Yvain says in his posts’ comments that coffee doesn’t work, as tolerance builds up. This seems disputed.
But why not ban coffee? Because, like alcohol, it’s now too ingrained in our culture. But if it wasn’t—preventing headaches, irritability, concentration troubles, and the expectation that everyone can pull all-nighters? Fuck yes.
So, the world would be a better place if people like me (who drink butter-coffee everyday) had to give up their favorite health food or risk jail time? Consider me skeptical.
Coffee may not work to generate more virtual hours of productive time in the long run but that doesn’t mean that it’s use in time shifting sleep requirements etc isn’t still of net benefit.
I’ve been thinking about qat a lot these past few days, so I’ll tap out of the Far mode discussion. Just this: my problem with coffee is that people are often given too much work, which they require coffee and similar stimulants to accomplish. (Witness: programmers’ love for soda; project deadlines at university.) Qat doesn’t seem to have that problem.
It does have another problem: if you don’t want coffee, it’s usually socially acceptable to drink another hot beverage (though if you don’t want tea either you’re kinda screwed), whereas qat lacks an alternative.
Given the third world’s fondness for tobacco (eg. apparently China is now the largest and growing tobacco market in the world), isn’t chewing tobacco an alternative?
Yvain says in his posts’ comments that coffee doesn’t work, as tolerance builds up. This seems disputed.
But why not ban coffee? Because, like alcohol, it’s now too ingrained in our culture. But if it wasn’t—preventing headaches, irritability, concentration troubles, and the expectation that everyone can pull all-nighters? Fuck yes.
So, the world would be a better place if people like me (who drink butter-coffee everyday) had to give up their favorite health food or risk jail time? Consider me skeptical.
Does it not work with decaf?
Coffee may not work to generate more virtual hours of productive time in the long run but that doesn’t mean that it’s use in time shifting sleep requirements etc isn’t still of net benefit.
Coffee may be too Near to discuss; I suggest a different even-older expensive teeth-staining addictive stimulant plant popular in social gatherings.
I’ve been thinking about qat a lot these past few days, so I’ll tap out of the Far mode discussion. Just this: my problem with coffee is that people are often given too much work, which they require coffee and similar stimulants to accomplish. (Witness: programmers’ love for soda; project deadlines at university.) Qat doesn’t seem to have that problem.
It does have another problem: if you don’t want coffee, it’s usually socially acceptable to drink another hot beverage (though if you don’t want tea either you’re kinda screwed), whereas qat lacks an alternative.
Given the third world’s fondness for tobacco (eg. apparently China is now the largest and growing tobacco market in the world), isn’t chewing tobacco an alternative?