Harry Paidas: Counting the ways we live life by the numbers
I will only scratch the surface in the following paragraphs, but it is fascinating how numbers rule our lives. It is also fascinating to think how life would be different had we stuck to the Roman numeral system rather than converting to the Arabic system in the 16th century.
We Boomers might remember that the educators of our time were insistent that we learn Roman numerals as well as other now nearly obsolete things like Latin, writing in cursive, diagraming sentences, using a slide rule and long division.
Today's students, products of the Age of Technology, have their share of requirements but because of technology, their tools have taken them to a new frontier.
The only common usage of Roman numerals has been relegated to designating which Super Bowl is being played. I think NFL brass thinks it is classier to use Roman numerals. Unfortunately, anyone younger than 65 needs to consult Google to figure it out.
Meanwhile, Arabic numerals dominate in all facets of our lives. (For the purpose of consistency, I will deviate from the journalistic practice of using the word for a number under 10 and use numerals throughout).
Let's look at my typical day. I look at the clock: 6:30 a.m. I immediately put my Apple Watch on to begin measuring what I hope will be 10,000 steps. I look at my July calendar with its 31 days and realize I have a 10 a.m. doctor's appointment. I go to the kitchen where I put 4 scoops in the coffee maker to make 5 cups of coffee. I pour 4 ounces of juice and stick 3 prunes in my cereal. Then I take my nine pills and supplements. I'll skip over the parts that include the numbers 1 and 2.
I get in the car and see the odometer is just over 50,000 miles. On my way to the doctor, I have to stay under 25 mph, then 35 mph, then up to 55 mph, then quickly back down to 25 mph. Kathe calls my phone number to remind me to stop at the grocery store to pick up 12 eggs.
When I get to the doctor, the front office staff wants to confirm my Social Security number, my Medicare number, and the account number for my supplemental insurance. When I get to the inner doctor's office, they want me to know I am still 5-foot-6 and now weigh 175 pounds and remind me that I should be about 15 pounds less.
Then it's time to check blood pressure, which ideally should be 120 over 75. Mine tends to be in the 130s over something in the 60s, which suggests I have both high and low blood pressure. Go figure. The week before, I had some bloodwork. Doc and I look at my numbers and if anything is out of range we discuss why and what to do about it. This day, she says, 'Your numbers look good.' Even though I don't feel so well, it's great my numbers are good.
So, I leave the doctor's office and go to the grocery store. I can't believe I am paying $5 for 12 eggs. And, holy cow, bananas are 64 cents a pound! I think to myself, it's a good thing they aren't taking my blood pressure now. Everywhere I look in the grocery store, I see prices and realize that inflation is real.
I return home and the mail has arrived. Electric bill, gas bill, water bill, cable bill and Visa bill have all arrived at the same time with various dollar amounts in Arabic numerals. They are also due by certain dates.
I go to the newsfeed on my phone and see a full slate of baseball games are to be played. The Guardians and Pirates are both under .500 and hardly anybody bats .300 anymore. The Pirates have a pitcher, Paul Skenes, whose ERA, incredibly, is under 2.00. There was a time when I knew nearly every Major Leaguer's batting average, but my RAM has been jammed by the aging process.
I could go on and on but I think you get the picture. And I hope you will take the time to pause and appreciate the works of our ancestors to bring us to this point.
I know that ever since that near all-nighter when I came to the realization that numbers dominate our lives, I have accepted and even embraced the importance of numbers. Even when I go to the doctor and I am not feeling well, I love to hear her say that my numbers are good.
In fact, in what I hope are many years from now, if you happen to be strolling through city cemetery and see my name, I have left instructions for the headstone to read: 'But his numbers were good …'
Harry Paidas is faculty emeritus at Mount Union and writes a periodic column for The Review. He can be reached at paidashp@mountunion.edu.
