It's inconvenient. Someone might need to come in at night. A relative, or a neighbor in a jam. You want to be helpful to them.
That's literally the thought process. Bad people will break in anyways, so only good people will be kept out by the locks, so why lock it? And of course, people didn't bash a door in, they used lockpicks, it was a more elegant time. Or at least that was the perception.
Now, we see things differently. We see things in a Modern Current Year lens.
Or they'd just bust a window, or come in through an open window.
Because maybe you DID lock your door, but there'd be at least one window open for the breeze, or not locked, and they probably didn't have screens on them yet. But hey, it's not hard to cut through a bit of window-screen.
It's inconvenient. Someone might need to come in at night. A relative, or a neighbor in a jam. You want to be helpful to them.
That is a sort of social fabric I've never known. If I want someone to come in, I hand him an extra set of keys. I probably couldn't even sleep if I knew that someone could come in at will.
And of course, people didn't bash a door in, they used lockpicks, it was a more elegant time. Or at least that was the perception.
Interesting. But at the same time, open doors might tempt people who don't know how to lockpick. Not trying to be argumentative, it's just so foreign to me that it's almost unbelievable.
It's inconvenient. Someone might need to come in at night. A relative, or a neighbor in a jam. You want to be helpful to them.
That's literally the thought process. Bad people will break in anyways, so only good people will be kept out by the locks, so why lock it? And of course, people didn't bash a door in, they used lockpicks, it was a more elegant time. Or at least that was the perception.
Now, we see things differently. We see things in a Modern Current Year lens.
Or they'd just bust a window, or come in through an open window.
Because maybe you DID lock your door, but there'd be at least one window open for the breeze, or not locked, and they probably didn't have screens on them yet. But hey, it's not hard to cut through a bit of window-screen.
That is a sort of social fabric I've never known. If I want someone to come in, I hand him an extra set of keys. I probably couldn't even sleep if I knew that someone could come in at will.
Interesting. But at the same time, open doors might tempt people who don't know how to lockpick. Not trying to be argumentative, it's just so foreign to me that it's almost unbelievable.