I'm inclined to propose the opposite argument. When we count we go from one to ten (0), in all other instances, so why change it for the date? What the years were called 2000 years ago is irrelevent (if you want to correct for that, then the current year probably isn't "2009"). I think the second decade starts Jan.1 2011.
So again, what science thinks and what popular opinion is are not one and the same. The same argument was used in 2000, that was considered the advent of the new millennium, not 2001.
You're simply paraphrasing what I said earlier.
Really? I don’t recall you pointing out that the reason people think this is a different decade is that the second digit changes form 0 to 1. I don’t recall you mentioning the CNN study of how stocks performed in this decade compared to the previous decade. I don’t recall you mentioning that there are numerous articles as to how things were in the past decade (the one that is just ending).
All of these things were in the same post that you quoted, you conveniently erased them. So I agree with you as far as that one sentence is concerned, so what is your point? Do you own copyright on the sentence, just because you wrote it first?
No, actually, it was a psychology test, and you've done exactly what we predicted.
Let your fingers do the counting:
One, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight, nine, ten!
Voila! We completed a DECADE. Or we will at 12:00 December 31st, 2010.
And then we will begen a new decade.
Hopefully, counting on your fingers will convince even the most obstinate ones that the new decade will begin at 00:00 hors, January 1st, 2011.
Quite so Tonington. One could say that 90s really encompass 1990 – 1999, since all these years contain a ‘9’. After all, 2000 does not contain a ‘9’, so how can it be a part of the 90s decade?
So if 90s were from 1990 to 1999, it follows that the next decade would be 2000 to 2009.
There is just one slight eensy problem- somewhere back in time there was a "decade" that was one year short.
And when was that, JLM? The current calendar started in the year 1582. I really cannot see where that would have occurred, can you? Thus in the 16th century, 90s would have been 1590 – 1599 and so on.
What you say may hold true if the calendar started from year 1, but it didn’t, it started from year 1582.
Really? I don’t recall you pointing out that the reason people think this is a different decade is that the second digit changes form 0 to 1. I don’t recall you mentioning the CNN study of how stocks performed in this decade compared to the previous decade. I don’t recall you mentioning that there are numerous articles as to how things were in the past decade (the one that is just ending).
All of these things were in the same post that you quoted, you conveniently erased them. So I agree with you as far as that one sentence is concerned, so what is your point? Do you own copyright on the sentence, just because you wrote it first?
Technically, yes.m. So I agree with you as far as that one sentence is concerned, so what is your point? Do you own copyright on the sentence, just because you wrote it first?
Nuggler, your most intelligent remarks/comment were your asterisks.
Not to mention the words you were too chickenish to spell correctly.
Please do me the favour and NOT respond to my posts.
I'm ready to concede by "majority rules" that we will be calling years from x0 to x9 a decade, but a "lump of time" would be more accurate.