Professors’ proposed calendar synchronizes dates with days

Imagine a future in which you always know the date of baseball’s opening day. Or that your birthday is always on a Tuesday (sorry). Or that New Year’s Eve is always on a Saturday.

As the people of the world prepare to hang their 2012 calendars, two professors at Johns Hopkins University are proposing one you can keep forever, as each date falls on the same day of the week as it did the year before.

Christmas might always be celebrated on a Sunday, for instance, and Memorial Day Monday could always be on May 28.

Astrophysicist Richard Conn Henry and applied economist Steve Hanke devised the new calendar after years of research and planning. They say their calendar would make it easy to plan annual activities, from holidays to academic schedules to financial calculations.

“Think about how much time and effort are expended each year in redesigning the calendar of every single organization in the world, and it becomes obvious that our calendar would make life much simpler and would have noteworthy benefits,” Henry said.

Every third month on the new calendar would have 31 days, with the rest of the months having 30, for a total of 364 days. They would drop the quadrennial 366-day leap years entirely in favor of an extra week at the end of December every five or six years.

The pair say their calendar is different from other alternative calendars proposed in the past because it keeps each week at seven days.

“All of the major (other calendars) have involved breaking the seven-day cycle of the week, which is not acceptable to many people because it violates the Fourth Commandment about keeping the Sabbath Day,” Henry says. “Our version never breaks that cycle.”

The two men also propose eliminating time zones and adopting a universal time around the world to streamline international business.

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2 Responses to Professors’ proposed calendar synchronizes dates with days

  1. R Carruthers says:

    Years ago a business consultant proposed thirteen four week months. Makes it easier to compare month to month sales and cost figures.

  2. Paul Clifford says:

    I'm in favor of both of these ideas. Sure it would suck if your birthday was on Monday, but other than that I like it. I love universal time. Who says 8 or 9 is a good time to start the day anyway? I think 1:00 would make more sense. Still if my business is open from 10-7 and yours is 2-11 I don't need to know what time zone you're in. I think we should kill daylight savings time, too.

    Paul

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