Was there an alternative adjective to “clockwise” other than “the rotation you take around left hand”?

Also, how did all watch companies around the world agree on what the direction of “clockwise” is?

  • @FooBarrington
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    710 months ago

    It works, but it’s ambiguous. You have to specify which part you’re referring to if you want to be sure you’re understood.

    • @[email protected]
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      310 months ago

      Honestly the hardest concept for me to grasp in organic chemistry was left vs right chirality. I could understand why they were different, but fuck me if i could ever consistently identify them.

    • @kuneho
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      010 months ago

      You have to specify which part you’re referring to

      What do you mean by that?

      • @[email protected]
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        310 months ago

        Turning right, looking at the top of the clock, is different from turning right while looking at the bottom of the clock. And so on.

        • themeatbridge
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          010 months ago

          You’re not entirely wrong, but the convention is to refer to the top of the wheel. But you could be looking at the wheel from the other side, which would change its direction from your perspective.

          • @kuneho
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            10 months ago

            That’s true, but saying clockwise/anticlockwise also works with fixed perspective, unless the thing itself has a fixed orientation. but if that’s the case, left/right works the same.

            • @FooBarrington
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              210 months ago

              No, it’s an extra level of confusion. Clockwise/counterclockwise only has one axis of confusion (looking from front or behind) with one option being the obvious default. Left/right have this axis AND the axis of top/bottom for confusion. It’s literally one bit more ambiguous.

      • @FooBarrington
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        110 months ago

        No matter which direction a ball rolls, part of it moves to the right, and part to the left (either top right and bottom left, or vice versa). If you don’t specify which part of the ball you’re looking at, it could be either top or bottom, so the statement is ambiguous.

        • @kuneho
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          110 months ago

          but without this information, clockwise and anticlockwise also ambigous.

          • @FooBarrington
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            10 months ago

            No, they are well-defined. There is no missing information in “clockwise”. There is missing information in “right”.

            There is no “top clockwise” or “bottom clockwise”.