This article originally appeared on The Alliance Review: Harry Paidas: Counting the ways we live life by the numbers
Solve the daily Crossword

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Buzz Feed
4 hours ago
- Buzz Feed
XX Things On The Brink Of Collapse No One Talks About
Between the existential chaos around the world and whatever we're all dealing with in our personal lives, it feels like we're collectively acting like everything is fine these days, but that's not really the case. Political turmoil is wreaking havoc across the globe, climate change is getting realer by the second, and the global economy is shifting, for better or for worse. Needless to say, we're in very trying times, and it feels like burnout is now a universal feeling. A recent post on the r/AskReddit sub asked users the following question: "What is currently on the brink of collapse but no one is talking about it?" From collapsing ecosystems to the rise of AI, these 19 responses highlight just how close our dystopian future might be: Note: these responses have been edited and condensed for clarity. "The orca pod known as J-pod, that are residents of the Pudget Sound, are starving as the salmon population is collapsing." "And to be specific, Chinook salmon. Chinook are their main food source because of the fat content, and they're on the brink of collapse. I mean, it's not looking good for all salmon species, but when/if the Chinook go extinct, that's the first big domino to fall in the Salish Sea ecosystem." "Here in the UK, the water table. Already seen a massive drought in the North with unprecedented lack of rainfall this year. Reservoirs and rivers are lower than they've been in decades. On top of leaking pipes that date back to WWII, we could honestly be talking about real drinking water shortages in 5-10 years." "Honestly, I'd say the internet. Everything requires an account, everything collects your information, you can't own anything because you can only get subscriptions to services. There are way too many social media platforms, which are somehow all owned by the same few mega corporations (Meta, Google, Microsoft, etc.) AI is slowly taking over everything and spewing out misinformation left and right." "Lots of collectively-owned private, professional businesses: Private equity has been relentlessly buying up veterinarian practices, CPA firms, and — I'm sure — all kinds of other businesses so they can egregiously increase prices, sell everything that isn't nailed down, cut staff to nothing, then sell the little bit that's left to some naive future buyer at a hugely inflated cost." "Teachers. Not teaching itself, but the whole system around it. So many teachers are underpaid, overworked, and just done. A lot are quitting quietly or switching careers, and schools are struggling to replace them. It's kind of scary how fast it's unraveling, but no one's really screaming about it yet." "Maybe not on the brink, but possibly approaching — The AMOC, or Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation, is a large system of ocean currents that acts like a conveyor belt, circulating warm and cold water throughout the Atlantic Ocean." "Bridges, railroad lines, power grids, and water pipes. Some of them are decades old and unstable (Germany)." "A bunch of small ecosystems around the world." "The working class. Hopefully, the collapse will wake some folks up, but I don't have a lot of hope when they seem perfectly happy in their caves staring at the shadows." "Critical thinking. Humanity is over-reliant on devices and AI to do their thinking for them instead of using tech to enhance their own thinking." "The movie industry feels that way in Hollywood right now." "The Cascadia Subduction Zone." "The 'enrollment cliff' is starting. This year, the lack of kids born during and after the 2008 recession is starting to graduate from high school. In this population pyramid, you can see that starting at the 15-19 age group, birth rates went down and kept going down. Now, it was already going down on average, but right before the recession, there was a small uptick that could have been a turnaround." "Civilizations decline/collapse over generations — I'd suggest that there is a strong possibility that 'the free liberal West' is in the early stages of a multi-generational decline, not unlike that of the Roman empire. Facebook and Netflix are our bread and circuses while around us, cultures that are not compatible with our (democratic, egalitarian, progressive, liberal) values are rising to challenge and eventually displace us. It won't happen in my lifetime, but it is happening." "The Anthropocene." "Overly complex appliances, cars, TVs, etc." "I think our civilization's ability to write without Generative AI. I believe writing is thinking, and it provides clarity to our thoughts. A vast majority of university students are now relying on services like ChatGPT, which I believe will eventually affect us in the long run. I don't have research backing up my claim, and I hope I'm wrong. Regardless, I'm worried." "Surprised I didn't see many posts about insects. We are in a mass extinction event of something like 60% of their population."

