- Each language has their unique encoding of their language represented in pulses of light.
- Written text remains the same
- The light is beamed from the human head in 360 degrees when ever they communicate, visible for up to 1KM
- Instumental music still works, and people can still hear things, just not talk.
- People currenly alive will instantly know how to communicate with light in equivalent proficiency to their speech proficiency before the scenario happening, but everyone born from now on will have to learn from the adults.
Remember: Light cannot penetrate walls
A lot of epileptics are gonna have a very bad time
In no particular order, here are my thoughts:
- most languages need to reform in large ways due to being at least partially tonal/inflection based (such as a rise in inflection to indicate a question). All languages need to add an additional conveyance mechanism to account for the loss of tone and inflection to indicate feeling, and anything else speech patterns normally convey, as suddenly all language works like texting
- people suddenly suck at talking in exactly the same ways they suck at writing, because they have to pick the right conjunction or homophone. Good luck two us all
- directional blinder hats would be a thing almost immediately (something that shields the light but has a covered hole in front to selectively open however wide you need, probably with hand controls and color filters and shit)
- light pollution dies down to facilitate conversation, but dark sky areas have to shutter their projects due to conversational twinkling (sad outcome :( )
- indoor light gets dimmer to facilitate conversation. 60 more stubbed toes happen every month
- sunglasses become the new unplugged headphones
- someone develops filtering goggles that cut the specific human communication wavelengths for people with epilepsy. They are a big hit with commuters and parents
- since people can no longer talk but it sounds like all else remains the same, someone would develop a translation device that does “blinks to speech” for blind and epileptic people, who could maintain use of the auditory old language and still function fine in society (good outcome, yay!) (I considered how they communicate back, but there’s no reason their light thing wouldn’t work so this is fine)
- more people opt to have their outer eyelids removed so they can eavesdrop on conversation while looking like they are sleeping (weird outcome, but it is a surgery that exists and divers sometimes elect to get it done to avoid wearing a mask. Inner eyelid is left in place, can’t tell from outside, but you can see through it apparently)
- private conversations become much more difficult, which forces everyone to act nicer in public, which reduces the amount of time people can be shitty, which in turn makes everyone nicer (yay happy outcomes!)
- it gets a lot harder to hide that you are watching porn or kinky boning when the blinking light gives away the… dialogue. Blackout curtain and door light stopper sales skyrocket literally overnight
- people rarely go missing in the woods or in wrecks. Everyone has a beacon every night, and there are huge social awareness campaigns to use your light this way. An international help pulse is developed so no matter where a person gets lost, they can blink for aid. 1km is quite far, meaning they would light up the area around them, especially multiple people blinking in unison. A project is launched to have satellites scan the night-facing surface looking for the pulse pattern, and is wildly successful. There is a brief trend among young teens to cry wolf, until the bills for wasting global resources start rolling in
- lots of famous people suddenly find themselves jobless, as singing is no longer a career. Since light pulses are completely sensually unrelated to music, instrumental music makes a big comeback, as do poetry recitations and stage plays. All the weirdo instruments from over the course of history are resurrected (best attempt) to add variety to the cultural landscape once filled with voices
- television and movies lose cultural significance as they lose the ability to tell many of the stories they do now (blinky light gives away your location in horror, ruins ambiance for romance, interrupts action sequences, etc. it’s just not amazing for the current form of visual entertainment)
- translation becomes a lot easier, as the effects of accents and dialects diminish. The light pulses can easily be read by software and translated to a different pattern (human speech sounds are so so much harder to parse)
- people have an easier time learning other languages now that everyone shares the same blinks framework; no pronunciation difficulties, just new patterns
- animals mostly very much dislike humans, and find us quite alarming. The blinking doesn’t help. Animals trained to respond to verbal cues have to be retrained to understand the blinks are an attempt to communicate something to them. Many animals now have problems in their homes due to the change (very sad outcome :( )
Epileptics are not going to be thrilled, neither are the blind. Buy stock in aspirin because migraines and headaches are going to increase. Driving at night will become a silent affair. No more covert night ops.
Wait wtf is this image 🤣
Its communication via Old Greg
It’s Old Gregg
I’m going to place an angled mirror from the bathroom to the kitchen so I can blink to my wife to bring toilet paper. Or a towel.
Morse code: am I a joke to you?
I mean, in this scenario, human are just morse code machines with a glowing lightbulb-like head.
Just the men. Women already have headlights
Well, all fully blind people lose their ability to effectively communicate, at the very least. At least until some form of sound based “sign” language is developed.
- The light is beamed from the human head in 360 degrees when ever they communicate, visible for up to 1KM
This sounds extremely impractical. It’s like everyone can only yell at the top of their lungs. At least we can choose to focus on the person we’re interested in and ignore background “noise”. But someone trying to get our attention would be difficult. Now we can just call someone’s name from behind them. Something equivalent would be impossible.
Nearly all existing media (radio, songs, TV, movies, YouTube videos, …) will eventually lose its appeal, as (for new born people at least) it will effectively be in a foreign language, that uses a completely separate mode of communication. You can’t share Back to the Future with anyone new anymore.
But all of Star Wars gets a remaster with a CGI light-speech dub.
Sign language becomes more prevalent
I was going to say something like this (that it could combine in interesting ways) though if we assume that it was part of society’s past it’s more likely it was never created due to lack of need (being deaf would no longer be a hindrance to communication).
Though being blind would be even worse and I’m not sure what (simple) system* could be created to overcome that. It would be like being deaf now but without sign-language existing, at least when it comes to receiving communication.
* I guess maybe some implant like a modified cochlear implant, but that’s not exactly simple
Fiber-optic “phone calls”?
Remember: Light cannot penetrate walls
Glass: “Am I a joke to you?”
Lol, roadrages is gonna be fun when people start instictively
sayingcommunicating via light “you motherfucker” on their drive to work. The entire road willhearsee it.
We can make a human computer to predict the motion of the suns in the sky. But we might have trouble keeping secrets…
不要回答。不要回答。不要回答。
DO NOT ANSWER. DO NOT ANSWER. DO NOT ANSWER.
I am a pacifist from this world. You’re lucky I got this mesaage first.
If you respond, they will come, and your world will be conquered.
DO NOT ANSWER!
不要回答!
(Its actually why I made this question. Both the Netflix and Tencent versions were awesome in their own ways)
What is this from?
Three Body Problem, part of a Trilogy of Books called Rememberance of Earth’s Past. Originally in Chinese, but translated to English, so the phrasing can seem a little “weird” since its the difference in language (according to reddit).
I haven’t read it yet (because I have attention span issues), but I watched a Netflix Adaptation 3 Body Problem which would eventually cover the entire book series, with the Season One already out.
There’s also a Tencent version of it called Three Body (三体) (in Mandarin) that coveres the entire first book, which I also watched and it feels slightly overdramatised so I kinda skipped a lot of it.
This is the exact scene from Netflix: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ycs6JRx-pxk (minor Episode 1 spoilers)
Its an interesting world, and I’ll probably have to read it since the text is just too different from any adaptations, and they’re estimating season 2 and 3 of it being released in 2028 (I’m not gonna wait that long, I’m just gonna read it first).
I recommend the series, I’m currently on the third, listening to the audiobook (I don’t think there’s any downside to listening over reading if the text is translated)
I watched the Netflix show too beforehand, but I don’t remember it that well. I think it was pretty faithful to the book, although it definitely left some things out.
Hats. Hats everywhere… And sunglasses