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How many fingers do Kerbals have? If not 10, then they don't count decimal.


kerbalboy2000

How many fingers do Kerbals have?  

17 members have voted

  1. 1. How many fingers do Kerbals have?

    • 4+4
    • 5+5 (Humans)
    • 6+6
      0
    • 7+7
      0
    • 8+8
      0
    • 9+9
      0
    • 10+10 or more?


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Hello fellow Kerbals....

I would just like to ask the question "How many fingers do Kerbals have," assuming that they always wear mittens/gloves in most pictures, except for Wernher von Kerman, who has visibly 4 fingers, 3 and a thumb... thus they probably count in Octo. (Base 8)

There will be a poll later of numbers, and you can also put some suggestion in this thread.

The purpose of this is for my conlang Kerbal languages in the IKLC, the International Kerbal Language Committee (started my wptheenah)

:)

How do you close the poll? Seems like 4+4 is winning?

Assuming that Kerbals have 8 fingers:

<iframe src="https://docs.google.com/forms/d/1HbE9xVvx0XVQGBm6TMwxyNrPC00L019Xm9GrkZiHln0/viewform?embedded=true" width="760" height="500" frameborder="0" marginheight="0" marginwidth="0">Loading...</iframe>

What number system do they have in counting?

Edited by kerbalboy2000
(Counting with the thumb is really important in some language gestures and sign languages)
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The popularity of base 10 is as much a fluke as it is practical. From what I remember of my history of mathematics, base 12 and 20 were actually more common before the spread of base 10 took off. Base 60 was also rather popular in rather early periods, and to this day some of its traits carry over and are used. (Ever think about why 60 is used so much in time rather than a more logical 100?)

Sure, matching the number of fingers/thumbs we have made it easier to teach which helped its popularity, but honestly base 12 or base 16 make a whole lot more sense when it comes to actual practicality due to the number of awkward fractions base 10 leaves you with.

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Well, actually, assuming their fingers are segmented in a similar way to our own, they could also count in base-12. Counting each of the three segments on each finger on one hand allows you to count up to 12. Base 12 also has significant mathematical advantages over any other system; there are a fair few proponents for changing our world to this "dozenal" system, as they call it.

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If not 10, then they don't count decimal.

How so? Humans used 12-base for a long time in spite of having ten fingers.

(can count to 12 on one hand, using the thumb to count the total of 12 segments of the fingers).

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Well, actually, assuming their fingers are segmented in a similar way to our own, they could also count in base-12. Counting each of the three segments on each finger on one hand allows you to count up to 12. Base 12 also has significant mathematical advantages over any other system; there are a fair few proponents for changing our world to this "dozenal" system, as they call it.

Indeed, using this method they could even get the base 10 system we see with the four digits they have. Count to nine using the segments of the first three fingers then count the thumb as one.

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