We evolved through a long torturous process of trial and
error biologists refer to as adaptation through natural selection. Our branch,
humans, budded off the tree of life some 5 million year ago. Evolution may be
the greatest story ever told but also a long complicated and continuous story
with no big jumps. We did not suddenly learn how to walk upright anymore than
birds suddenly learned how to fly. The same is true with how we adapted to the environment
in terms of the food we eat. Fruits did not “evolve” so we could eat them any
more then we evolved to eat fruits.
We all recognize that salt, fat, and sugar have two things
in common; they taste good and we require them to survive—survival of the
fittest. In this case, “fittest” means our ancient ancestor learned to ingest
things with food value. Although we could use any one of the three food elements
Mika mentioned in her title, as an example to make my point concerning food
preference, I will use sugar. As any dietician will tell you, some fruits have
more sugar than another fruit. To condense millions of years of adaptation in to
one sentence, we survived because we learned to seek food with the highest sugar
content we could find. Chimpanzees, our closest relatives still eat leaves but
obviously, they would prefer to eat fruit, if there was any. They preferred to eat
the fruit because it tasted better. The reason the fruit tasted better is that
it contained more sugar. The fruit with the highest sugar content tastes the
best and the strongest in the group got the most—the strongest got he most because
he or she is the strongest, which is why he or she is the strongest—the
reference is to the never ending circle of greed as an innate trait universal to
all biota.
In the raw world of survival, food was scarce. They were
essentially always hungry and looking for something to eat, and as just
explained, they preferred some food source to others. As our ancestors evolved
from being hunter-gatherers to agriculturalists, they did the obvious; they
grew the most nutritious food—they were empirical nutritionists.
They also were industrialists. Just as they learned how to
grow the most nutritious food, they eventually learned how to preserve food and
make it more nutritious. That is no
longer ancient history.
The point is that we now know how to manufacture pure sugar,
fat, and how to mine salt. Read the above paragraphs carefully. You will only
find positive food reinforcement in our evolution: we evolve always looking for
food and we always prefer the best tasting food and innately want to eat all we
can get. The only negative stimulus is satiety—we eat until we can eat no more
then stop. The result is obesity and all the consequence of obesity. As Dr. Greg
Gibson so eloquently wrote in his book, It
Takes a Genome (Amazon Kindle.com), we did not evolve in an environment of
food abundance; therefore, our bodies are not genetically equipped to handle
floods of sugar, fat and salt. Obviously, the conflict is between our minds and
our metabolism. Mika, if you let McDonald’s win, it is your fault not theirs.
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