- #1
darkar
- 187
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Hello, why is there must 7 days in a week?
brewnog said:Have a look at this link:
http://www.dbeat.com/28/
It proposes a 28 hour day, and a 6 day week. I'm up for it!
darkar said:Hello, why is there must 7 days in a week?
franznietzsche said:So we can have 1 day weekends?
Monique said:that means that scientists have to squize even more working hours in a single day?? ;)
vincentchan said:good question, it is because you are living in a cristian world... and the bible said god create the world in 7 days. the last day---- sunday, is for us to take a break... therefore sunday is holiday----or Holy-Day
Janus said:Actually, Saturday is the last day of the week and the original Sabbath as celebrated by Judaism. It is just that the early Christian's wished to distance themselves from their Hebrew brethern and bumped their Sabbath to the next day. (except for Seventh-day Adventists, who returned to the traditional Saturday Sabbath).
Janus said:(the very reason the tradition of a 2 day weekend started was because the Jewish and Christian Sabbaths fall on Saturday and Sunday).
JasonRox said:Is there anything in this world that doesn't involve the interference of religion?
tribdog said:The only hard part about a 28 hour day would be getting the Sun to slow down. He's sort of a jerk, from what I hear.
Microsoft Encarta Encyclopedia 2004 said:Week (from Latin vicis,”change”), period of seven days now in universal use as a division of time. It is of Hebrew or Chaldean origin and is mentioned as a unit of time in the Bible (see Genesis 29:27). The division of the lunar month into seven-day periods probably began as a celebration of the creation of the world in six days with the seventh day for rest. The Roman week was an eight-day period until 303 ad, when official recognition of the Christian religion made it necessary to celebrate the Sabbath every seventh day. The English names for the days of the week—Sunday (Sol), Monday (Moon), Tuesday (Tui, the Saxon Mars), Wednesday (Woden, or Mercury), Thursday (Thor, or Jupiter), Friday (Frygga, or Venus), and Saturday (Saturn)—come from Roman or Norse names for the planets.
© 1993-2003 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
I thought it was 8 days a week.darkar said:Hello, why is there must 7 days in a week?
tribdog said:The only hard part about a 28 hour day would be getting the Sun to slow down. He's sort of a jerk, from what I hear.
selfAdjoint said:The mention of Chaldean suggests that that discussion came from a christian source. Chaldean is their catchall name for the earlier mideastern cultuures.
It is likely that the seven day week began in the old Babylonian or Sumerian culture, and precisely because there are seven visible moving bodies in the sky: the Sun, the Moon, Mercury, Venus, Mars, Jupiter, and Saturn. They were deified as gods.
There is no definitive answer as to why there are 7 days in a week, but it is believed to have originated from the ancient Babylonians who assigned each day of the week to a different planet. This system was later adopted by the Greeks and Romans, and eventually spread to other cultures.
The ancient Romans named the days of the week after their gods and goddesses. For example, Sunday was named after the sun god, Monday after the moon goddess, and so on. These names were later translated into the Norse language and then into English.
The number 7 has been considered a sacred or lucky number in many cultures, which may have contributed to its use in the week. Additionally, 7 days may have been chosen because it roughly corresponds to the four phases of the moon, making it a convenient unit of time.
The ancient Egyptians, Romans, and Chinese all had calendars with different numbers of days in a week. It was not until the spread of the Julian calendar by the Roman Empire that the 7-day week became widely used. However, some cultures, such as the ancient Hebrews, had a 7-day week before the Julian calendar.
No, not all cultures use a 7-day week. Some cultures, such as the ancient Aztecs, had a 13-day week, while others, such as the ancient Egyptians, had an 8-day week. In modern times, some cultures have adopted the 7-day week through globalization, but there are still some variations in the length of the week in different parts of the world.