Guest guest Posted May 17, 2007 Report Share Posted May 17, 2007 He coulda has a urea cycle disorder. That would explain the natural aversion to meat in addition to the dulled mind (from excess ammonia). -Lana On 5/17/07, <oz4caster@...> wrote: > > --- B, " downwardog7 " <illneverbecool@...> wrote: > > Kaspar Hauser, who wasn't wild but confined, was repulsed by > > anything but brown bread and water and found the smell of raw meat the > > most repulsive of all. Curiously, as his tolerance and consumption of > > meat increased, while his body gained needed strength, his mind grew > > duller. So they say. > > Vegan propaganda ! > > Or maybe it was COOKED meat that he was eating? > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 17, 2007 Report Share Posted May 17, 2007 > > He coulda has a urea cycle disorder. That would explain the natural > aversion to meat in addition to the dulled mind (from excess ammonia). > Lana, I wonder. His senses were hypersensitive at first after the years of confinement in a dark, soundless environment, but he seemed especially badly affected by even the smell of foods high in amines. He had an aversion to any kind of food or drink. He would get very ill from a few drops of anything people would sneak into his food or convince him to try as an experiment. It's such an amazing story. All he'd ever eaten was black bread and water as long as he'd known--there'd be a new loaf and jug sitting beside him when he awakened each...day? Of course he had no concept whatsoever of time. He was in quite good condition, healthy even, but for the deformity of his legs and atrophy/weakness from never being in other than an upright seated position on the hard floor for all those years. 24/7. He even slept seated upright. Said he'd never had so much as a headache in all those years locked away, yet in society he felt sick frequently, mostly from the offensive smells. I'm guessing he had fantastic genetics and his mother was very healthy. I'm not sure what could account for it. When he showed up, at 17 y.o., he was 4'9 " . He didn't have rickets and he had good weight on his body. His complexion, though not " florid " wasn't especially pale nor at all sickly in appearance. Because he was able to acquire language and communicate ideas, he must have been exposed to language at some critical point, but nobody knows. He knew nothing other than his confinement, wherein he never saw the face of another human nor spoke. He was taught to write by someone standing behind him at one point and his mind was such that he could pick something like that up on a single try. Possibly he was locked up at two or three years old, and later " remembered " language as he was exposed to it. It seems the coarse bread was as nourishing as we've been told in WAPF literature. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 17, 2007 Report Share Posted May 17, 2007 > Or maybe it was COOKED meat that he was eating? > > , It was cooked meat. Starting with a couple drops of gravy mixed into gruel, then building up to two or three muscle fibers. His nervous system was excruciatingly sensitive at the beginning. Whenever I read something like that which inadvertently supports the old Ayurvedic texts, it intrigues me. I'm unwilling, however, to test it to that extreme myself. Though my mind has much improved since massively reducing amines, which the yogis say are a dulling and heavy influence. It's been such an improvement I'll never eat an amine-heavy diet again. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 17, 2007 Report Share Posted May 17, 2007 > > > > But if your previous posts in their absolutism about what babies and feral > > children will eat (based on anectotal and limited examples) are to be taken as > > conclusive, then there should be no flexibility here, should there? > > have you already made up your mind that I'm a fanatic, or are you trying to figure out if I am a fanatic? Because I'm not. I'll eat cooked food if it's offered to me, I guess. I don't eat cooked more than a couple of times a month. Those still aren't hard and fast rules. I'm trying to find what works here, as far as diet goes. It's not a religion. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 17, 2007 Report Share Posted May 17, 2007 > > Where does it say " never " ? lived for sixty years after being > taken in at age 13 and I doubt his caretakers kept him in acorns and > tree sap all that time without attempting to change his tastes to > bread and lentils. The other thing about is this: > You " doubt " ? That's an unfounded assertion. Granted, my story about the feral blacksmith's assistant is too. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 17, 2007 Report Share Posted May 17, 2007 The word 'fanatic' didn't come to mind. I've basically given up because you are simply not getting any of the points I've made. -------------- Original message ---------------------- From: " michael grogan " <tropical@...