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Date: | Thu, 3 Jul 2003 22:12:05 +0200 |
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Jerry, you wrote :
> Does "instinctive eating" include eating meat? Consider. First the meat
> would need to be raw and unseasoned, otherwise it would be modified by
> "culinary artifice" and therefore not "original food". Is eating -raw-
> meat
> instinctive?
F: Yes, Jerry, it may be and it can be extremely tasty when the meat is in a
state (usually very aged, gamy, but sometimes also fresh) useful to your
body. But, of course, if you don't like it you don't eat it.
> GCB's idea of "taste change": That's wrong. Taste change does not mean
> enough; it means excess. It means that one has eaten so much as to cause
> sickness. It means gluttony. One should never eat to the point of a
dramatic
> taste change.
F : That's about what GCB says and it's confirmed by everyone's experience.
> I try to avoid counting on anything anyone says. I try to get the facts
and
> think for myself.
F : You're wise, keep going on that way !
>
> Anopsology needs some more work on it before it is perfected.
F : Of course, every man-made thing is imperfect, and by experimenting the
thing we try to find ways to improve it.
Cheers,
Francois
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