Ok I'm all for not wage-slaving it up for the benefit of billionaires but this is just stupid. No matter the economic system people still need schedules and ways to wake up at specific times.
Why do they need to sleep at a 'reasonable time' as determined by someone who has no access to their body or mind? What's wrong with being a night person?
We don't need to all wake up at the crack of dawn and cater to the panicky little day people who can't stop staring at the minute hand.
The responses to this thread on SLRPNK of all places just shows how far gone we are. Even here people default to a commerce-centric worldview where the idea of not waking up to an alarm is a ridiculous proposition.
A world in which humans allow their bodies to sleep and wake up naturally? Don't be absurd!How would we prioritize meaningless toil over our own health and happiness if we entertained our bodies' own internal clocks?
As far as I can tell no one was defending a "commerce-centric" worldview. Even in a world without work you still might want to wake up at a particular time. Maybe you slept late, maybe you need to wake up earlier than you naturally do, you might not have daylight to wake you, predisposed to sleeping loads, etc.
Defaulting to a commerce-centric worldview in this context means being completely mystified as to why anyone might not want to wake up to an alarm, and finding a society that puts human needs first ridiculous.
The reality is that centering our lives around buying and selling things at the expense of untold human misery is itself ridiculous. Unfortunately it's also extremely prevalent.
Yes, clocks are important for many people. There's a significant percentage of our population that prefers living in the type of structured lifestyle that clocks enable. But the history of clocks is not neutral. This Historia Civilis video goes into detail about the proliferation of clocks and how they were used to erode workers rights.
Clocks can be cool, being punctual is a good habit. But there is a valid point to be made about the tyranny of keeping time. It doesn't work for everyone, and we do ourselves a disservice by not acknowledging that there's a benefit (for some) to treating time fluidly.