I read it somewhere, I'm sorry I can't recall where... when the United Nations considered calendar reform in the 1950s it and the World Calendar were the two main proposals. Now I look at it a bit more, maybe I have the name of the thing wrong... I'm sure I've read it called the "Perpetual Calendar" somewhere, but all I can find is a reference to the "International Fixed Calendar" or the "Cotsworth calednar" or the "Eastman plan"... the thing obviously had a lot of names. Okay, have a look at this website: http://personal.ecu.edu/mccartyr/13-month.htm -- Simon J Kissane |
I read it somewhere, I'm sorry I can't recall where... when the United Nations considered calendar reform in the 1950s it and the World calendar were the two main proposals. Now I look at it a bit more, maybe I have the name of the thing wrong... I'm sure I've read it called the "Perpetual Calendar" somewhere, but all I can find is a reference to the "International Fixed Calendar" or the "Cotsworth calendar" or the "Eastman plan"... the thing obviously had a lot of names. Okay, have a look at this website: http://personal.ecu.edu/mccartyr/13-month.htm -- Simon J Kissane I've not heard of the "Perpetual Calendar" as a specific calendar before. The disciption is almost identical to the "Cotworth and Eastman Calendar". The only difference is that the leap day occurs in the extra month Sol rather than at the end of the year. See the above mentioned web page for more details. Karl Palmen |
This article smelled a little partisan to me, so I spent a few minutes doing some research. I found http://www.calendarreform.org/, started by Canadian Miklós Lente. He offers four different proposals for calendar reform. None of them refer to "Sol," though. It sounds like Yet Another Idealistic Pipedream – more like Esperanto than the [metric system]? (please pardon my bias – after all, I'm restricting it to this /Talk page :-). Still, in the spirit of neutral point of view I merely seek the source of the idea so that all readers can judge its value with full knowledge of its history.
<>< Tim Chambers