Elizabeth’s comment and one other that I remember but can’t find now.
Revisiting this, I dislike the analogy even more. Analogies aren’t how you do science, and I’d argue that a majority of the time, things that feel bad are bad. Exercise doesn’t even actually generally feel bad, it generally feels good. You don’t have to encourage children to run or skip or hop, you only have to do that with sedentary adults.
Also, the author says that the state of sleep research is “100% a psyop,” so I’m very sceptical of their thinking in general.
Maybe they do have legitimate points, and good ideas can come from people who think differently than the majority, but this article is full of red flags. Somebody else can sort this.
Elizabeth’s comment and one other that I remember but can’t find now.
Revisiting this, I dislike the analogy even more. Analogies aren’t how you do science, and I’d argue that a majority of the time, things that feel bad are bad. Exercise doesn’t even actually generally feel bad, it generally feels good. You don’t have to encourage children to run or skip or hop, you only have to do that with sedentary adults.
Also, the author says that the state of sleep research is “100% a psyop,” so I’m very sceptical of their thinking in general.
Maybe they do have legitimate points, and good ideas can come from people who think differently than the majority, but this article is full of red flags. Somebody else can sort this.