PP, as usual, you are talking nonsense re the above comments. It is perfectly valid and understandable that I should criticise people who advocate topics which are objectionable within RPD guidelines. Some arguments are appalling:- for example, the lame mercury-in-fish argument, frequently debunked by many scientists, is used by vegans and others to claim that one should never eat raw seafood. This means that rawists, if they believed such lame nonsense, would feel obliged to cut out all raw seafood, which is actually a very healthy type of raw food that is particularly useful in many cases. So, it is perfectly understandable that when someone makes lame, unscientific comments in favour of the Noble-Savage theory or some other pro-cooked-oriented or pro-raw vegan topic(or tries to rewrite history by previously pretending that cannibalism was not as prevalent as claimed in palaeo times), that one should naturally step in and criticise such a move. In the past, not doing so on other forums has usually led to various pro-cooked advocates eventually attacking rawists on raw forums by trying to pretend that cooking is OK and that any pro-raw argument must be wrong and that is unacceptable.
Your mention of Lex's unscientific comment is also appalling. For one thing, not only are there countless scientific studies showing that a variety of medical conditions are made much worse with increasing amounts of heat-created toxins , derived from cooking, in the human body(and also studies showing a decrease in severity of many conditions when AGE-levels in the human body were reduced) but also there have been studies showing how AGEs directly and negatively affect human cells in vitro, so it is just not scientific to pretend that heat-created toxins are not a problem.My citing of the more solid theories re gravity etc. is , of course, valid, as many pro-cooked-advocates seem to ignore the fact that one does not have to prove, beyond absolute doubt, a particular theory in order to make it part of scientific concensus, one only has to accumulate far more scientific evidence in favour of one's hypothesis than evidence favouring other viewpoints.The greater the difference between them, the more likely it is that the one side with the larger studies is right, and the other smaller one wrong.
The lame argument that all other studies are wrong, just because one says so, makes no sense. Even if one believes in conspiracy-theories such as that almost all scientific studies are biased or are flawed, that still does not exclude the common argument in science that the side with the highest number of studies in its favour is the best one, for now. To take an obvious example, let's say, there are 500 studies which favour the pro-cooked-meat-advocates and 40,000 studies favouring the notion of heat-created toxins causing some harm(given the studies I have already seen, this seems a reasonable rough assumption re ratios, though not numbers). Then, if 95 percent of all studies are biased or flawed or corrupt in some way, then 5 percent of 500 means there are only 25 excellent, well-done studies favouring the pro-cooked-meat side of things, and 2,000 excellent, well-done studies favouring the notion that heat-created toxins, so that would still mean that the notion of heat-created toxins was far more likely to be correct. Now, one could pretend that absolutely all the studies favouring one side were a-ok, while absolutely all studies favouring the opposite side were totally flawed and corrupt(like Taubes tried to do but got heavily criticised for his fatal errors of assumption and his own personal bias) but this is physically impossible as human bias, flawed studies etc. appear all the time, favouring all kinds of different viewpoints, affecting all sides.
What cannot be denied, nowadays, is that cooking heavily causes harm to foods. That is now mainstream thought. Granted, there are still some delaying tactics with many scientists claiming, despite evidence of toxins in such foods, that boiled/lightly-cooked foods are somehow OK because they are "less worse" than well-cooked foods, but that is to be expected since humans have been eating cooked foods for so many millenia.