Poll

Well?

Warm
Cold

Author Topic: Would you rather be uncomfortably warm or cold?  (Read 3214 times)

try living in the northern US/Canada for a couple winters and THEN tell me how much you love the cold. i've lived in south Florida for 14 years, where the humidity is pretty much almost always REALLY loving high, along with 90+ temperatures (could feel like 100+ some days, and that's wet, sticky heat, not dry heat) daily and I can assure you it's WAYYY better than the cold.
Pssh.

try living in the northern US/Canada for a couple winters and THEN tell me how much you love the cold. i've lived in south Florida for 14 years, where the humidity is pretty much almost always REALLY loving high, along with 90+ temperatures (could feel like 100+ some days, and that's wet, sticky heat, not dry heat) daily and I can assure you it's WAYYY better than the cold.

totally did not mean to come off like a richard, oops
dude you're talking to the sand person that loving despises the heat and desert.  If I could I would live in a god damn igloo and never feel 80°+ temperatures again

have you lived in the desert? I've been to 120°+ and back(EVERY YEAR) I will literally fight to the death about this cold verse hot topic

I've been to 110 at 97% humidity in the summer. And -58 with 80 KPH winds at average in the winter.

Cold.  You can always bundle up more but you can't strip more than what you wear.  Well, you could but then you have to endure some pretty harsh pain.

Cold.  You can always bundle up more but you can't strip more than what you wear.  Well, you could but then you have to endure some pretty harsh pain.
No he meant cold or UNCOMFORTABELY warm Im sure.

Exactly.  You can do much to remedy being cold, but not as much to remedy being warm.

Humans don't function well in heat. We have lots of mechanisms to warm us up if we're cold (shivering, growing hair, seeking cover, etc) but very few to keep us cold when it's hot (basically just sweating). While extremely cold temperatures eventually cause human cell death, heat does it way faster. Brain death begins at something like 110 degrees Fahrenheit, and at that point death is pretty likely without immediate hospitalization. The highest body temperature survived by a human being is 113 degrees Fahrenheit. Anything greater is always lethal.

However, when you compare that to cold temperatures, the limits of human survival are much greater. The lowest body temperature survived was 55 degrees Fahrenheit, which is much much farther away from normal body temperature than 113 degrees. So in that regard, being uncomfortably cold is more appealing because the human body can support it better.

Another thing to note is that the sensation of being 'really cold' usually won't cause hypothermia. You can be outdoors in 60 degree weather and it's highly unlikely that your body temperature will plummet to 60 degrees. This is probably because your body insulates itself, and your internal cell processes create heat that replenishes heat lost by wind chill. The same isn't true for 110 degree heat, where people can succumb to heat stroke in a matter of hours. In that case, your body works as a conductor for heat and the only mechanism it has to remove heat energy from your body is by secreting sweat that absorbs some energy when it evaporates off of your skin. Not nearly as good as all the things in your body that produce tons of heat when there isn't enough!

All of the above is correct, and were the question to be "would you rather be in dangerous cold or dangerous heat" I would choose the cold too.

But since the topic is "would you rather be uncomfortably warm or cold", I would prefer the warmth, since an uncomfortable coldness can come with pain, whereas an uncomfortable warmth is just uncomfortable.

And since Nonnel has made it clear that in this hypothetical warm/cold situation you can't escape being uncomfortably warm/cold, it doesn't matter whether you could warm up or cool down more effectively, since you're not allowed to in this scenario.

Nonnel bring up a good point, but here are my thoughts on the subject:

I have a pretty strong resistance to cold, but naturally I have a weakness to heat. My ideal sleeping conditions are around 50-60F under some blankets, I sleep on the floor next to my room's balcony door wide open all night in the winter. It's wonderful.
So I suppose the smart answer to this solutions choosing uncomfortably warm because it doesn't take much heat to put me there, which is much safer. But I'm stubborn and choose cold even though I realize that uncomfortably cold for me would be much more dangerously low.

also, it's 51 F and raining and I absolutely love it.
« Last Edit: December 04, 2014, 04:05:03 AM by Steve5451² »

cold
you can bundle up but you can't strip naked
besides sweating is far worse than shivering
uh-huh

cold

i dont want nasty-ass laptop burns from too much of prolonged heat
yes

considering it's easier to store heat than it is to give it off, I'm gonna go with cold
YEPPERS

All you pusillanimous individual forgets are saying how 90° is hot xD


Bitch come live in phoenix Arizona for a summer and tell me 90° is loving hot so I can kick your ass with some honor

We're talking about uncomfortable heat, not deadly heat, ya nigro.

forget no to cold
warm all the way


As someone who gets the temperature around 100F+ in the summer and like -20 in the winter, I prefer the heat.