▲ | vladms 4 days ago | |||||||||||||
> An "upside down" map is just as valid as a right side up map. Is it as useful and/or efficient though? I could write a phrase in English from right to left and if you really wanted you could read it, but it would be highly inefficient. An efficient society sometimes has to pick conventions (how to write text, how to print a map, what characters to use, etc) and I find not interesting to point that other conventions could have been used. | ||||||||||||||
▲ | jcattle 4 days ago | parent | next [-] | |||||||||||||
I mean, to me at least it is also interesting. Like Japanese writing or Arabic. It's interesting because it is different, there's a different predominant convention. You can also think further about how the writing convention might have had an impact on culture and the society itself. Also thinking of maps and Japan: where I am from (Germany) public overview maps of parks or street maps usually have north as up. In Japan however it is very common for those maps to have up as the cardinal direction you are looking at the map at. So if you are looking at the map in a western direction, the map will have west up. So for walking the map is straight up, backwards down, left left and right right. Like that it is very easy to know which way to go. Want to go to some place that is on the left on the map? Turn left! | ||||||||||||||
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▲ | ashoeafoot 4 days ago | parent | prev [-] | |||||||||||||
[dead] |