> > > > > > > > But if your previous posts in their absolutism about what babies > and feral > > > children will eat (based on anectotal and limited examples) are to > be taken as > > > conclusive, then there should be no flexibility here, should there? > > > > > have you already made up your mind that I'm a fanatic, or are you > trying to figure out if I am a fanatic? Because I'm not. I'll eat > cooked food if it's offered to me, I guess. I don't eat cooked more > than a couple of times a month. Those still aren't hard and fast rules. > > > I'm trying to find what works here, as far as diet goes. It's not a > religion. > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 17, 2007 Report Share Posted May 17, 2007 > You " doubt " ? That's an unfounded assertion. > > Granted, my story about the feral blacksmith's assistant is too. Hi Mike, Yes, I was feeling bold and made an assertion for a change. It's founded on all the feral cases I've read. In not one did I see a trend to feed the wild one the craved foods but instead to switch them over to a standard diet. I simply said *I* doubt that was indulged in his preferred foods at the time of his capture. It's also unfounded but possible that his tastes may have adapted as he remained in society. It's interesting to me--though perhaps painfully obvious to anyone else--that isolated feral children living in the wild on their own are typically vegetarian, like , while those raised by wild (meat eating) animals are meat eaters. Memmie Le Blanc was an exception, but her pre-feral history is so mysterious. tb Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 17, 2007 Report Share Posted May 17, 2007 > > > The word 'fanatic' didn't come to mind. I've basically given up because you are simply not getting any of the points I've made. > I get them. However, I feel your complete unwillingness to address the issue of the buildup on the teeth of all the groups Dr. Price studied indicates that you are playing a game. Play if you want. I can play logic games too. Nobody takes you seriously when you do that. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 17, 2007 Report Share Posted May 17, 2007 I have no idea what you're talking about, and my replies were to posts that you made, both before and after replies that I made. I'm not playing a game, but quite obviously your reasoning process needs a bit of work. -------------- Original message ---------------------- From: " michael grogan " <tropical@...> > > > > > > > The word 'fanatic' didn't come to mind. I've basically given up > because you are simply not getting any of the points I've made. > > > > > I get them. However, I feel your complete unwillingness to address > the issue of the buildup on the teeth of all the groups Dr. Price > studied indicates that you are playing a game. Play if you want. I > can play logic games too. Nobody takes you seriously when you do that. > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 17, 2007 Report Share Posted May 17, 2007 > > > I have no idea what you're talking about, and my replies were to posts that you made, both before and after replies that I made. I'm not playing a game, but quite obviously your reasoning process needs a bit of work. > There are two main problems with cooking food. 1. The water-soluble nutrients tend to be lost. 2. The complex carbs in the food tend to be converted to simple sugars. We all know what simple sugars do to your teeth. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 17, 2007 Report Share Posted May 17, 2007 Whether this is true in all cases, and how important it is in all cases is not something I'm qualified to answer. However it has little to do with the posts that I replied to, and it is this total discontinuity in your responses that I am unable to respond to. -------------- Original message ---------------------- From: " michael grogan " <tropical@...> > > > > > > > I have no idea what you're talking about, and my replies were to > posts that you made, both before and after replies that I made. I'm > not playing a game, but quite obviously your reasoning process needs a > bit of work. > > > > > There are two main problems with cooking food. > > 1. The water-soluble nutrients tend to be lost. > > 2. The complex carbs in the food tend to be converted to simple > sugars. We all know what simple sugars do to your teeth. > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 17, 2007 Report Share Posted May 17, 2007 > > > Whether this is true in all cases, and how important it is in all cases is not something I'm qualified to answer. However it has little to do with the posts that I replied to, and it is this total discontinuity in your responses that I am unable to respond to. > There is no real discontinuity if you've actually studied the subject area. You should have a sound, well-thought-out answer to every point I've made. Cooking is what's on trial here, not raw. Raw is what's innocent until proven guilty, not the other way around. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 17, 2007 Report Share Posted May 17, 2007 ARGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGH -------------- Original message ---------------------- From: " michael grogan " <tropical@...