So I've been toying with some ideas in my free time and one of the concepts i've been tossing around is the cultural shock when introducing a regreessive dark age-esk surface setting and isolationist subterranean civilizations.
I've been playing around with numerous elements and how to address them, but theres one I can't figure out.
Time.
How the hell does an underground civilization conceptualize time?
Shorter durations of time (minutes, seconds, hours) are used as precise ways to measure out a single day, which is however long it takes for a full day/night cycle. Something that doesn't exist underground.
Longer durations of time (weeks, months, years) are use to measure out how long it takes for a full rotation around the sun to pass. This can be tracked and verified via seasons, or if you wanted to be a bit more accurate, the positions of stars and costellations can be further used to track where in the year you are.
Absolutley none of this can be applied to an underground culture that either never goes to the surface, or very, very rarely goes up top.
That said, if the civilizations are going to be as advanced, if not moreso than whats on the surface, some metric of time has to have been created and used, as even "simple" mundane things such as cooking and smelting need to have some way to measure/track time in order to be efficent. However, everything I can think of is more or less inapplicable (day/night cycles, star locations, seasonal changes, etc).
This makes even simple questions like "how old are you" impossible to answer when there is nothing that can be compared or referenced.
Any ideas on how to tackle this?