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Re: Definition Drift, WAS: Bowditch 1995 Table 18

From: Bill (no email)
Date: Thu Feb 03 2005 - 16:55:14 EST

  • Next message: Frank Reed: "Re: History of Bowditch's Navigator"

    > Agreed. I spent a fair bit of time searching for some meaning of the word,
    > "sensible" and how that could have become attached to the concept of
    > "sensible horizon", which is not at all sensible to the neophyte, in any
    > sense of the word that I can discover.

    Jim

    Not sure it is "sensible" to the expert either unless a representation is
    made into a drawing;-) Love those low-heat-to-light debates. Is the
    celestial horizon real? Many will argue, "Yes, of course." I reply, "Show
    it to me. It does not exist until sentient beings conceive it and name it.
    It is just a concept." Which is why I so love the word "conceptual." As in
    "a conceptual line."

    It would handy if the celestial horizon was real and sensible. Want to know
    east or west? Look at where it meets the horizon. Want latitude? Measure
    from the horizon to the highest point on the arc, and voila, colatitude.
    Curious about a body's declination? Just measure from from the arc. <G>

    Bill


  • Next message: Frank Reed: "Re: History of Bowditch's Navigator"



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