Yes it makes more sense for people to comprehend temperature when it relates to them.
I appreciate having a scale with larger numbers. Fahrenheit is the only Imperial number that I don't mind at all because it's still pretty useful and at least doesn't need to be divided or multiplied by made-up numbers.
But temperature is all relative and arbitrary anyway. I know the idea is "0 degrees feels cold, 100 degrees feels hot", but anything colder than like 55 degrees or hotter than 85 degrees is already enough to start slowly killing you from exposure. At that point it's just a matter of how quickly, and how much you do to combat it. Fahrenheit was designed with its numbers chosen at random anyway. 30 degrees for freezing point of water (which was wrong) and 90 degrees for internal human body temperature (which was also wrong).
So in defense of Celsius, at least it's based on something a
little less arbitrary. Knowing the freezing and boiling points of water (on Earth) are handy for literally every science, and extremely useful for food storage and cooking. It's also helpful to know at a glance if you need to cover your garden from frost.