I thought you could go blind looking at the sun.

Edit: My title was worded badly. I meant how people don’t go blind. I understand why people look at sunsets, just not how they do blind. That’s my fault.

Edit: Thanks for all the replies and clarification!

Here’s what I learned incase anyone else has had the same question as me, the reason we don’t go blind is that we’re usually looking at the colours of the sky during a sunset and only some few second glances at the sun.

Looking at the sun also doesn’t make us go blind during sunrise and sunset because the light rays have to go through more atmosphere, so by the time they reach your eyes, the rays are weaker. It’s fine to look at the sun for a few seconds when it’s more red than white or yellow.

Again, thanks for all the clarification.

  • @fubo
    link
    51 year ago

    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”.

    • @T156
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      English
      11 year ago

      They did also mean “this is highly poisonous”, so some wires might have been crossed along the way.