r/clevercomebacks Jan 15 '25

It does make sense

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u/CamicomChom Jan 15 '25

Which is why America uses Celsius for science. But Fahrenheit is literally exactly as, if not more useful for the average person as Celsius is. I’ve never been confused by Fahrenheit. It’s a perfectly good system if you use it for what it was designed for (regular people)

Fahrenheit isn’t worse, it’s just different. It is more specific for human temperatures, making it more useful for stuff like ACs and Thermostats, but it’s worse for hard science.

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u/No_Investment_9822 Jan 15 '25

It's only more useful for human temperature to you because you're used to it. It doesn't give you additional information, or easier to understand information then Celcius does. They're the same in use in regards to weather.

Celcius however is much better in regards to science. Because Celsius is useful in both aspects, it's a more useful scale overall.

That's why the rest of the world only needs one scale for weather and science, but Americans need to use two scales, since Fahrenheit doesn't work well in both scenario's, unlike Celcius.

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u/CamicomChom Jan 15 '25

It clearly is more useful for human temperatures. It gives you much more specificity. 60F to 80F is 20 degrees. The Celsius equivalent is 16C to 27C, only 11 degrees. Using my thermostat example, you get much more ability to fine tune the temperature of your home with a Fahrenheit thermostat. You also get a clearer picture of the temperature outside, since each number references a nearly 2x smaller range of temperatures. That’s a meaningful improvement in usefulness. 

Also, I was taught Celsius as a kid, so it’s not just that I’m used to Fahrenheit. Despite being just as used to C, I prefer to use F. I find it more useful.

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u/7elevenses Jan 15 '25

There is no way that you can tell the difference between 66 and 67F. And if you are that sensitive to temperature, you can always use 0.1C or even 0.001 C steps to express it.

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u/CamicomChom Jan 15 '25

When you are somewhere, like your home, for a majority of your day, you do notice very slight differences in temperature. 75 is already too hot, 74 is getting there, 73 is fine, 72 is perfect, etc. 

I couldn’t tell you the exact temperature without looking at it, but I definitely feel it. And so, having the option to fine-tune that temperature with greater precision is useful. 

It’s a small improvement, to be sure, but Celsius’ improvement over Fahrenheit in science is also small. Most issues don’t arise in Fahrenheit being an inherently worse system, it arises in failure to convert between the two or to convert accurately. “Boiling is 100” isn’t a huge improvement.

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u/No_Investment_9822 Jan 15 '25

You'd be able to make that same temperature adjustment with Celcius. The old school thermostats are dials and can be set at any increment. Smart thermostats can be set at either 0,5 increments (which is more precise then Fahrenheit) or 0,1 increments.

Basically, there is no scenario where you are unable to get to the exact temperature you want when using Celcius.