Boston Globe
7 hours ago
- Boston Globe
Milton Williams's path toward being a Patriots cornerstone started with his dad, long roads, and ceaseless work
The choice was easy. Williams grew up watching his father, Milton Sr., work late nights as a truck driver in Texas. Williams Sr. chose the overnight shift to ensure he could be present for his three children during the day. He usually took the road around 11 p.m., sometimes as late as 1 a.m., and drove double-digit hours. Williams Sr. never accepted an 'over-the-road' job. That would require him to stay out of town, and his family remained his top priority. Advertisement For the nearly three decades that Williams Sr. followed that schedule, he still dropped his kids off at school; supported their extracurriculars; enjoyed breakfast with his wife, Willamette; mowed the lawn, and worked out in the neighborhood. All the stereotypical dad things. Get Starting Point A guide through the most important stories of the morning, delivered Monday through Friday. Enter Email Sign Up 'Me seeing that, like, 'Man, I know he's tired,' ' Williams said. 'I'm getting a full night's rest and I'm tired, but he's consistently getting up every day and making sure we had everything we did. Me seeing that meant I ain't got no excuses. Ain't nobody going to feel sorry for you.' After growing up with a single mother, Williams Sr. always intended on maintaining an active role in his children's lives. No matter what. 'I was tired going to work sometimes, but I knew what I had to do for my children,' Williams Sr. said. 'I said, 'When I get children, I'm going to be there 24/7.' ' Advertisement After that interview, Williams's agent called Williams Sr. to tell him what his son had told the group of coaches and executives. 'I had to pull over on the side of the road for about 45 minutes because my eyes watered up,' Williams Sr. said. 'I teared up. 'You don't think the kids watch you, but they watch everything you do. I'm the role model for my son? I thought he was going to say Aaron Donald or Lawrence Taylor or someone like that. He said, 'My dad.' That broke me down.' Milton Williams was part of the havoc that dominated Patrick Mahomes and the Chiefs in February's Super Bowl. Matt Slocum/Associated Press A father's plan in motion When Williams and his twin sister, Mia, turned 3 years old, their father started kicking a soccer ball with them in the backyard. It was all part of his plan. Williams Sr. wanted to introduce the concepts of coordination and begin conditioning their muscles at a young age, in order to prepare them for organized sports. A few years later, the family added shooting hoops in the driveway. Even after the twins formally enrolled in team sports in grade school, Williams Sr. kept them on his own regimen. At 12 years old, they did push-ups and other calisthenic exercises. At 13, they began gradually lifting weights. 'You don't want to do it before then because you don't want to stunt their growth,' said Williams Sr. The emphasis on strength and conditioning dates to his childhood in Pahokee, Fla., a small town that has produced a handful of NFL players. Williams Sr. connected with the late Advertisement 'A coach would rather have a player play the game four quarters at 80 percent than have a player play one quarter at 100 percent,' Waters said. That perspective resonated. Williams Sr. effectively served as his children's first trainer. He took them to a nearby hill to run sprints, obtained a dip machine to target the upper body, and designed workouts with weighted vests, jump ropes, and parachutes. Related : During the summer, Williams and his sisters would lift weights in the morning before hitting the hills in the afternoon. Williams Sr. would sometimes do it with them. 'I feel like that's where I got a lot of my speed from. Even though I put on some size, I still kept my speed, agility, and quickness,' Williams said. 'My dad always talked about building your fast-twitch fibers from running those hills. He was from Florida. They're out there in the sugarcane fields, chasing rabbits, running hills, and all that stuff.' When Williams was a teenager, there was a stretch where he didn't finish his workouts because he was instead playing video games on his PlayStation. What did Williams Sr. do? 'I took the PlayStation from him,' he recalled. 'I said, 'Listen, I didn't have my dad to push me like I'm trying to get y'all.' I did everything on my own.' In order to earn his PlayStation back, Williams would have to do 100 reps on the dips machine. 'One time I tried to lie and tell him that I did them,' Williams said. 