As a rare type of human whose surface area to volume is much crappier than average, the OP's math has much validity. Years ago, I read a well-respected book about green houses whose author stated emphatically that any greenhouse smaller than 10 ft by 12 ft would struggle for all the reasons stated by both Kevin and r ransom.
More recently, I read another well-respected book and did a review here:
https://permies.com/wiki/143395/Chinese-Greenhouse-Dan-Chiras#1213651
Much of what Dan Chiras said made huge amounts of sense to me. Yes, in our cloudy winters, we may benefit from more glazing than some greenhouses that only glaze part of the roof and the southern exposure, but glazing a north wall is just asking for more difficulty managing temperatures than is necessary, and doesn't add enough light in the winter to balance the heat loss.
I have much respect for a few of our local farmers who shut down their greenhouses from November to the end of January to avoid our shortest, cloudiest days, rather than throwing good energy after bad. They're working with what the industry standard was when energy was cheap. It is possible to build more intelligent greenhouses. There are good examples out there. I suspect it is difficult to change what's been done by so many farmers for the last 40-60 years.