Continued from
http://www.rawpaleodietforum.com/off-topic/what-are-you-eating-right-now/msg79287/#msg79287It may be fruitless, but I'm pleading with folks to please do less of making absolutist pronouncements as though they were all-knowing gods and instead put more thought and effort into their posts, especially in supplying specific evidence to support and explain their views. There are many types of evidence one could present, not just books and articles, but also years of personal experience, well-designed self-experiments, logical arguments backed by scientific knowledge, real-world observations of others, image/video documentation, and so on, but I'm not seeing a lot of it. It seems like there's a tendency for folks to act as if they are more interested in arguing than in learning and sharing and putting effort into their posts. Satya has done a good job at the Dirty Carnivore forum of redirecting the energy away from the mindless arguing and more into thoughtful, well-supported posts and I'd like to ask if folks could consider the same for this forum. I've seen it work, so it is possible.
Macronutrient ratios play indeed a fundamental important role in many medical conditions, for example fungal overgrowth, epilepsy, ADHD etc.
Where did I deny that? Don't expect sweet comments from me if you accuse me of making straw man arguments that I never did. This isn't relevant to what I actually wrote. I was talking about the wars on the Internet and via books and other media over low carb vs. high carb and low fat vs. high fat. I'm bored of the endless macronutrient wars and people that pronounce that "it's all about carbs" or "fat" or opinions to that effect or proclaim something like that the whole human race absolutely would do better on a low carb or low fat diet.
And even if I speculate about the diet of our ancestors 10k+ years ago, whats wrong with speculating? It's part of a thinking process.
Again, I didn't argue for that straw man that no one should ever speculate. I just pleaded for less speculative pronouncements and more learning and deeper and more skeptical thinking--especially when the speculation is used as the foundation for arguments. There's too much in this forum and the Internet in general of throwing out absolutist proclamations based on shoot-from-the-hip speculations pronounced as though they were dictates from heaven. I'm all for speculation when it's used as the starting point for thought and discussion, not as the conclusion.
Please realize that your speculations about word combinations like "must have" are of no use for anyone.
Please realize that you don't speak for everyone, unless you're claiming to be God or a Borg who has access to everyone's minds or a dictator who can kill any of us who disagree. Besides, it's not a speculation to point out that stating that something "must have" been absolutely so without providing evidence is asking the readers to accept an absolute assumption without evidence. It's a simple recognition of the logical fallacy called
begging the question.
Have you learned anything from any hunter gatherer group? Or have you just read some nice books and articles like nearly everyone else here?
Are you now at least acknowledging that it's not true that we can learn "absolutely nothing" from HGs, but instead may be able to learn something by means other than books or articles? What if anything do you accept as useful sources of information on hunter gatherer groups (living as a HG, living among HGs, direct communication with HGs, videos of HGs, writings by HGs, observers reporting on HGs, field studies, lab studies, ...)?
Many of todays hunter gatherers are in a very poor shape and show detrimental habits like smoking and drinking alcohol.
I can't believe you're using the same style of proclamations without evidence, which I just decried, in your points to me, and you're not making it very clear who or what you're referring to or how it relates to what I wrote. If you're expecting me to be convinced by the methods I took issue with, that is puzzling.
This is a good example of where it would help for you to put in a little more effort and provide specific examples to not only support what you're saying, but to explain it. Which hunter gatherers are you talking about? Are you talking about traditional pipe smoking and home-fermented alcoholic beverages or store-bought modern versions? Are you saying that the HGs are in very poor shape because of their traditional foods and lifestyles or modern influences? Who do you believe have higher rates of chronic diseases (aka the diseases of civilization), the hunter-gatherer peoples that have maintained more of their traditional diet and lifestyle or those which have adopted more modern practices?
Are you seriously trying to re-animate Tyler's dead straw man argument in which he basically complained about people advocating mindless HG re-enactment that assumes without evidence that 100% of what HGs do is healthy, which I have actually argued
against doing, not for? I don't recall anyone arguing recently in this thread for that inanity. As I pointed out, my signature and icon caption, which I think have been there for months now, show I don't believe that nonsense.
Regarding healthy diets for human beings there is not really SO much to learn, IMO. It's more about unlearning. The message is simple: Just eat all parts of HEALTHY animals (raw) and some raw plant food as desired. That's all.
Yet more of the same revelatory pronouncements. How can I make it plain to you that I'm not convinced of anything just because you say it's so and I'm much more interested in your actual experience, experiments and thorough research than in opinions that don't appear to have had much thought or effort put into them? Are you God or a prophet with a direct link to his mind? If not, I require more evidence than your say-so.
And of course, there are many other factors beside macronutrient ratios. Nobody denies this, PP.
Then we are in agreement on that, but my point was that there is too much emphasis on macronutrient ratios when it comes to diets for the general population and not enough on the bigger picture. I was not implying the ridiculous notion that all of the science and medicine that in any way touches on macronutrients must be discarded or ignored. Nobody that I know of has argued for that.
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By the way, when I wrote this:
Some people have been making a lot of guesses and assumptions, which is typical on the Internet. Instead of doing that, why not read all you can about the actual hunter gatherer, pastoral and horticultural peoples you've been making guesses about and learn what you can? It's much more interesting and rewarding than pure speculation. Why not do as Stephen Covey advised and seek first to understand, then to be understood? http://www.rawpaleodietforum.com/off-topic/what-are-you-eating-right-now/msg79137/#msg79137
I meant Stone Age hunter gatherers too, not just those that were observed in recent centuries, and it was a request, not a demand, but I'm hoping that people will seriously consider it and in the constructive way in which it was intended.