I know evolution is governed by chance and it is random but does it make sense to “ruin” sleep if there’s light? I mean normally, outside, you never have pure darkness, there are the moon and stars even at night. In certain zones of the Earth we also have long periods of no sunshine and long periods of only sunshine.

I don’t know if my question is clear enough but I hope so.

Bonus question: are animals subject to the same contribution of light or lack of it to the quality of sleep?

  • @givesomefucks@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    We didn’t…

    “Full darkness” isn’t even a real thing in nature. It’s hard to tell with light pollution, but even in the absolute middle of nowhere with no artificial lights, you’re going to be able to see fairly well. Even with no moon, starlight isn’t just an expression. And on a full moon it can be surprisingly “bright” if you’re just out there for a while.

    It’s not like climbing into a cupboard, shutting the door, and sealing all the cracks with duct tape.

    You may be used to needi g full darkness to sleep, but that’s a learned habit. I guarantee if there was nothing you could do, it wouldn’t take you long to adapt your “requirement” of total darkness.

    • @catloaf@lemm.ee
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      51 year ago

      The experience of people working the night shift, who use blackout curtains to sleep during the day, would disagree.

      But that’s for a relatively highly regimented sleep cycle. If you slept and worked completely at your leisure, you might end up with one shorter sleep period at night, and one even shorter nap during the day. And without any day-night cycle at all, some people naturally adopt cycles of varying lengths.

      • @givesomefucks@lemmy.world
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        -21 year ago

        The experience of people working the night shift, who use blackout curtains to sleep during the day, would disagree.

        Wow, I didn’t know my own experience disagreed with me…

        Or that during my childhood when my dad was swing shift, he was apparently a freak of nature too…

        But that’s for a relatively highly regimented sleep cycle. If you slept and worked completely at your leisure, you might end up with one shorter sleep period at night, and one even shorter nap during the day. And without any day-night cycle at all, some people naturally adopt cycles of varying lengths.

        Again, human variation is a big thing.

        But an individual will change their sleep schedule as they age, which is another supporting point for what I’m saying.

        Evolutionary biologists hypothesis that it was so out of an entire tribe of early hominds, at least some members were likely to be awake. It wasn’t an inate guard duty rotation. But kids and middle age went to bed early, teens went to bed super late, and by then the elderly were waking up.

        If something happened, someone screamed and everyone woke up. And the fires stayed lit all night.

    • @linucs@lemmy.mlOP
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      01 year ago

      I’m not talking about myself, melatonine, is synthesized by the body when it’s dark, light can reduce or stop the synthesis.

      • @givesomefucks@lemmy.world
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        01 year ago

        Nope.

        It’s a very specific wavelength of light that inhibits it.

        https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Melatonin#Regulation

        That’s why there’s “blue light filters” on electronics these days. That wavelength isnt included with moonlight/starlight… maybe on a big full moon there’s be some.

        And why people prefer soft yellowish lights when relaxing and not the bright ass LEDs.

    • @Contramuffin@lemmy.world
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      -11 year ago

      This is untrue - we have explicitly evolved to sleep in the dark. Sleeping in the light is a learned behavior that’s more or less an exploitation of a loophole in the circadian clock

      • @givesomefucks@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        A specific wavelength may effect you…

        That wavelength is not present in moonlight/starlight, which is not “full darkness”.

        For the vast majority of human evolution, “full darkness” wasn’t safe, and wasn’t even really possible.

        I understand what you and OP are trying to say. And you both kind of have the general idea but none of the details.

        Like how you got taught basic things in 6th grade, but by 12 grade you’re learning what you thought was the whole truth, was just a general overview.

        Which wouldn’t be bad if you recognized it, but loads of people want to insist the short summary the learned as a child is as deep as it gets

    • FiveMacs
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      1 year ago

      Full darkness is most certainly a thing and is more of a thing then light…light is artificial. Remove the sun…what do you get, full darkness. Light is added, darkness isn’t.

      Same with heat…everything is cold unless heat is added.

      Cold and full dark are forever, heat and light are techcially temporary.

      • @givesomefucks@lemmy.world
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        01 year ago

        “Full darkness” isn’t even a real thing in nature.

        And

        It’s not like climbing into a cupboard, shutting the door, and sealing all the cracks with duct tape.

        So I thought it was pretty clear I meant that to get “full darkness” where you really can’t see, requires extra steps to intentionally make it happen. Just that for the vast majority of human evolution, we weren’t really capable of it, and would have no reason to even try.