Guest guest Posted April 20, 2005 Report Share Posted April 20, 2005 jeannie_rose_13 [jeannie_rose_13] Wednesday, April 20, 2005 8:58 AM <rawfood > rawfood RE: [Raw Food] New Here - am concerned about cravings Elchanan previously wrote: When most of us associate any food with primates, the first food that typically comes to mind is the banana. We are primates. The link is actually rather easy, when you look at our species in the context of its larger family of species. Now Jeannie writes: Yes, I was thinking about that evolutionary link all last night. It DOES make sense. I was wondering though, if you know, or if anyone else here knows, of any literature or studies done on main food staples of varying species. It would be interesting to see how main food staples have evolved or changed (or not changed) with each species. Thanks, Elchanan. JR _____ Just pick up any zoology book visit any zoo, etc. Almost any such descriptions of animal species provide information about their typical habitat, diet, etc. Here's a thought: I find it interesting to think in terms of similarities among groups of species without regard to considerations of evolution. This enables me to talk comfortably with many people whose beliefs do not include the idea of cross-species evolution. Remember, evolution is a theory, the theory itself has changed quite a bit over time, and there is, as yet, no definitive " proof " of anything about these theories -- except that over the years, many aspects have been DISproved. For example, the notion of random selection is substantially nonsense. We now know, through simple observation in our own timeframe, that species mutate quite intelligently, in accordance with Nature's principles, in response to stressful conditions. For example, many bacteria and insects have mutated quite brilliantly in response to our antibiotics, pesticides, etc. In other words, to the extent that there is evolution, is appears to be adaptive in nature, not random at all. And no one has observed the emergence of any new species as a result of such adaptation, even among animals whose reproductive rates might allow for such an event to arise. There have been some fascinating studies in this regard. Best to all, Elchanan -- ---------------------[ Ciphire Signature ]---------------------- vlinfo signed email body (1885 characters) on 20 April 2005 at 16:58:40 UTC rawfood ------------------------------- : Ciphire has secured this email against identity theft. : Free download at www.ciphire.com. The garbled lines : below are the sender's verifiable digital signature. ------------------------------- 00fAAAAAEAAABAimZCXQcAAFMCAAIAAgACACBZ36NZd8ice9rJ4ZlYrt6BrEjH8O zzmKDQLsTNDUWDmAEAhgSkE5NuzzvORJkeFIi/NVXB9GCG1XVfaMj+yPGZ0X2Vvx pd6dUTcwel5sp7dbMam3q4uaF6qYMajPe9Nnf0sg== ------------------[ End Ciphire Signed Message ]---------------- Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 20, 2005 Report Share Posted April 20, 2005 Hi, Elchanan, thanks for sharing these thoughts. It reminded me of a couple of books that speak to the same issue, both by Huston Smith (I believe I have mentioned him to you before); the first is Forgotten Truth, a fairly short book, and the second is a more recent publication, Why Religion Matters. He talks about science vs. scientism, and alludes to the 'blind faith' that is placed in evolutionary theory by many in the scientific community (both research and education). Both are good reads. Peace, Valerie " INFO @ Vibrant Life " <VLinfo wrote: Remember, evolution is a theory, the theory itself has changed quite a bit over time, and there is, as yet, no definitive " proof " of anything about these theories -- except that over the years, many aspects have been DISproved. For example, the notion of random selection is substantially nonsense. We now know, through simple observation in our own timeframe, that species mutate quite intelligently, in accordance with Nature's principles, in response to stressful conditions. For example, many bacteria and insects have mutated quite brilliantly in response to our antibiotics, pesticides, etc. In other words, to the extent that there is evolution, is appears to be adaptive in nature, not random at all. And no one has observed the emergence of any new species as a result of such adaptation, even among animals whose reproductive rates might allow for such an event to arise. There have been some fascinating studies in this regard. Best to all, Elchanan Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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