I might ask, is it possible that darkness could ever be considered good? — chiknsld
I might ask, is it possible that darkness could ever be considered good? — chiknsld
This thread seems rhetorical/poetic and maybe plain silly. You might upset the neighbors. — Nils Loc
Some folks buy black out curtains with a desire to help themselves ease into sleep by shutting out the light. That kind of sweet darkness before bed is bliss. — Nils Loc
Darkness is fine, insofar as one always has means/access to light, given how vital our vision is for navigating the world.
— Nils Loc
How could the good exist without darkness, if one is necessarily conditioned by the other? — Nils Loc
Certainly, by bats, jaguars, clandestine lovers… — Vera Mont
…and prisoners in fluorescent-lit cells. — Vera Mont
Our association of night with all things sinister arises from fear, due to our inability to see potential dangers in the dark. — Vera Mont
Our sensory dependence upon light creates a false, moralistic dualism between darkness and wretchedness and light and goodness. — chiknsld
The dark facilitates the light? — chiknsld
"Good" -- for what? How about: "darkness" is good for seeing the stars, or good for sleeping, or good for prey avoiding predators, or good for cooling-off desert fauna & flora, or good for (many forms of) mysticism, or good for vampires (& goths) ...I might ask, is it possible that darkness could ever be considered good? — chiknsld
Well, it goes back a long, long way through our ancestry. Monkeys are easy prey at night, and even the strong, aggressive hominids were at a disadvantage against some heavy-duty feline predators. — Vera Mont
Not to mention the literal pitfalls and quagmires waiting for a diurnal species with no artificial light at their disposal. — Vera Mont
In civilized times, right up to the present, spies, guerillas, burglars and murderers operate at night, as well as the purveyors of illicit pleasure. — Vera Mont
Also, more people die between 2 and 4 am than any other time period, again, because we are a diurnal species. In the hours of deep sleep, our bodies are at their lowest energy level. Since this has been so through our entire existence as a species, it's not surprising that we associate night with death. — Vera Mont
Only? Survival is important to most of us.Indeed, the primitive emotion of fear (useful only for survival) should have little to no value in a highly advanced society. — chiknsld
Very scary I suppose, especially before discovering fire — chiknsld
I just realized that if all of humanity were blind, then darkness could never be used in the same colloquial sense to confer random, evil forces. — chiknsld
Indeed, they seem to operate under the same priniciples of fear such as a "cockroach" with human capabilities, — chiknsld
But it's true that if we had evolved and remained deep underground, we would not have formed eyes and might well be different in many other ways.Most blind people with no perception of light, however, experience continual circadian desynchrony through a failure of light information to reach the hypothalamic circadian clock, resulting in cyclical episodes of poor sleep and daytime dysfunction.https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3202494/
It is not by chance that the Enlightenment was a movement that considered rationality the main reference point for humanity. Rationality is a tremendously powerful and useful instrument, but it also create risks. It seems to me that today philosophy is experiencing something like a new Enlightenment, which means that today philosophers seem unable to appreciate, or even to understand, what is not rational, not logical, not scientific. — Angelo Cannata
I would say that even music belongs to darkness rather than light, and even painting belongs to it: a great master of lights in painting was actually the master of shades: it is Caravaggio. — Angelo Cannata
More so, you can't meaningfully have the concept of one without the other, and how we value either is dependent upon a variety of contexts in which both (stimuli and its absence) play potentially good and bad roles in relationship to what we are. — Nils Loc
I might ask, is it possible that darkness could ever be considered good?
— chiknsld
"Good" -- for what? How about: "darkness" is good for seeing the stars, or good for sleeping, or good for prey avoiding predators, or good for cooling-off desert fauna & flora, or good for (many forms of) mysticism, or good for vampires (& goths) ... — 180 Proof
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