@goodguy5 Just make sure you log in at the same time every day. I put it on my list of sites to visit in the morning while I get ready/caught up with the world.
I think we need a coordinated universal time, and local times that fit the culture and biosphere of each area. It's like being bilingual, but with time.
For example, even setting aside that a local clock would probably shift day/night signifiers with the seasons and would put the turnover at someplace other than midnight in locations where sunrise or sunset, rather than midnight, are when the day changes...
...the original point of time zones was that the sun should always be overhead at 12 noon.
But since everybody's "sun overhead" was a little bit different, and the trains needed to run on a clock that didn't change with every few towns, time zones were introduced to standardize "noon" in a way that didn't actually match up with the sun.
Time zones reduced the ability of local time to accurately reflect local reality.
Yeah. That's actually a super fascinating area of study: the way that mechanical clocks changed how cultures (and the bodies in them) interact with time.
Clocks and other things; people in medieval times would have a period of wakefulness between two stages of sleep but omnipresent artificial light made it easier to stay up longer and sleep in one chunk
It starts the year on the day in which the Sun enters Aries, as seen in Tehran; there are nineteen months of nineteen days each; two of our Holy Days are the first and the second day following the occurrence of the eighth new moon after the New Year; and the days left over that don't fit into any month are just "extra" days between the eighteenth and nineteenth month--usually four, but sometimes five, depending on the Sun and Aries, which is how we get our leap year calculations.
@BESW What we have currently is a very nice compromise between Time Has No Meaning (because if I walk a mile I have to readjust my watch) and Time Has No Meaning (because it's just a number with no connotation or connection to real world events)
(The two Holy Days are determined by the lunar cycle in a solar calendar because they're celebrating events that occurred on consecutive days of the year in separate years in the Islamic lunar calendar, but occurred a month apart by solar reckoning.)
@BESW I know stellar drift occurs on the order of billions of years so it's not really a major issue, but does the calendar reconcile the possibility that there might be a time when Aries no longer exists?
@Rubiksmoose I'm not sure that we're on the same page with this one yet, but, I just wanted to let you know that I've made an edit to my answer on the Counterspell question which may or may not address the issue you were trying to raise earlier. Let me know if you think it's an improvement, ideally here rather than in the comments.
The Bahá'í Faith teaches that each religion is part of a progressive revelation of the timeless, changeless Faith of God, and that each Messenger reveals what They can according to the capacity and needs of humanity at the time--so at a point in the future (not less than a thousand years from the middle of the 19th century) Bahá'u'lláh's religion will no longer be sufficient for the new capacity of humanity and the new challenges we'll be facing.
God will send a new Messenger, and as a sign of the renewed spiritual guidance that new Messenger will bring a new calendar.
So provided Aries hangs in there for another 900 years or so, we're good.
(Also there's an international elected administrative body with the authority to make rulings on things not covered by the original Texts. So if Aries blows up next week, the Universal House of Justice can figure out what to do.)