13 The rhetoric and politics of standardization: Measurements and needs for precision
Important then to escape the pitfalls of any arbitrariness in understanding what we are doing in counting units of length, weight, or any measurements of areas of space, we need to understand what constitutes the unit of measurement in order to use it practically in what we do when we use measuring tools. Measurements such as sums of units of length, area, of volume, angles, weight, and even sums of units of time are countable. In turn we use these measurements to relate to other things that we also define as being countable.
How we relate to those countable applications depends upon the measuring tools we create. And what constitutes a unit of measurement is ...
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