'I don't know how he knew, but he knew.' Advertisement Williams Sr. kept a close eye on his children, whether at home, at school, or on the field. He paid attention to everything — friends, grades, football. At first, Williams didn't understand why, but he gained an appreciation for his dad's watchful nature. 'The older you get, the more you realize everybody doesn't have that growing up,' Williams said. 'They don't have a father figure that's hard on them, that's teaching them how the world works and how life's going to go. It took me a while to figure out why. I understand why now. He knew what he wanted to instill in me.' Milton Williams began his college career at Louisiana Tech as a backup, and ended it as a third-round draft pick of the Eagles. Matthew Hinton/FRE170690 AP The proof is in the numbers At Louisiana Tech's pro day in 2021, Williams dominated the testing. He ran the 40-yard dash in 4.67 seconds, the three-cone drill in 6.96 seconds, and the 20-yard shuttle run in 4.33 seconds. He registered a vertical of 38½ inches and a broad jump of 121 inches. He logged 34 reps of 225 pounds on the bench press. At 6 feet 3 inches and 284 pounds, those numbers reflected elite athleticism and explosiveness. 'I knew that I was going to be the fastest defensive tackle in this draft class. No question about it,' Williams said at the time. 'No defensive tackle anywhere was going to run faster than me.' Had the NFL not 'I've always been overlooked and underrated, so I had to go above and beyond to show what I'm capable of,' Williams said. 'That just made me build up my work ethic and my consistency of making sure I show up every day and just get better.' Advertisement Williams knows his football pedigree isn't eye-catching. Coming out of Crowley (Texas) High School, he earned defensive MVP in District 5A-Region II for his impact as a pass rusher, but Williams is one of just two Crowley alumni to make it to the NFL. The other, linebacker Gary Reasons, was drafted in 1984. As a two-star recruit, Williams nabbed offers only from nearby schools: Tulane, University of Texas at San Antonio, Stephen F. Austin, and Louisiana Tech. He committed to the Bulldogs, where he played three seasons after redshirting his freshman year and earned first-team all-conference honors in 2020. During his college career, Williams continued to focus on strength and conditioning, putting on more than 20 pounds of muscle. Whenever he came home to Texas for a school break, he would be back running hills and doing dips with his dad. Throughout his son's football journey, Williams Sr. would often reference a popular saying: 'Hard work beats talent when talent doesn't work hard.' 'Nothing was given to him,' Williams Sr. said. 'Nothing.' 'I didn't go to the biggest college. I didn't go to the top high school. I didn't go to all the camps and all that stuff,' Williams said. 'But if you give me an opportunity, I'm going to take advantage of it. I tried to do that at every level.' When the Eagles drafted Williams in the third round with the 73rd pick, Williams Sr. immediately had a message for general manager Howie Roseman: 'Nobody on this team is going to outwork Milton Williams.' Related : Advertisement Williams served as a rotational piece in Philadelphia, as the Eagles spent their first-round picks in both 2022 (Jordan Davis) and 2023 (Jalen Carter) on defensive tackles. Williams missed only one game in four seasons, because of a concussion in 2023, but was never on the field for more than 50 percent of the defense's snaps each season. Taking care of his body remained a top priority in the pros. He started integrating acupuncture and massages into his routine. He spent a summer working with famed defensive line coach Pete Jenkins. Most recently, he added boxing as a cross-training activity. While his son longed for a bigger role, Williams Sr. would tell him the same message: 'When you're on the field, make them call your name.' During It's not a stretch to say Milton Williams will play a big role in the success of Mike Vrabel's first season in charge of the Patriots. John Tlumacki/Globe Staff Investment and expectations In March, Williams sat in his agent's house stunned. He had just signed 'Everything I had been through, all the extra work I had to put in, all the late nights and early mornings that nobody sees, all the days where you don't feel like doing and you still get up and do it, I was just thinking about all that,' Williams said. 'I was stunned.' Related : Not only are they expecting him to play significant snaps, the Patriots are turning to Williams as a cornerstone amid their rebuild under new coach Mike Vrabel. 'He's very mature,' Vrabel said. 'There's zero reservation about his leadership ability. He's here a lot, he's here all the time, he shows up early, he gets plenty of work in, he takes care of his body, and he's a true pro.' Williams has totally embraced his opportunity. 'In Philly, I was never the starter or never looked at as the guy that was going to lead the group,' Williams said. 'Now, I finally get the opportunity that I always felt like I had in me. To get the opportunity now, I just want to make sure I'm ready for it. I really can't be slacking off because the young guys are going to be looking at me. I just want to show them a good example.' Just like the one he had. Nicole Yang can be reached at


