Yeah, I get what you mean. But you'd probably just keep a calender or day planner or something.Space Spoons said:I'm not sure, honestly. I really look forward to sleeping at the end of a particularly hard day. It might be somewhat disheartening to lose that small comfort. I guess I'd try it for a few days, see how it goes.
I imagine it'd have some strange effects on long term time management, though. I mean, the concept of the days of the week would sort of lose it's meaning without sleep to draw the line between the days, you know?
I guess you could stop taking the drug. I don't know the exact rules other than what I've heard.ThePoodonkis said:So, we wouldn't need to sleep.
Would we still have the ability to sleep though?
I'm not dodging the question, I know how to suspend disbelief. I'm just saying you could never convince me there were no side-effects, so I wouldn't take it. That's my answer. If you want, I'll add that if I had three wishes, one of them would be for there be no need for me to sleep.PirateKing said:Really, no side effects. Any of the stuff you think would happen wouldn't. You just don't have to sleep.Easykill said:You're telling me that a drug that eliminates any need to sleep, ever, has no side effects? I'd never trust it. Especially since this sounds like the kind of stuff where the side-effects show up in your brain. My body is just my body, but my brain is ME. I don't fuck with it.
So they don't age while they're asleep?orannis62 said:This reminds me of something. Anyone here read the Worthing Saga, by Orson Scott Card? Its almost exactly the opposite; there's a "drug", for lack of a better term, called Somec. When you take it, you're able to sleep for years, think of it like cryogenics. Thing is, the amount of it you're given is determined by how important you are, i.e, the most important people only have to be awake for one year for every hundred under Somec, while a normal person might not even get a 1:1. It leads to a breakdown in society, because all the important people see the problems, then just go "Oh, I'll go under Somec, and by the time I'm out, everything will be fixed."
...wow, on reflection, that's barely related at all, but it's interesting.
No, its like cryogenics, as in, complete stasis. Thing is, although the book is very good, the thing with Somec is by far the most interesting part, and its very minor to the story, because its a few centuries after, and at one point, a guy is explaining why society collapsed. Ok, that's not really how it is, but that's as close as I can get without giving anything away. Anyway, pick it up, its a good book.PirateKing said:So they don't age while they're asleep?orannis62 said:This reminds me of something. Anyone here read the Worthing Saga, by Orson Scott Card? Its almost exactly the opposite; there's a "drug", for lack of a better term, called Somec. When you take it, you're able to sleep for years, think of it like cryogenics. Thing is, the amount of it you're given is determined by how important you are, i.e, the most important people only have to be awake for one year for every hundred under Somec, while a normal person might not even get a 1:1. It leads to a breakdown in society, because all the important people see the problems, then just go "Oh, I'll go under Somec, and by the time I'm out, everything will be fixed."
...wow, on reflection, that's barely related at all, but it's interesting.
I might. I started reading Enders Game a few years ago and I stopped for some reason. I thought it was really good. I'll have to finish that first.orannis62 said:No, its like cryogenics, as in, complete stasis. Thing is, although the book is very good, the thing with Somec is by far the most interesting part, and its very minor to the story, because its a few centuries after, and at one point, a guy is explaining why society collapsed. Ok, that's not really how it is, but that's as close as I can get without giving anything away. Anyway, pick it up, its a good book.PirateKing said:So they don't age while they're asleep?orannis62 said:This reminds me of something. Anyone here read the Worthing Saga, by Orson Scott Card? Its almost exactly the opposite; there's a "drug", for lack of a better term, called Somec. When you take it, you're able to sleep for years, think of it like cryogenics. Thing is, the amount of it you're given is determined by how important you are, i.e, the most important people only have to be awake for one year for every hundred under Somec, while a normal person might not even get a 1:1. It leads to a breakdown in society, because all the important people see the problems, then just go "Oh, I'll go under Somec, and by the time I'm out, everything will be fixed."
...wow, on reflection, that's barely related at all, but it's interesting.