I appreciate you calling out BS and poorly backed claims--I expect you're right that the book isn't as helpful or rigorous as it purports to be, but I find your arguments about the potential harm of the book largely unconvincing
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Replying to @Chris_PK_Smith @alexeyguzey and
"[imagine a young person that] naturally needs to sleep for 7 hours a night, reads Why We Sleep, gets scared, and decides to spend the full 8 hours in bed every day...they will waste more than 20,000 hours or more than 2 years of their life, with uncertain long-term side-effects"
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Replying to @Chris_PK_Smith @alexeyguzey and
I find it hard to imagine many people who naturally feel great with low amounts of sleep will act on the book's advice. I expect it's largely people who already think they don't sleep enough that'd be affected by the books message.
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Replying to @Chris_PK_Smith @alexeyguzey and
While it's not impossible, I'm not convinced that this book will stop many people from trying sleep deprivation therapy
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Replying to @Chris_PK_Smith @alexeyguzey and
"When people don’t restrict their food-eating, many...start eating more than they need and become obese...allowing ourselves to get as much food as we want, likely isn’t the healthiest choice. My guess is that same is likely true for sleep."
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Replying to @Chris_PK_Smith @alexeyguzey and
I'm not convinced by this analogy. I don't think hunter-gatherers regularly struggled with overeating even when food was abundant. Something changed recently about the environments humans live in and the types of food they can access. These changes made over-consumption a problem
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Replying to @Chris_PK_Smith @alexeyguzey and
I don't know that there's any comparable change that makes humans' natural drives towards sleep maladaptive in the modern environment
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Replying to @Chris_PK_Smith @SleepJunkies and
I appreciate your comments but I'm puzzled that they all pertain to things I clearly mark as "imagine", "my guess", and in the case of "imagine" follow it immediately with "to be less speculative" and quote a specialist who works on sleep and link to concrete evidence on harm
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Replying to @alexeyguzey @SleepJunkies and
I appreciate you flagging those things in the way you did. I guess I just struggle to reconcile what I take to be your best guess (that the book does as much harm as good) with the fact that readers & Amazon reviewers seem to have found it mostly helpful
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Replying to @Chris_PK_Smith @alexeyguzey and
And maybe that's not really your best guess--I may be reading between the lines incorrectly (if I did that, I expect many other readers of your post have done the same thing)
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Just for fun:pic.twitter.com/lmd8v1vZdF
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Replying to @Chris_PK_Smith @SleepJunkies and
Got it. I don't really know how much harm and how much good the book did. It probably caused some people who underslept to sleep more and it probably caused some people who slept enough to oversleep..
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