I was also likely more tired some nights than others, and perhaps my diet varied both in when I ate and how much I ate so I don’t understand how the mind still knew when to wake up with all of these variables. — Benj96
Furthermore if we have such a precise measure of time instilled into perception then why do we have periods when “time flys” faster than we expected or drones much slower than it ought to. What rule do you think is involved in biological time keeping? — Benj96
There are interesting French cave experiments where folks live away from time cues. Turns out that the natural biological clock runs on a slightly longer than 24 hour day. That is folks will choose to go to sleep later and later until they are sleeping during the external "day" and choosing to be awake at "night". — LuckyR
Something I find quite amazing is the human brains capacity to keep time with incredible accuracy on a subconscious level. — Benj96
Our bodies perform the most amazingly intricate things every moment without our awareness. I don’t think that oysters opening and closing in time with the tides even when isolated from them is a consequence of any awareness on their part. I don’t think oysters are aware in any sense but in the metaphorical sense that characterises organic life generally, but it’s nothing like sentient awareness in the higher animals. — Wayfarer
IN FEBRUARY 1954, a US biologist named Frank Brown discovered something so remarkable, so inexplicable, that his peers essentially wrote it out of history. Brown had dredged a batch of Atlantic oysters from the seabed off New Haven, Connecticut, and shipped them hundreds of miles inland to Northwestern University in Evanston, Illinois. Then he put them into pans of brine inside a sealed darkroom, shielded from any changes in temperature, pressure, water currents, or light. Normally, these oysters feed with the tides. They open their shells to filter plankton and algae from the seawater, with rest periods in between when their shells are closed. Brown had already established that they are most active at high tide, which arrives roughly twice a day. He was interested in how the mollusks time this behavior, so he devised the experiment to test what they would do when kept far from the sea and deprived of any information about the tides. Would their normal feeding rhythm persist?
For the first two weeks, it did. Their feeding activity continued to peak 50 minutes later each day, in time with the tides on the oysters’ home beach in New Haven. That in itself was an impressive result, suggesting that the shellfish could keep accurate time. But then something unexpected happened, which changed Brown’s life forever.
The oysters gradually shifted their feeding times later and later. After two more weeks, a stable cycle reappeared, but it now lagged three hours behind the New Haven tides. Brown was mystified, until he checked an astronomical almanac. High tides occur each day when the moon is highest in the sky or lowest below the horizon. Brown realized that the oysters had corrected their activity according to the local state of the moon; they were feeding when Evanston—if it had been by the sea—would experience high tide. He had isolated these organisms from every obvious environmental cue. And yet, somehow, they were following the moon.
I still feel there's something off about considering rhythmic/cyclical behavior "remarkable" or that it is "inexplicable". — TheMadFool
Thus, I presume, over many generations those organisms who behaviors were synchronized with natural cycles would survive and end up in a lab somewhere. There's the explanation for the "inexplicable" and it isn't "remarkable" any more. — TheMadFool
But if you are consciously or subconsciously aware that you are more fatigued than normal, then you could take this into account when making a time estimation — VagabondSpectre
Here's another time feature: as people get older, they report that time (seems to) pass by faster. I'm 75 and can attest that time seems to pass quite a bit faster for me now than it did when I was 50. I did not experience this acceleration of time when I was in college or in my late 20s and 30s — Bitter Crank
learned from Lyall Watson's book Super Nature, that oysters kept in tanks in the midwest of the USA in old mines and in still water, still opened and closed in time with the oceanic tides, which of course in those conditions they had no exposure to. Figure that out. — Wayfarer
iewing rhythmic biological processes like sleep-wake cycles, oyster opening-closing behavior, etc. as awareness of time is a grave mistake in my humble opinion. These processes are cyclical or rhythmic as other posters have commented and that's all there is to it. They can be used as crude clocks, no doubts about that, but their existence doesn't imply that living organisms have an innate awareness of time no more than a mechanical clock's ticks imply that clocks are, somehow, aware of time. — TheMadFool
Wayfarer Thank you very much for the link. Very informative but...I still feel there's something off about considering rhythmic/cyclical behavior "remarkable" or that it is "inexplicable — TheMadFool
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.