Overview
This theory says that the transition to LED lighting altered more than electricity use and color temperature. It allegedly changed human perception itself. According to believers, modern lighting environments suppress subtle visual or energetic sensitivities that older lighting conditions allowed people to access.
Real Lighting Background
LEDs became dominant because of their energy efficiency, longevity, and tunability. Researchers and public agencies also study their spectral composition, circadian effects, and blue-light content. Because lighting can measurably affect sleep, mood, and biological rhythms, conspiracy versions argue that it may also affect perception more deeply than officially admitted.
“Spiritual Spectrum”
The spiritual-spectrum claim usually centers on the idea that human vision and consciousness once interacted with a broader field of light than contemporary people now experience indoors. In this theory, sunlight and older warmer light sources are described as fuller or more continuous, while modern LEDs are described as spectrally manipulative, narrow, or spiritually flattening.
Blue-Rich and Circadian Arguments
The theory often points to research on blue-enriched light, melatonin suppression, circadian disruption, and retinal strain. Those real physiological discussions are then extended into metaphysical territory. If LEDs can alter sleep and hormonal rhythms, believers argue, they may also impair subtle perception, emotional resonance, or the capacity to sense auras.
Indoor Environment and Control
A further branch claims that because LED systems are tunable, centralized, and nearly universal in offices, schools, and public facilities, they represent an ideal instrument for environmental normalization. The theory says the issue is not one bulb but a total lighting regime that standardizes visual reality.
Legacy
Aura Spectrum Stripping turns ordinary lighting policy into a theory of perceptual governance. It reframes efficiency lighting not as a technical upgrade but as a narrowing of human sensory and spiritual range, carried out through the most mundane infrastructure of everyday life.


