Subject: | |
From: | |
Reply To: | |
Date: | Thu, 20 May 2004 09:32:28 -0400 |
Content-Type: | text/plain |
Parts/Attachments: |
|
|
Ingrid Bauer/Jean-Claude Catry wrote:
>IMO, cooking caught on because it help to bypass the instinctive
>regulation of eating . once the food is cooked or denatured our genetic is
>not able to recognise the food very clearly and we don't experience a clear
>"stop" ( when taste becomes not so appealing).
>
>
I'm not sure how this, if true, explains why it caught on. Why would
the inability to experience a clear stop result in the universality of
cooking? Is it simply that cooking makes food appealing in greater
quantities?
>on top of that once you start to eat beyond what your body wanted to ingest
>by bypassing instinctive regulation , your body is blocking by instinct to
>the raw undenatured nutrients that will overwhelm your metabolism while the
>same denatured nutrients will not find any barrier to their ingestion .
>
>
The implication is that people who cook food eat too much. Is that your
claim?
>alcohol; and other drugs also caught on and it is not because it gives a
>definite advantage to our species .
>
Indeed, alcohol induces a state of intoxication that many (myself
included) find pleasant. That would certainly explain why it caught
on. But then, the spread of alcohol use was never a mystery. Perhaps
your position is that cooking is analogous in that it causes a kind of
intoxication?
Todd Moody
[log in to unmask]
>And yes cooking also provide an inner
>exitation of the nervous syatem that lead us to overpopulation , call it
>advantage if you like but it is what is leading our species to extinction .
>
>jean-claude
>
>
|
|
|