Applying the Sprengel/Liebig principle of the minimum to human food production & nutrition, a society can be protein-rich, and thus limited by its carbohydrate & fat intake (i.e. calorie-limited), or it can be rich in carbohydrates or fats, thus limited by its protein intake. /2
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Our hunter-gatherer ancestors had poor social scalability because they were roving bandits, frequently at war with each other. Their typical diets, compared to ours, were heavier in meat, & thus more limited in energy (carbohydrates & fats) and less limited in proteins. /3
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Stationary agriculture was carbohydrate heavy -- abundant in energy but relatively scarce in protein. Permanent food sources enabled stationary bandits, an innovation that allowed social scaling to far greater population sizes and densities than roving banditry. /4
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The downside to stationary agriculture: the protein-limited grain diets of typical farmers were unnatural & poor compared to the protein-rich diets of their hunter-gatherer forebears. Genetic adaptation was only partial. /5
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Alongside the stationary carbohydrate-rich (and thus protein-limited) cultures were the nomadic protein-rich cultures, far more limited in social scale, except when, as with Mongols, Arabs, etc. they conquered & led the social scaling institutions of stationary societies. /6
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Replying to @NickSzabo4
Protein dilution explains almost all obesity. Protein has gone from ~30% of calories down to <12%. But we're adapted for much higher levels so will search for more and more calories to satiate protein needs Getting back to HG protein levels is the best way to lose weightpic.twitter.com/Dc9e7jEefw
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Replying to @KetoAurelius @NickSzabo4
All Civilisations with their innovations and drive have emerged and prospered while being grain fed, from rice to wheat to barley to maize. Complex systems (the changes within the genomics of hosts, commensal microbiota, endemic pathogens) cannot be simplified down to 2 lines
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Replying to @cryptopoiesis @KetoAurelius
The industrial revolution, and its associated agricultural revolutiion, started in regions (English Midlands, Scottish Clydeside, Wallonia, Wupper Valley, etc.) that had the highest levels of stationary pastoralism in the worldpic.twitter.com/A0ZsAuQ0HJ
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The traditional association of grains & civilization has nothing to do with a carb-heavy diet (nutritionally a big disadvantage), it is due to grain being a permanent, stationary supply of food, vs. necessary mobility of pastoralists prior to the dawn of stationary pastoralism.
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Exactly. Grain is an excellent store of carbs. It grows fast and if kept in a dry and cool place, can be stored for a significant amount of time.
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Good point, and illuminates the important roles of hard cheese and sausage in stationary pastoralism.
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