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Mon, 20 Jul 2009 17:55:03 -0600 |
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william wrote:
> Kathryn wrote:
>> Our local newspaper published a Los Angeles Times article on
>> Wednesday, July 15, entitled "evolution holds health lessons." It
>> referenced a book written by Dr. William Meller, a board certified
>> internist who runs a medical practice in Santa Barbara. His book is
>> titled, "evolution Rx: a practical guide to harnessing our innate
>> capacity for health and healing." That's quite a mouthful for book
>> title.
>>
>
> IIRC no evolution happened during the paleolithic era, so his book holds
> no health lessons for us.
>
> The excerpt about the cave bones was interesting.
>
> William
The paleolithic is about 2.5 million or so years long. Anatomical
modern man came into being within that period via the ongoing process of
evolution. I would hazard to guess that man at the end of the
paleolithic period could not interbreed with his ancestors from the
beginning of that period because of the ensuing evolutionary changes
within the time frame of the paleolithic.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paleolithic
The dietary clues found within caves would be additional evidence of an
evolutionary based diet within the time frame of the caves habitation.
In fact, I would hazard to guess again that man today would be
genetically compatible - could interbreed - with the cave's inhabitants.
Therefore, I wouldn't be so presumptions as to say that the discovered
cave information has no applicability to a more ideal diet.
--
Steve - [log in to unmask]
"The Problem with Socialism is that eventually you
run out of Other People's Money." --Margaret Thatcher
"Mistrust of Government is the Bedrock of American Patriotism"
Take World's Smallest Political Quiz at
http://www.theadvocates.org/quiz.html
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