AllenRBrady
AllenRBrady t1_j7dim8j wrote
Reply to comment by AllenRBrady in Is the yearly cycle of varying daylight durations from day to day throughout time consistent? Is the cycle we have today the same as in the 17th century? by meellowstar
I just wanted to throw in a few calculations to round this theory out a bit. Looking at Mannheim, Germany, I see that the winter solstice this year will have 8 hours and 9 minutes of daylight, and the summer solstice will have 16 hours and 17 minutes. That means the winter night will last 951 minutes, and the summer night only 463. If we divide that into 12 hours, that makes a winter hour as long as 79.25 minutes, and a summer hour as short as 38.58 minutes.
So 8pm in the winter would translate to 158.5 minutes past Vespers (sunset), and 10pm in the summer would mean 154.3 minutes past Vespers. That's pretty consistent. If my speculation is correct, this law is saying you need to carry a light source if you're leaving your house 2.5 (modern) hours after sunset.
AllenRBrady t1_j7bvkb8 wrote
Reply to Is the yearly cycle of varying daylight durations from day to day throughout time consistent? Is the cycle we have today the same as in the 17th century? by meellowstar
I would consider the possibility that the local government was still using an antiquated system of measuring hours. Prior to the widespread adoption of mechanical clocks, hours were not a fixed length. Dawn to dusk was considered daytime, and dusk to dawn was considered night, and each was divided into 12 hours. The first canonical hour of the day was called Prime, and corresponded to 6am. When the sun was overhead, it was Sext. When the sun set, it was Vespers. The duration between Prime and Vespers was divided into 12 hours, regardless of how long daylight actually lasted. So in the summer, daytime hours were longer than nighttime hours, and in the winter, that was reversed.
That system was dominant throughout Europe until around 1600, when mechanical clocks finally became prevalent enough to replace older options like sundials. It seems possible to me that, by the early 1700s, certain jurisdictions might have still been working out the whole concept that all hours were the same length, and 8pm was daytime in summer and nighttime in winter. It's possible that the ordnance you refer to assumed 8pm was "a short time after sunset", while 10pm was "a long while after sunset, but not yet midnight."
AllenRBrady t1_j6n37af wrote
Reply to comment by pixeequeen84 in LPT: You will not remember it later. Write it down now. by [deleted]
It might not even matter if you remember where the note is. The simple act of writing things down has been demonstrated to improve your chance of remembering the content later. Research shows that adding a sensory component to information greatly improves the ability to recall that particular memory. Writing information down adds two sensory cues to the memory: visual and tactile.
AllenRBrady t1_j5uloyi wrote
Reply to comment by bfoster1801 in Ted Sarandos says that Netflix has “never canceled a successful show” by avery5712
None of them were dead at the time. What they choose to do with their lives after I've killed them is out of my hands.
AllenRBrady t1_j5rzexj wrote
Reply to comment by vlsdo in Ted Sarandos says that Netflix has “never canceled a successful show” by avery5712
Exactly. I haven't killed a single living person.
AllenRBrady t1_iw2zkxv wrote
Reply to comment by StanleyDards in DIY project ideas for hair dryer by hurly_burly_pegasus
I like the idea of attaching a fake hand, but I would make it a lamp instead of a fan. If you don't want to muck around with wiring, you can get rechargeable, color changing LED puck lights, and just tuck one inside the barrel. Some of those are remote activated, so you wouldn't even need a switch.
AllenRBrady t1_j7grp7n wrote
Reply to comment by contractor_inquiries in Is the yearly cycle of varying daylight durations from day to day throughout time consistent? Is the cycle we have today the same as in the 17th century? by meellowstar
I'm pretty sure that, in Europe at least, the local church or cathedral would be responsible for keeping the official time, and this would primarily be accomplished through the aid of a sundial. So if the sundial were properly calibrated, the daylight hours would have pretty regular.
I would have to assume that nighttime hours, or daytime hours on cloudy days, were often estimations at best. For the most part, the only folks who really cared what time it was were church officials who needed to determine when it was time to hold daily services. Everyone else would have just listed for the church bells.