Subtitles section Play video
Hello, Internet. A lot of you sent me this image making the rounds which concerns the
Mayan prediction that the world will end on December 21, 2012. The claim is that the Mayan
calendar short counted the years because they forgot about leap days so the world should
have already ended. This is followed by Mind = Blown, which I'm not sure how to take. Do
people think that the world forgot to have its apocalypse or that were it not for leap
days that we'd already be living in the future? Either way, it's spawned many an argument
that people ask me to explain, which I'm happy to do, because my next big video was delayed
by pestilence, which struck me down into the depths of unproductive misery for the last
few weeks. So, if you haven't already, please watch the related videos now as otherwise
this won't make a whole lot of sense and there are a few corrections I'd like to make. The
first of these is that I shouldn't have called the Mayans "Mayans". Maya is the correct singular
and plural noun to use in the same way that sheep is both singular and plural. Mayan is
the name of the language and the adjective form of the word as in the Mayan civilization.
Secondly, I showed a picture of the Aztec calendar stone, rather than a Mayan calendar
in my 2012 video, which at the time I thought was okay because the Aztec calendar is the
same as the Mayan, just with different names, sort of like the Greek and Roman Gods. And,
frankly, the Aztec one is much cooler looking. But I was still wrong to show it because despite
naming it the Aztec calendar stone, archeologists don't actually think it's a calendar. And,
speaking of stone, I used the term Stone Age to describe the Maya which made many people
very angry. For clarity, Stone Age does not mean stupid, it's the technological classification
of a civilization limited to stone tools. Advanced though their astronomy and mathematics
were, the Maya never discovered metallurgy and thus couldn't move on to the Bronze Age
then the Iron Age then the Diamond Age. Right. Enough corrections. It's explanation time
for this image which raised three questions: 1) Does the Mayan calendar have leap days?
2) Did the Maya miscount the years, 3) Should the world have already ended? The answer to
all of these is, no. To briefly recap, leap years exist to stop seasons from drifting
out of sync with the calendar, a problem that vexed Pope Gregory because every year Easter
and spring were getting further apart. To fix this, he introduced the modestly named
Gregorian calendar with its fancy leap year rules to keep the seasons and thus the holidays
together. But, while Pope Gregory cared about the seasons, the ancient Maya did not. Presumably
because where they lived the weather comes in only one season, too hot and too humid.
So the Mayan calendar ignores seasons in favor of accurately tracking the days since the
creation of the Mayan religion. This renders leaps years an unnecessary complication. Though
the Mayan calendar is no stranger to complication with its cycles within cycles within cycles
within cycles within cycles that, if you're interested, Hank Green can tell you much more
about. But back to the miscounting claims which comes from our idea that leap days are
extra days which, of course, they really aren't. The Gregorian calendar doesn't give people
extra days any more than daylight saving time gives people extra sunlight. If you transported
Pope Gregory 1,000 years back in time to meet the Mayan Lady Xoc and then made them count
the days until this year's winter solstice, they'd agree on that number because they're
just counting sunrises. It's not like Pope Gregory with his clever modern calendar would
notice 500+ days that the Lady Xoc somehow missed, perhaps while distracted by the pain
from her thorns through the tongue routine. The only thing that they would disagree on
is what to call that day with Pope Gregory insisting on December 21, 2012 and Lady Xoc
preferring the 13th Baktun. So, this image is wrong because it's an apples to oranges
comparison. The Mayan calendar doesn't have leap days because it doesn't need them. It
counts days just fine and its long cycle will finish on December 21, 2012, but the world
will still go on.