No AC for me this year. Ice baths > poorfag cooling. Rate
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Poast new message in this thread
Date: June 16th, 2025 5:35 PM Author: stimulating brass set personal credit line
I decided to stop wasting money cooling stale air around my apartment this year. I'm running cold baths. They're supposed to have all these benefits: reduce stress, inflammation, spike dopamine, etc. After a 5-minute ice bath, I find that 90 degrees feels like 70 for quite a while. Fan on low, body still in glacier mode.
Start getting mental and physical gains while skipping the electric bill.
Rate me as a frugal innovator or a cheapskate savant.
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5738798&forum_id=2],#49021668)
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Date: June 16th, 2025 6:10 PM Author: stimulating brass set personal credit line
Fair enough, hadn't come across it. But thanks to ChatGPT spitting out answers in seconds, here's the comeback:
The "U-shaped" temperature-comfort curve idea has some truth, but it’s not that you “don’t need cooling”—rather, it means:
People tend to feel most uncomfortable at mildly warm temps (e.g. 27–30°C / 80–86°F)
Surprisingly, colder or hotter extremes can feel more bearable if you're physiologically adapted (e.g. through cold baths or acclimatization)
So yes, there is evidence that comfort perception isn’t linear, but saying you “don’t need cooling” oversimplifies it. Your body still responds to heat, and extended exposure to 30°C+ can cause fatigue or stress—even if it feels tolerable.
That quote is confident but half-informed. The curve exists conceptually, but you still need some form of heat regulation, especially long term.
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5738798&forum_id=2],#49021764) |
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Date: June 16th, 2025 6:13 PM Author: Laughsome forum turdskin
This is not accurate. You have to remember that ChatGPT isn't a fount of all knowledge--it is limited to the training set it has access to, and human temperature curve experimentation is the sort of thing that is buried deep in journals and mystical epemera, not something an llm is going to pick up wandering through the archives of the NYT. The gist of the reverse temperature curve is that, beyond a certain point, typically around 60-70 Celsius, your body will begin re-adapting to the temperature, triggering genetic modifications that are dormant but accessible through the elevated heat energy that is being generated within the environment where you are being subjected to the heat (I should note that humidity will play a factor in the activation curve but the extent to which it is relevant in an analysis is beyond the scope of this initial comment). It is that response, the re-activation of latent genetic capability, that allows humans on the other side of this curve to fully exploit the increased warmth and not merely persevere through high temperatures but become stronger and better from them.
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5738798&forum_id=2],#49021774) |
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