Alpha, I’m quite sure that if I happen to be lost at sea in a lifeboat with nothing to drink but seawater and if by an incredible luck you were sailing nearby, you would rescue me and offer me plain water… Of course, I would do the same in a converse situation!
Shall we fight aboard next? I doubt very much, especially since you’ve always been a very amiable and generous friend in real life. Ok, you have a personal anger with GCB and you got angry with me as well since I wasn’t convinced by your arguments and I backed GCB stand. But such private hostilities and attacks on personal character are not really interesting for the outsiders.
Therefore, I wish we could continue to have interesting discussions, but in an amiable way. You seem to perceive the “instincto” stand as dogmatic (you frequently use the words “instincto dogma”), but a feel it’s just the opposite. I suppose we got diverging impressions because we were presented the instincto model by different persons (FvB in your case, GCB in my case with practical demonstrations by the then 25 years practicing JDD and his family).
For me, instinctive nutrition is an experiment and a research. I don’t see any dogma in it, it’s an open theory not pretending at all to embody the ultimate truth. Many of your arguments were already incorporated in the way I was acquainted with and understand instinctive nutrition and you are therefore very often beating a dead horse, at least in my eyes.
Civilized man in front of his computer the whole day long with ad libitum springwater and fruit or food available does of course never "overdrink" sea water. Yet this was never in the past (and won't be in future) the normal condition of real man in nature with frequent situations of intense physical activity, exhaustion, dehydration and thirst and nothing to drink but seawater
Humans are mammals. So, it seems logical that we can infer from the actual situation of other mammals and especially primates. Do we actually see many exhausted mammals, particularly monkeys and apes, suffering from intense dehydration and thirst dying from having drunk too much seawater? Are the beaches littered with cadavers of mammals dead from drinking too much seawater?
Seawater has at least a common characteristic with that dangerous chemical
dihydrogen monoxide (DHMO). Nevertheless, a limited amount of DHMO is necessary to our health
. It is similar for every foodstuff: an adequate amount is useful to our welfare, but too much of it is noxious.