between men and things. Thus it appears the binary division of things is 
not only most readily obtained, but also most frequently required. 
Indeed, it is to some extent necessary; and though it may be set aside in 
part, with proportionate inconvenience, it can never be set aside 
entirely, as has been proved by experience. That men have set it aside 
in part, to their own loss, is sufficiently evidenced. Witness the 
heterogeneous mass of irregularities already pointed out. Of these our 
own coins present a familiar example. For the reasons above stated, 
coins, to be practical, should represent the powers of two; yet, on 
examination, it will be found, that, of our twelve grades of coins, only 
one-half are obtained by binary division, and these not in a regular 
series. Do not these six grades, irregular as they are, give to our coins 
their principal convenience? Then why do we claim that our coins are 
decimal? Are not their gradations produced by the following 
multiplications: 1 x 5 x 2 x 2-1/2 x 2 x 2 x 2-1/2 x 2 x 2 x 2, and 1 x 3 x 
100? Are any of these decimal? We might have decimal coins by 
dropping all but cents, dimes, dollars, and eagles; but the question is 
not, What we might have, but, What have we? Certainly we have not 
decimal coins. A purely decimal system of coins would be an 
intolerable nuisance, because it would require a greatly increased 
number of small coins. This may be illustrated by means of the ancient 
Greek notation, using the simple signs only, with the exception of the 
second sign, to make it purely decimal. To express $9.99 by such a 
notation, only three signs can be used; consequently nine repetitions of 
each are required, making a total of twenty-seven signs. To pay it in 
decimal coins, the same number of pieces are required. Including the 
second Greek sign, twenty-three signs are required; including the 
compound signs also, only fifteen. By Roman notation, without 
subtraction, fifteen; with subtraction, nine. By alphabetic notation, 
three signs without repetition. By the Arabic, one sign thrice repeated. 
By Federal coins, nine pieces, one of them being a repetition. By dual 
coins, six pieces without a repetition, a fraction remaining. 
In the gradation of real weights, measures, and coins, it is important to 
adopt those grades which are most convenient, which require the least
expense of capital, time, and labor, and which are least likely to be 
mistaken for each other. What, then, is the most convenient gradation? 
The base two gives a series of seven weights that may be used: 1, 2, 4, 
8, 16, 32, 64 lbs. By these any weight from one to one hundred and 
twenty-seven pounds may be weighed. This is, perhaps, the smallest 
number of weights or of coins with which those several quantities of 
pounds or of dollars may be weighed or paid. With the same number of 
weights, representing the arithmetical series from one to seven, only 
from one to twenty-eight pounds may be weighed; and though a more 
extended series may be used, this will only add to their inconvenience; 
moreover, from similarity of size, such weights will be readily 
mistaken. The base ten gives only two weights that may be used. The 
base three gives a series of weights, 1, 3, 9, 27, etc., which has a great 
promise of convenience; but as only four may be used, the fifth being 
too heavy to handle, and as their use requires subtraction as well as 
addition, they have neither the convenience nor the capability of binary 
weights; moreover, the necessity for subtraction renders this series 
peculiarly unfit for coins. 
The legitimate inference from the foregoing seems to be, that a 
perfectly practical system of weights, measures, and coins, one not 
practical only, but also agreeable and convenient, because requiring the 
smallest possible number of pieces, and these not readily mistaken for 
each other, and because agreeing with the natural division of things, 
and therefore commercially proper, and avoiding much fractional 
calculation, is that, and that only, the successive grades of which 
represent the successive powers of two. 
That much fractional calculation may thus be avoided is evident from 
the fact that the system will be homogeneous. Thus, as binary gradation 
supplies one coin for every binary division of the dollar, down to the 
sixty-fourth part, and farther, if necessary, any of those divisions may 
be paid without a remainder. On the contrary, Federal gradation, though 
in part binary, gives one coin for each of the first two divisions only. Of 
the remaining four divisions, one requires two coins, and another three, 
and not one of them can be paid in full. Thus it appears there are four 
divisions of the dollar that cannot    
    
		
	
	
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