Wrangham's hypothesis...makes less logical sense to me.
You could put almost anything in the middle of that sentence, in the ellipse, and I would agree. The man seems determined to be wrong, loudly, publicly, and in print, as much as one man can. He's setting new standards for factual wrongness. Guinness Book of World Records is going to have to start a new category to describe his wrongness. He's setting records.
Seriously,
cooking makes bigger brains?
WTF? My degree is in flipping MUSIC, and even I see how that requires waaaay the heck more support than the fossil record and archaeological record show.
I think it's obvious what "brain food" is, for humans. Fat
builds the brain, and carbs
run the brain. You need some of both. Some people can get by with almost no carbs, but almost everyone needs some good-quality fats.
Brain food is species-dependent. Large-brained creatures eat all kinds of diets. Whale sharks are small-brained, but they eat the same food that large-brained blue whales do. Giant centipedes have almost no brain, but they are definitely meat-eaters, and eat a similar diet to tarsiers, which have much larger brains. Brain food can be anything. Some primates eat a lot of meat, relatively, some eat almost none, and instead eat mostly fruit.
Seriously, who is bribing Wrangham to
say this crazy crap? LOL
I just don't get it. Why would our pre-human ancestors need cooked food to develop larger brains? Their ancestors didn't need it. I'm not saying there's no way it could have had an influence, I'm just saying that the proof is far, far,
far from solid. In a case like this, I'm going to have to say that it's an "innocent until proven guilty" situation, where humans are innocent of needing cooked food to develop large brains, until proven guilty. In other words, given the general evolutionary tendency toward larger brains in vertebrate evolutionary lines, the burden of proof lies with Wrangham, not me.