On Tue, 21 Apr 1998, Kent Multer wrote:
> Todd, thanks for the great summary -- you hit a bunch of key points very
> concisely.
You're welcome.
> Ray, I'm curious as to what's your take on this? It seems to contradict
> one of the basic points of your book, by stating that maybe some people
> actually *have* evolved the ability to eat non-paleo foods in a mere 10,000
> years.
I don't know Ray's take on this, but in a way it's *obvious* that
some people have evolved the ability to thrive on non-paleo
foods. The Japanese are the longest-lived people on the planet
and, although their diet is quite different from most Western
diets, it includes plenty of non-paleo items, such as rice, soy,
and noodles. The Swiss are also quite long-lived, despite a diet
high in dairy products, especially cheeses. The celebrated
"Mediterranean" diet makes use of goat cheese and whole-grain
flours. At least *some* ovo-lacto vegetarians enjoy long and
healthy lives (as, in fact, John Harvey Kellogg did), even though
many seemingly encounter problems.
The problem is knowing *who* can handle these foods, and who
cannot. Is blood type really a marker, or are adaptations
randomly distributed in the population?
Todd Moody
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