> and then afterwards there was an industrial revolution.
> Every machine in every machine shop was geared towards manufacturing dimensions and tolerances specified in inches, tenths, and hundredths. Changing to metric would have required rebuilding or replacing all of them.
I don't think this argument makes anywhere near as much sense as you think it does: the part of the US which lags the most in metrication isn't industry, it is in everyday life, K-12 education, and consumer products/services; the US manufacturing industry is significantly ahead of US consumers in the adoption of metric. Entire industries in the US have adopted metric (most notably the US automotive design&manufacturing industry has switched to mostly metric). If the real issue were about industry, you'd expect industry to have the biggest lag, not to be ahead of consumers.
I think the real reason is actually cultural. Almost every country which successfully metricated, did so with some degree of government coercion – "you are going to start using metric now, and we aren't giving you a choice about it". The US cultural emphasis on individual freedom led it to refuse to go down that path, insisting that metrication be voluntary only – which is a large part of why, decades later, so little progress has been made. Similarly, the UK's insistence on retaining miles for road distances is due to cultural and political reasons, not any practical concern – Australia successfully converted all its road distance and speed limit signs to kilometres, despite having much longer roads than the UK does
Also, for all that US insistence on "freedom", it actually engages in anti-metric governmental coercion – consider the Fair Packaging and Labelling Act (FPLA), a federal law which makes metric-only packaging illegal for many categories of consumer goods.
> The SI units were designed to make unit conversions easier, but in practice nobody actually converts units
I can remember doing lots of unit conversions in science and maths classes in high school. If I'd gone on to study physical science or engineering at university, I'm sure I would have done plenty more. From an educational viewpoint, I think it is easier to teach students how to do science with SI units if they have already been taught basic metric units at the primary/elementary level, and are used to using them in everyday life. Whereas, students in the US start out with less familiarity with basic metric units, which makes learning to use SI units in science class more work for them
And every time I visit the US I find myself constantly trying to remember stuff like "what is an ounce, again?" "what's 60 degrees Fahrenheit in Celsius?". If the US finally finished adopting the metric system, it would eliminate the need for many unit conversions which are now required by international visitors, immigrants/emigrants to/from the US, journalists, businesses engaged in product localisation, etc
> Cooking uses teaspoons, tablespoons and cups, but you never need to convert between spoons and cups
Some countries (Australia I know is one, there are probably others) have defined metric cups, teaspoons and tablespoons. So this isn't really the argument against the metric system that you think it is
> and then afterwards there was an industrial revolution.
> Every machine in every machine shop was geared towards manufacturing dimensions and tolerances specified in inches, tenths, and hundredths. Changing to metric would have required rebuilding or replacing all of them.
I don't think this argument makes anywhere near as much sense as you think it does: the part of the US which lags the most in metrication isn't industry, it is in everyday life, K-12 education, and consumer products/services; the US manufacturing industry is significantly ahead of US consumers in the adoption of metric. Entire industries in the US have adopted metric (most notably the US automotive design&manufacturing industry has switched to mostly metric). If the real issue were about industry, you'd expect industry to have the biggest lag, not to be ahead of consumers.
I think the real reason is actually cultural. Almost every country which successfully metricated, did so with some degree of government coercion – "you are going to start using metric now, and we aren't giving you a choice about it". The US cultural emphasis on individual freedom led it to refuse to go down that path, insisting that metrication be voluntary only – which is a large part of why, decades later, so little progress has been made. Similarly, the UK's insistence on retaining miles for road distances is due to cultural and political reasons, not any practical concern – Australia successfully converted all its road distance and speed limit signs to kilometres, despite having much longer roads than the UK does
Also, for all that US insistence on "freedom", it actually engages in anti-metric governmental coercion – consider the Fair Packaging and Labelling Act (FPLA), a federal law which makes metric-only packaging illegal for many categories of consumer goods.
> The SI units were designed to make unit conversions easier, but in practice nobody actually converts units
I can remember doing lots of unit conversions in science and maths classes in high school. If I'd gone on to study physical science or engineering at university, I'm sure I would have done plenty more. From an educational viewpoint, I think it is easier to teach students how to do science with SI units if they have already been taught basic metric units at the primary/elementary level, and are used to using them in everyday life. Whereas, students in the US start out with less familiarity with basic metric units, which makes learning to use SI units in science class more work for them
And every time I visit the US I find myself constantly trying to remember stuff like "what is an ounce, again?" "what's 60 degrees Fahrenheit in Celsius?". If the US finally finished adopting the metric system, it would eliminate the need for many unit conversions which are now required by international visitors, immigrants/emigrants to/from the US, journalists, businesses engaged in product localisation, etc
> Cooking uses teaspoons, tablespoons and cups, but you never need to convert between spoons and cups
Some countries (Australia I know is one, there are probably others) have defined metric cups, teaspoons and tablespoons. So this isn't really the argument against the metric system that you think it is