14 June 2014

Full Moons and the Digital Age

I went out to take a look at the full moon while it was still Friday the 13th, which got me thinking about why the full moon is supposed to make people crazy. I can't pass any judgement on triskaidekaphobia, but the full moon is an interesting phenomena.

Luna certainly affects life on Terra. Everything from the tides to wolf hunting behavior to human menstrual cycles are influenced by its orbital period, primarily through gravity and reflected light. It's not hard to think of good reasons why. Considering how light affects human actions, it makes sense that the greater nighttime illumination offered by a full or gibbous moon could change how people act.

I have my own hypothesis for how full moons and strange behavior became associated. In pre-industrial societies, Luna was the only major source of light after sunset (and candles really didn't do much for interior lighting, either). When we think about how much time agriculture and other forms of manual labor take up, those people would be thankful for the extra hours afforded by a full moon.

The thing is, staying up later makes people tired, and tired people do foolish things. Ergo, people are crazy around a full moon--both before and after.

In our modern age, however, we don't spend much time looking at the moon. In fact, most of the light that keeps us awake comes from television, phone, and computer screens. Perhaps the decrease in that superstition can be traced to the advent of television, or all the way back to widely-available lightbulbs.

Either way, I'm turning the laptop off and going to bed. 

08 June 2014

The Choice

There comes a point in every person's life where he must choose whether he will be ruled by the pursuit of pleasure or that or joy. To state it differently, the question is whether his body will be a tool of his mind, or the reverse. Many people never fully make that choice, and remain suspended between animal and human being.

It's not an easy decision to make, but I'd rather make it--and retain the possibility of happiness--than not.