Quote:
ninjaxlikewoah__ wrote
There is a missing day in history.
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A Trigonometry teacher believes this ridiculous bullshit?
There is no such thing as "a day." The phenomenon that we call "a day" is our own perception of the Sun during one rotation of the Earth. A missing "day," then, would require the EARTH TO STOP ROTATING, not for the Sun to stop spinning; as such, it would not even result in a "missing day," but rather a superlong day.
Besides which, there are 11 "missing days" between 4 October 1582 and 15 October 1582 when the Catholic Church switched from the Julian Calendar to the Gregorian Calendar. So clearly the phenomenon of "Missing days" is a result of psychosocial culture, not physical reality.