Temporal Numerology

or Arithmology, if etymology’s your thing.

Numerology refers to occult, supernatural, or mystical association between numbers and events: birthdays, dates of deaths, volcanic eruptions and so on. It can be useful, however, in linking numbers to common uses, and in so doing, generate a common meaning.

24-7-365 is one example, drawn from the 24-hour day, the 7-day week, and the 365-day year. We don’t have an idiom for the month, as it isn’t so definitive: the lunar month has 29 or 30 days, the Gregorian calendar month has 28 to 31 days. theAbysmal Calendar has such a variety of measures that it’s unclear how any of this might be meaningful.

That’s not to dissuade one from trying.

a jumble of numbers
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Raccoon’s New Year

Today marks yet another of theAbysmal Calendar’s interlocking New Years.

This past year I’ve been developing a novel calendar system, which divides the year into 363 + 2 days. The 363 days are divided into 11 months of 33 days each. Each month is made up of three weeks of 11 days. There are also three terms of 121 days.

The first day of the year is today, Jun 22 (21 in a leap year).

 

image of concentric circles. The outermost circle is made of eleven "months" of thirty three days arranged as three by eleven rectangles. Each rectangle contains thirty three circles representing the days of the year. Each circle is shaded from white at the top through greyscale to black at the bottom. The next circle in numbers the months 0 to 10 from top right clockwise to top left. The next circle in numbers the terms 0 to 2, beginning at the top right, ending top left. The central circle has the number 363.
Northern Hemisphere

 

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Experimental Time

Experimenting with possible calendars. There’s lots to play with.

I’ve been tinkering for a while with the various ways we can organize the 365 days of the year. I’ve been focused on the 13-month calendar which divides the year in several ways: 52 x 7-day weeks, which can further be organized by fortnight, month, quarter, and semester; 28 x 13-day weeks, which can further be organized by double, house, quarter, and semester.

There are any number of ways to divide the year: the Gregorian’s irregular 12 months, the more regular 13 months of the Persian calendar, the lunar months of any number of systems, the various market weeks of diverse systems (2-day weeks all the way to 20-day weeks). What else is possible?

I’ve discovered two possible structures: one that reflects the change in daylight throughout the year in the higher latitudes, and the other that is simply an ongoing experiment in trying to evoke a little chaos.

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