ebola?
Bluelight Crew
Here we go again! 8( 
1. I don't think that going lacto-ovo vegetarian or vegan (hence-forth known under the superordinate category, "vegetarian") solely for health reasons makes a great deal of sense. Ethical concerns tie in most directly to vegetarian practice, and then environmental and health benefits relate less directly.
The most healthy diet possible would include fish.
2. Most vegetarians who I've met (including me) eat a great deal more healthily than your average person. I believe this to be primarily an effect of vegetarianism forcing one to pay active attention to what he/she's eating.
You confuse descriptive science (that which gave us the 'food chain'), which uncovers mechanisms of how things came to be, with effective prescription for optimizing the efficacy of personal behavioral management, which tells us how to act to best attain our goals. If we were to consciously select for eating meat, would it improve our personal lives (besides just hedonistically, assuming that you're not body-building) or the evolutionary fitness of future generations? How? Would it do so because of mechanisms of natural selection?
Really? Most who I've encountered stick to complex carbohydrates, lean proteins, and ample fruits and veggies, not coca-cola and fries.
Even here, there has been insufficient time in human history to differentially evolve to select for different diets, for the most part. Exceptions include tiny tweaks, like lactose tolerance. Really, we evolved to have the ability to sustain ourselves healthily a bit past reproductive age on a variety of diets. Does this tell us anything about how we SHOULD eat to live healthily into old age?
Not reliably or particularly bioavailably. Most vegan must take b-12 supplements, and all should.
I draw the line at where I think that consciousness (defined widely) is likely to emerge. My best guess is that some sort of neural centralization is necessary. I consider cnidarian ethically sound to eat. Too bad jellyfishe's taste and texture are horrid. I don't believe that there are any edible sponges. I am a bit torn on whether echinoderms or bivalves are okay. I don't like sea urchin roe or oysters either though.
Plants, protozoa, and bacteria? I find it unlikely that they 'experience', although they clearly respond to their environments.
ebola

It kinda strikes me that many ppl out there are focussed on eating strickly vegetarian or vegan meals without taking in consideration the fact wheter this food is originated by organic (or socalled biological) farming methods. I don't understand what's healthy or beneficial about eating vegetables that have been treated with all kinds of pesticides. It might hurt your stomach when you realize you are in fact sponsering dirty transnational companies who are making alot of cash by selling GMO seeds, fertilizers and pesticides. ;-)
Personally I prefer an organic piece of meat above a vegan dish consisting of GMO vegatables that have been intensively sprayed. Also IMO the former appears to be less harmfull to the environment, as sustainability is the main objective of organic farming. Thoughts, anyone?
1. I don't think that going lacto-ovo vegetarian or vegan (hence-forth known under the superordinate category, "vegetarian") solely for health reasons makes a great deal of sense. Ethical concerns tie in most directly to vegetarian practice, and then environmental and health benefits relate less directly.
The most healthy diet possible would include fish.
2. Most vegetarians who I've met (including me) eat a great deal more healthily than your average person. I believe this to be primarily an effect of vegetarianism forcing one to pay active attention to what he/she's eating.
Man evolved, homo erectus was one of the first to eat meat, the one's before him were herbivores(or quite close to the definition of herbivore as they probably ate fish...).
Going vegeterian is reversing the trend of human evolution if you ask me.
You confuse descriptive science (that which gave us the 'food chain'), which uncovers mechanisms of how things came to be, with effective prescription for optimizing the efficacy of personal behavioral management, which tells us how to act to best attain our goals. If we were to consciously select for eating meat, would it improve our personal lives (besides just hedonistically, assuming that you're not body-building) or the evolutionary fitness of future generations? How? Would it do so because of mechanisms of natural selection?
Most vegetarians are carbohydrate addicts killing themselves slowly with insulin resistance and metabolic disorder.
Really? Most who I've encountered stick to complex carbohydrates, lean proteins, and ample fruits and veggies, not coca-cola and fries.

unless you happen to be living in a far-northern climate. (successful) evolution is about adapting to an environment, really.
Even here, there has been insufficient time in human history to differentially evolve to select for different diets, for the most part. Exceptions include tiny tweaks, like lactose tolerance. Really, we evolved to have the ability to sustain ourselves healthily a bit past reproductive age on a variety of diets. Does this tell us anything about how we SHOULD eat to live healthily into old age?
nutritional flakes have B12
Not reliably or particularly bioavailably. Most vegan must take b-12 supplements, and all should.
I see Balarki talks about non breathing, non-sentient creatures but surely just because an organism does not scream that it is still not aware. Plants respond to pest attacks and will grow and move in response to it's environment. Surely a tree who is alive for 50yrs has some sort of "emotional" interaction with its surrounds, even though it doesn't have a humanoid like central nervous system. What about bacteria? Do Protozoa become safe as soon as they are multicellular? Or a worm whose nervous system is extremely primitive? Is there a safe size? Which creature will be the next to evolve and suddenly become vegan safe?
I draw the line at where I think that consciousness (defined widely) is likely to emerge. My best guess is that some sort of neural centralization is necessary. I consider cnidarian ethically sound to eat. Too bad jellyfishe's taste and texture are horrid. I don't believe that there are any edible sponges. I am a bit torn on whether echinoderms or bivalves are okay. I don't like sea urchin roe or oysters either though.

Plants, protozoa, and bacteria? I find it unlikely that they 'experience', although they clearly respond to their environments.
ebola