Agreed. I call the assumption of food scarcity the Hobbesian Assumption.
Jim Swayze
www.fireholecanyon.com
Sent from my iPhone
On Jun 29, 2009, at 11:25 AM, "Cooley, Brad" <[log in to unmask]
> wrote:
> On Mon, 29 Jun 2009 11:07:47 +0100, Geoffrey Purcell
> <[log in to unmask]> wrote:
>
>> Re hunter-gatherers:- One problem with that theory is that hunter-
>> gatherers
>> ate a diet rather low in AGEs. For example, advanced glycation end
>> products/AGEs and other heat-created toxins are found in even higher
>> amounts in well-cooked foods such as grilled meats/fried foods etc,
>> whereas
>> hunter-gatherers mostly just boiled their foods in water, doing
>> much less
>> damage to their foods, and thus reducing AGE-content.
>
> Many HGs also roasted food directly over flame or slow-cooked in hot
> coals
> and rocks.
>
> . Plus, due to frequent
>> famine, hunter-gatherers were subject, by implication, to a
>> lifelong caloric
>> restriction diet which would also help to reduce average daily
>> intake of
> AGEs,
>> thus lowering susceptibility to arthritis etc.
>
> You have made this statement before, which is false. Generally HGs
> lived in
> an environment with a surplus of food. Sure, at times food was
> scarce, but
> that was the exception to the rule. Being nomadic and eating
> literally
> hundreds of different types of foods helped mitigate the risk of
> starvation
> compared to their agricultural counterparts. Anecdotally HGs such
> as the
> Inuit would eat huge amounts of food, so no caloric restriction there.
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