The question of why the same individual exhibits structurally different psychological profiles — across emotional tone, accessible memory, cognitive style, social judgment, and phenomenological sense of self — at different times of day has not received a unified theoretical account. Existing frameworks attribute such variation to circadian biological rhythms, mood fluctuation, or social role performance, each capturing an important dimension while leaving a specific explanatory gap: none address the possibility that temporal context functions as an ecological trigger for the activation of qualitatively distinct neural pathway configurations. Drawing on established findings from network neuroscience, state-dependent memory research, the metastability framework, and philosophy of self, this paper develops a theoretical account in which the diurnal cycle functions as a systematic, recurring, and ecologically structured pathway-switching trigger. Three propositions are advanced. First, daytime and nighttime constitute distinct ecological packages — reproducible bundles of social demands, normativity pressure, interpersonal exposure density, and performance orientation — that function as attractor-triggering contextual conditions for different whole-brain connectivity states. Second, a social field effect is proposed, in which the simultaneous activation of a shared pathway configuration across multiple individuals in a social environment creates self-reinforcing ecological conditions that amplify the dominance of that configuration beyond what individual consolidation history alone would produce, rendering alternative configurations inaccessible. Third, nighttime is characterised as a condition of structural solitude — defined not by physical withdrawal from others but by the functional attenuation of social normativity pressure sufficient to dissolve the social field effect — producing access to configurations that are suppressed during the daytime. The paper distinguishes throughout between established empirical findings, theoretical propositions derived from those findings, and speculative extensions requiring direct empirical test. Implications are developed for the epistemology of self-knowledge, the interpretation of interpersonal behaviour, and the architecture of identity as a context-dependent repertoire. Explicit falsifiability commitments and methodological directions are provided.
Zaelani (Mon,) studied this question.