this post was submitted on 17 Mar 2026
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We're taught both metric and US customary units in school. I prefer metric for most things, to the point I have a metric-only tape measure among other things.

However, I'll die on the hill that Fahrenheit is superior for ambient air temperature. 0 degrees to 100 degrees neatly encompasses the range of average surface temperatures seen throughout the year in the contiguous US.

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[โ€“] XeroxCool@lemmy.world 1 points 2 weeks ago (1 children)

Yeah, that's what I'm saying. It's roughly the range, not an exact definition. More humidity, laboring to survive, or not having modern access to water would make 100+ considerably dangerous. Similarly, not having shelter, having high wind, or being wet makes 0- considerably dangerous. So yes, with current tech and convenience, we can casually survive -20 to 120, but it's still pretty awful.

I was also saying the range in regards to what we can touch and perceive. I know 1000 is very hot and melts some metals, but I can't really touch a 200 degree pot of water, either. I don't have intrinsic knowledge of the difference.

[โ€“] elucubra@sopuli.xyz 1 points 2 weeks ago

The thing is that Fahrenheit is basically arbitrary. From what I read in Wikipedia, 0 is the temperature of some harebrained brine solution, and 100 the approximate temperature of the human body.

Temperatures may make more sense to you because of habit, but the references are nonsensical.

Knowing that 0 is where water freezes, and that 100 is where water boils, is a way more useful reference in general.

I know that 18 is a baseline comfort temperature, 30 is nice hot weather, anything above 38 is damn hot. normal body temp around 37...

We usually remember reference temperatures in whatever scale we use, but the basis of Centigrade seems way more logical to me.