let's explain.
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    For the majority of recorded
    human history,
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    units like the weight of a grain
    or the length of a hand weren't exact
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    and varied from place to place.
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    And different regions didn't just use
    varying measurements.
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    They had completely different
    number systems as well.
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    By the late Middle Ages,
    the Hindu-Arabic decimal system
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    mostly replaced Roman numerals
    and fractions in Europe,
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    but efforts by scholars like John Wilkins
    to promote standard decimal-based measures
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    were less successful.
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    With a quarter million different units
    in France alone,
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    any widespread change would require
    massive disruption.
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    And in 1789, that disruption came.
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    The leaders of the French Revolution
    didn't just overthrow the monarchy.
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    They sought to completely
    transform society
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    according to the rational principles
    of the Enlightenment.
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    When the new government took power,
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    the Academy of Sciences convened
    to reform the system of measurements.
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    Old standards based on arbitrary authority
    or local traditions
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    were replaced with mathematical
    and natural relationships.
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    For example, the meter,
    from the Greek word for measure,
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    was defined as 1/10,000,000
    between the Equator and North Pole.
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    And the new metric system was,
    in the words of the Marquis de Condorcet,
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    "For all people, for all time."
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    Standardizing measurements
    had political advantages
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    for the Revolutionaries as well.
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    Nobles could no longer manipulate local
    units to extract more rent from commoners,
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    while the government could collect
    taxes more efficiently.
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    And switching to a new Republican Calendar
    with ten-day weeks
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    reduced church power
    by eliminating Sundays.
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    Adoption of this new system wasn't easy.
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    In fact, it was a bit of a mess.
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    At first, people used new units
    alongside old ones,
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    and the Republican Calendar
    was eventually abandoned.
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    When Napoléon Bonaparte took power,
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    he allowed small businesses
    to use traditional measurements
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    redefined in metric terms.
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    But the metric system remained standard
    for formal use,
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    and it spread across the continent,
    along with France's borders.
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    While Napoléon's empire
    lasted eight years,
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    its legacy endured far longer.
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    Some European countries reverted
    to old measurements upon independence.
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    Others realized the value
    of standardization
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    in an age of international trade.
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    After Portugal and the Netherlands
    switched to metric voluntarily,
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    other nations followed,
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    with colonial empires spreading the system
    around the world.
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    As France's main rival,
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    Britain had resisted revolutionary ideas
    and retained its traditional units.
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    But over the next two centuries,
    the British Empire slowly transitioned,
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    first approving the metric system
    as an optional alternative
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    before gradually making it offical.
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    However, this switch came too late
    for thirteen former colonies
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    that had already gained independence.
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    The United States of America stuck with
    the English units of its colonial past
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    and today remains one
    of only three countries
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    which haven't fully embraced
    the metric system.
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    Despite constant initiatives
    for metrication,
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    many Americans consider units like feet
    and pounds more intuitive.
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    And ironically, some regard the once
    revolutionary metric system
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    as a symbol of global conformity.
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    Nevertheless, the metric system is almost
    universally used in science and medicine,
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    and it continues to evolve according
    to its original principles.
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    For a long time,
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    standard units were actually defined by
    carefully maintained physical prototypes.
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    But thanks to improving technology
    and precision,
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    these objects with limited access
    and unreliable longevity
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    are now being replaced with standards
    based on universal constants,
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    like the speed of light.
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    Consistent measurements are such
    an integral part of our daily lives
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    that it's hard to appreciate what a major
    accomplishment for humanity they've been.
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    And just as it arose
    from a political revolution,
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    the metric system remains crucial
    for the scientific revolutions to come.
Title:
Why the metric system matters - Matt Anticole
Speaker:
Matt Anticole
Description:

View full lesson: http://ed.ted.com/lessons/why-the-metric-system-matters-matt-anticole

For the majority of recorded human history, units like the weight of a grain or the length of a hand weren’t exact and varied from place to place. Now, consistent measurements are such an integral part of our daily lives that it’s hard to appreciate what a major accomplishment for humanity they’ve been. Matt Anticole traces the wild history of the metric system.

Lesson by Matt Anticole, animation by Globizco.

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TED-Ed
Duration:
05:08
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