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[โ€“] HexagonSun@sh.itjust.works 7 points 15 hours ago* (last edited 15 hours ago)

Thatโ€™s an interesting question that Iโ€™d never thought about before.

I asked chatGPT, which predictably bullshitted me and said theyโ€™d decided grams made more sense than kilograms for scientific lab work.

But then I searched and found this from the user tomalator on Reddit:

โ€œWhen the French were developing the metric system, they suggested the unit be called a grave (pronounced grav) being the mass of 1L of water (1000 cm3)

The French at this time being in the middle of a revolution against the rich notice that it sounded a lot like the word Graf, being a word for Duke or Earl, and they wanted to avoid affiliating with the nobility, so they changed the measurement to be the mass of 1mL of water (1 cm3) and called it the gramme

They then noticed that it was inconvenient to use a mass unit so small, so they changed back to the 1L of water definition, but kept the name gramme for the base, and threw out the word grave in favor of the kilogramme.

And that's why the kilogram is the base SI unit and not the gram. I had the exact same question when I learned the SI unites.โ€