Joat42 wrote:phillies wrote:"... how many inches are there in 1.3 miles?..."
Let us know the first time you encounter this question outside this class of debates, and why it mattered.
I'll will do that when you let me know that a similar type of conversion have never been done in a real-life situation.phillies wrote:"What is the mass of a volume 2.57 x 3.14 x 87.6 meters of liquid mercury?" Without a calculator and a copy of the CRC tables, please.
You missed something important, my question contained ALL the relevant information to be easily solved in metric by just multiplying 4 numbers. If you want to refute what I said it's a bad sign that you both remove and "obfuscate" information as a gotcha. For the question to be equal in the context of comparing imperial to metric is should have been: What's the mass of a volume 10x10x10 cm of mercury liquid having a density of 13.534 g/cm³? To get the answer, move the decimal-comma right 3 times and you get 13.534 kg. No conversions, no precision-loss, no tables, no memorized constants.
A kilogram is an arbitrary mass. A meter is an arbitrary length. Any useful calculation in the metric system will inlcude arbitrary numbers that either have to be remembered or looked up. That is why I believe that the additional numbers (I believe that I can get by with 6 or so) that the Imperial system entails are not a critical impairment.