> > > > > > > > Whether this is true in all cases, and how important it is in all > cases is not something I'm qualified to answer. However it has little > to do with the posts that I replied to, and it is this total > discontinuity in your responses that I am unable to respond to. > > > > > There is no real discontinuity if you've actually studied the subject > area. You should have a sound, well-thought-out answer to every point > I've made. Cooking is what's on trial here, not raw. Raw is what's > innocent until proven guilty, not the other way around. > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 17, 2007 Report Share Posted May 17, 2007 > > > ARGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGH > Have you read " nutrition and physical degeneration " or Pottenger's Cats? If not, there's basically no hope of you understanding my points. If you think I'm an idiot, go ahead and think it. However, I believe there are a number of people here including B. and Chris Masterjohn who would vouch for my ability to make excellent points regarding nutrition. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 17, 2007 Report Share Posted May 17, 2007 --- Mike, " michael grogan " <tropical@...> wrote: > There are two main problems with cooking food. > 1. The water-soluble nutrients tend to be lost. > 2. The complex carbs in the food tend to be converted to simple > sugars. We all know what simple sugars do to your teeth. Mike, When I think of raw food, I think of food that is freshly harvested and processed no more than cutting it into bite sized pieces to eat. This means killing an animal and eating it on the spot or harvesting vegetables or fruits and eating them soon after harvest. Immediate refrigeration after harvesting might allow these foods to be kept in nearly raw state for longer times, maybe for days or even a week. But leaving food out in warm temperatures for more than a few hours after harvesting will allow fermentation to take place - in which case the food would no longer be in its raw state. It would then be processed by bacteria. The longer is is left out, the more processed it becomes. Obviously, some foods will ferment faster than others. Freezing the food may also change it so that it is no longer raw. Likewise with freeze drying or even sun drying. I would consider these foods minimally processed, but not necessarily raw any more. Foods processed in these ways may not have the same effect on consumption as the original raw food. If the food is run through a juicer, I don't consider it raw any more. I would call it minimally processed, but also consider it potentially altered from it's raw state - more so that can be accomplished by chewing. Potentially, some complex molecules could be denatured by the strong mechanical forces during the juicing. If the food is soaked for at least a few hours or fermented, I don't consider it raw any more. This is substantially more processed than juicing. The soaking and fermenting will chemically change the originally raw constituents in ways that may not be possible in our digestive system. Some nutrients may be increased while others are decreased and this is also true for some anti-nutrients. And of course, heating food more than about 120 degrees F will cause changes to the food so that it is no longer raw. Some nutrients may be lost, but also some anti-nutrients may be reduced by cooking, and some constituents, mainly starches, may be made more digestible. On the positive side, consuming raw foods may provide more nutrients and enzymes than cooking the same food, but it also increases the risk of consuming parasites or other pathogens that would be destroyed by cooking. I suspect that this risk of getting sick, and in some cases evening dying, may be what led to the popularity of cooking in the first place. So, to me there are pluses and minuses in consuming BOTH raw and processed foods. I'd suggest using your GUT FEELING to tell you how much of each is best for you, as well as which foods are best. <pun intended> Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 18, 2007 Report Share Posted May 18, 2007 > > > > > >> > >> > >> > ARGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGH >> > > > ³Have you read " nutrition and physical degeneration " or Pottenger's Cats? > > If not, there's basically no hope of you understanding my points. If > you think I'm an idiot, go ahead and think it. However, I believe > there are a number of people here including B. and Chris > Masterjohn who would vouch for my ability to make excellent points > regarding nutrition. ³ At no time have you responded, even to the slightest degree to any of my points. To the degree that it is beyond fanaticism or stuipidy, but absolute blindness. Yes I¹ve read much of NAPD. Yes, I understand what you¹re saying. However I don¹t think that ranting and raving will convince anyone of anything. It all comes down to science eventually, and this list often becomes scary enough to make me question my decision to eat the way that I do, given that such a large proportion of people who do it, and defend it, are absolutely brainless. Ban me from this list if you want, but I am so sick of this shit. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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