You don't usually look directly at the sun, just the sky itself as it changes colors. At just the right time of twilight (dawn or dusk), the sun isn't even visible, but it's light can still be seen turning the sky a pretty gradient of blues and purples or reds and yellows.
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Ohhh that makes more sense. Thanks!
You precious angel. 💗
Tell me you live in a city without telling me you live in a city.
But srsly it’s because it’s beautiful and unique every time. And the sun is below the horizon when we are looking
Even as the sun isn’t below the horizon…. You’re not usually looking at the sun.
OP probably also wonders why people look at stars. “Milky Way ain’t real, man!” Was a depressing thing a kid told me.
I wasn’t wondering about the appeal. I got that. I was wondering how people don’t go blind since looking at the sun can make you permanently blind. I realize my title was worded pretty badly.
you can glance at the sun for brief moments and not got blind. it's long term staring that becomes the problem. When watching the sunset, it's usually everything else that's being watched.
Oh ok, so we usually look at everything else (like the colours and stuff) + glancing at the sun for a few seconds is fine + the sun is less blind inducing during dawn and dusk (from a different person’s comment). I think I understand this now, thanks!
Well yeah, that's because it's actually a photo of the Andromeda galaxy.
Reddit quality toxicity right here.
And on NoStupidQuestions of all places.
Can we not?
When the sun is very low (nearly touching or even partly below the horizon), it's typically shining through such a large amount of atmosphere that the sunlight is significantly weakened by the time it reaches your eyes. This isn't always true though, for ex if the air is unusually dry, clear, or thin (such as near the poles). Good rule of thumb is that if it looks red rather than yellow or white, it's likely safe to look at for at least a few seconds.
Thanks
You don't look AT the sunset. You look at what the sunset does to the scene in front of you.
The sun high up in the sky produces light that has to go through a thin layer of air to reach you, and is really powerful. It’s so much light that it can burn your retinas. The sun near the horizon produces light that goes through hundreds of miles of atmosphere, scattering a lot of the light, and the remaining light is safe to view.
It is probably hardwired in our brains to notice such things for survival purposes. Sunset signifies the day is ending and the time of resting and fornicating is at hand.
SO much fornicating. Like, enough with the coitus already!
Patterns of vivid color might be stimulating to us because in the ancestral environment, they meant survival-critical things like "this is a tasty fruit" or "here's the water in the desert".
They did also mean "this is highly poisonous", so some wires might have been crossed along the way.
Because it might be their last. *The one gloomy commenter. We are looking at the sky change colors and not directly at the sun. As everyone else said on this thread.
It's because sunset can be romantic if you sit with somebody, such as your partner.
Because it is beautiful and interesting to look at, especially if your in the right place. The same rule applies to sunrises as well, a d a good place for that is pretty place, sc
A new opportunity to get the green flash