I've never seen mineral water offered at any social occasions. Do you bring your own mineral water with you to any social occasion? You're free to do whatever you want, of course and I wasn't trying to imply that avoiding coffee and all other non-RP foods all the time would
have to damage social life, just complicate it a bit and
potentially damage it. If someone wants to make social life easier and doesn't want to avoid all coffee, they may not have to, depending on their tolerance. I believe Tyler and others when they suggest that the occasional cup of coffee to be sociable hasn't impacted them negatively to a significant degree. Of course, YMMV.
I do think it's wise to eat really pure raw Paleo for a while, to have a good baseline to compare less strict practices to. If you find that occasional coffee produces much worse results than pure raw Paleo, then by all means avoid it.
I'm not out to prove anything and diet is so complex that I don't think that an "optimal" diet for all will ever be completely proven and dietary debates will likely continue indefinitely.
Sure, and what he says is plainly in agreement with us on the point that the doses of pesticides we ingest with our food are much less harmful than heated food, the problem with coffee being that it is roasted at high temperature.
That's your emphasis, not Ames'. If you look at the context of what he said, it seems his point was not that coffee drinking is so terribly risky, but that people's fears about man-made chemicals are often overblown (about which I think he goes too far).
We’ve got to take into account the fact that Bruce Ames is not a raw foodist himself....
Exactly, so I doubt his point was about the horrible toxicity of cooked foods.
although we can infer from his advice to eat more fruits and veggies that he supposes at least some of them will be eaten raw
Most of us already do that. The question in this thread is not whether eating some raw food is a good idea, but whether consuming some coffee really is all that bad.
Thanks for the link to the article, by the way. The first pages are really interesting.
You're welcome.
My opinion on this? I don’t know.
"I don't know" is a good place to be at and it's basically where I'm at. I don't know with certainty that coffee is highly toxic for everyone in small amounts, so I'm not going to claim that it's proven that all should completely avoid it. Isn't it possible that at least some forms and degrees of coffee consumption might not be proven as harmful in some people, and might even provide health benefits via hormesis?
While the full hormesis model is not widely accepted yet (though most scientists do accept certain forms of hormesis, such as muscle growth and stronger bones from weight lifting), in part because the mechanism is not understood, it wouldn't make sense to rule hormesis out merely because we don't fully understand how it works:
"As previously implied ... additional research is needed to expand our understanding of hormesis; however, it is shortsighted to assume that comprehensive mechanistic knowledge is necessary before an effect has been (or can be) considered in health policy. The history of medicine and public health is replete with examples of new insights supplanting previously “well-established” concepts of disease and how they should be addressed.... The more numerous, consistent, and coherent the findings of benefit or harm, the more readily they were accepted and acted upon even in the absence of comprehensive mechanistic explanations. To argue that hormetic mechanisms require a higher level of understanding is simply an example of a double standard designed to accomplish little more than maintain the status quo." (The Importance of Hormesis to Public Health, Ralph Cook and Edward J. Calabrese, http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1665397)
After all, the value of the raw Paleo approach is much less accepted in the scientific community than hormesis, yet we all employ its principles nonetheless.