New York Post
2 days ago
- New York Post
Amateur metal detectorist's ‘feeling' helps archaeologists uncover 2,000-year-old Roman settlement
Archaeologists uncovered an 'extensive' Ancient Roman settlement in an idyllic tourist destination in England – all thanks to the chance discovery of an amateur metal detectorist. In a press release shared with Fox News Digital, Cotswold Archaeology announced the discovery of the Roman settlement in Gloucestershire, a county within the Cotswold region of England. Advertisement The settlement dates back 2,000 years; it was inhabited between the first and second centuries A.D. The excavation near Willersey was done as a joint effort with Historic England. Among the recent discoveries were a Roman villa, remains of limestone buildings — and at least three Iron Age ring ditches. Excavators also found the remnants of Roman building materials, including ceramic roofing, painted wall plaster and box flue tiles. 'Once Historic England has the final report on the archaeological work, it will be able to consider whether to recommend to the Department for Culture, Media and Sport (DCMS) that the site be protected as a scheduled monument,' the statement said. Advertisement 4 Cotswold Archaeology announced the discovery of a Roman settlement in Gloucestershire, thanks to an amateur metal detectorist. Cotswold Archaeology / Historic England The recent excavation was all thanks to an amateur metal detectorist who found two iron Roman cavalry swords in the same location in March 2023. The hobbyist, Glenn Manning, reported his finds to the government, and they were subsequently donated to the local Corinium Museum in Cirencester. Advertisement 'The X-rays show that the swords were constructed differently: one has evidence of decorative pattern welding running down the center, whereas the other sword is plain,' Cotswold Archaeology explained in its statement. 'The pattern-welded sword would have been more expensive to produce and therefore higher status.' 'We turned a plowed field, the swords, and geophysical anomalies into the story of a settlement spanning hundreds of years.' The long swords likely belonged to cavalrymen in the second century, the organization said. Advertisement 4 Glenn Manning reported his findings of two iron Roman cavalry swords to the government, which were donated to the Corinium Museum in Cirencester. Cotswold Archaeology / Historic England 4 Painted wall plaster pieces were found. Cotswold Archaeology / Historic England 4 Pieces discovered at the Roman settlement. Cotswold Archaeology / Historic England 'They are contemporary with the villa,' its statement added. 'How they came to be there, though, is currently unknown.' Near Willersley, archaeologists also uncovered a burial of a skeleton that still retained an iron band around its arm. A horse skull was also found – but whether the remains date back to the Roman settlement is still unknown. In a statement, Cotswold Archaeology onsite project officer Peter Busby said he was 'very proud' of the achievement. Advertisement 'We turned a plowed field, the swords, and geophysical anomalies into the story of a settlement spanning hundreds of years – the first stage in telling the history of these fields and their cavalry swords,' the archaeologist said. 'This was only my second time metal detecting. I'm excited to find out more about them.' Glenn Manning, the metal detectorist who found the swords, described his experience as 'amazing.' He recalled, 'The morning before the rally, I had a feeling I would find something special. This was only my second time metal detecting. I'm excited to find out more about them.' Advertisement The Romans occupied the British Isles from 43 A.D. until 410 A.D., and many remnants of the era still emerge today. In May, British archaeologists announced the discovery of an unusual eight-sided Roman ring in a former drainage ditch in Lincolnshire. Before that, a Roman grave filled with gypsum was found during a highway construction project in England.