Archive for April, 2008

The McCarrison Society

Monday, April 28th, 2008

The McCarrison Society is named for Robert McCarrison, a British doctor who studied nutrition in India. Its website is full of important nutritional info, including this:

When I worked in East Africa from 1960 - 1965, there was not a single case of breast, colon or prostate cancer, no cardiovascular heart disease and any diabetes seemed relatively mild. Nor was this absence of such diseases due to poor diagnostic facilities.

It’s like a British version of the Weston Price Foundation.

Interesting lecture by Michael Crawford, its president.

More. It was founded in 1966 and has about 300 members.

My Theory of Human Evolution (micropygmies)

Sunday, April 27th, 2008

In 2004, anthropologists discovered fossils of tiny human ancestors on an Indonesian island. Called micropygmies, they were about three feet tall. Their brains were smaller than chimpanzee brains. They appeared to be descended from Hmo erectus rather than Homo sapiens.

They survived until about 20,000 years ago — which was impressive, since Homo sapiens reached nearby islands about 50,000 years ago. Why didn’t the Homo sapiens kill off the micropygmies? Jared Diamond was puzzled by this:

The discoverers of the Flores micropygmies conclude that they survived on Flores until at least 18,000 years ago (1, 2). To me, that is the most astonishing finding, even more astonishing than the micropygmies’ existence. We know that full-sized H. sapiens reached Australia and New Guinea through Indonesia by 46,000 years ago, that most of the large mammals of Australia then promptly went extinct (probably in part exterminated by H. sapiens), and that the first arrival of behaviorally modern H. sapiens on all other islands and continents in the world was accompanied by similar waves of extinction/extermination. We also know that humans have exterminated competing humans even more assiduously than they have exterminated large nonhuman mammals. How could the micropygmies have survived the onslaught of H. sapiens?

One could perhaps seek a parallel in the peaceful modern coexistence of full-sized sapiens and pygmy sapiens in the Congo and Philippines, based on complementary economies, with pygmy hunter-gatherers trading forest products to full-sized sapiens farmers. But full-sized sapiens hunter-gatherers 18,000 years ago would have been much too similar economically to micropygmy hunter-gatherers to permit coexistence based on complementary economies and trade. One could also invoke the continued coexistence of chimpanzees and humans in Africa, based on chimps being economically too different from us to compete (very doubtful for micropygmies), and on chimps being too dangerous to be worth hunting (probably true for micropygmies). Then, one could point to the reported survival of the pygmy stegodont elephants on Flores until 12,000 years ago (1, 2): If stegodonts survived so long in the presence of H. sapiens, why not micropygmies as well? Finally, one might suggest that all of the recent dates for stegodonts and micropygmies on Flores are in error [despite the evidence presented in (1) and (2)], and that both stegodonts and micropygmies became extinct 46,000 years ago within a century of H. sapiens‘ arrival on Flores. All of these analogies and suggestions strike me as implausible: I just can’t conceive of a long temporal overlap of sapiens and erectus, and I am reluctant to believe that all of the dates in (1) and (2) are wrong. Hence I don’t know what to make of the reported coexistence.

Yes, I know, when you have a hammer everything looks like a nail. But I think Diamond is quite wrong about the nature of Homo sapiens economies 50,000 years ago. To Diamond, the big change was the invention of agriculture. Before that, hunter-gatherer; after that, farmer and occupational specialization. I believe there were vast economic changes long before agriculture — it took a long time to evolve language, and that didn’t start until there was already plenty of trading. By 50,000 years ago, I’m sure there was lots of specialization (Person A makes/knows X, Person B makes/knows Y), giving the Homo sapiens all sorts of tools and other useful expertise that the micropygmies didn’t have. They both hunted and gathered but much larger brains and a vast amount of expertise would have been for naught if they didn’t hunt and gather different foods. Homo erectus did not have anything like human language, as far as I can tell; therefore they didn’t have lots of trading or expertise. The two groups could co-exist because their foods were different. I suspect the H. sapiens, able to hunt really large animals, thought small animals, which supported the micropygmies, a waste of time.

Better in Google Books

Sunday, April 27th, 2008

I’ve heard that Samuel Beckett’s plays, written in French, are better in English. I have no idea if that’s true but I am sure that Television Without Pity: 752 Things We Hate to Love (and Love to Hate) About TV by Tara Ariano and Sarah Bunting is better in its more accessible, abridged Google Books version. I remember Sarah from when she was an especially visible fan of My So-Called Life. I got a much-enjoyed soundtrack cassette from her. Then she and Ariano started Television Without Pity, a brilliant entrepreneurial idea, which has helped me understand so many erudite HBO dramas.

More about Acne (continued)

Saturday, April 26th, 2008

When I was a teenager, my dermatologist gave me a long list of foods that might cause acne. It wasn’t any help at the time but later, when my acne was better, it helped me realize that drinking Diet Pepsi caused me to get acne 2 or 3 days later because “cola drinks” was on the list.

Now I learn from Tucker Max that it was probably the caffeine that did it:

I had bad acne in high school. I cut all caffeine out of my diet–cola, chocolate, etc–and about 90% of the acne went away. I got the rest with Accutane.

Very useful information. The list my dermatologist gave me was too long and too homogenous. “The acne caffeine link is well-known to dermatologists,” Tucker added. Except those who claim acne has nothing to do with diet.

More about Never Enough

Friday, April 25th, 2008

From Never Enough by Joe McGinniss, which I blogged about:

One day she noticed that Michael wasn’t wearing the [$7000] watch [she’d given him]. He was embarrassed to tell her why. Finally, he said he’d told his brother Lance about the affair but Lance had been born again and told Michael he was immoral. More to the point, he told Michael he was fired. They argued. Finally, Lance said that Michael could keep his job in return for the watch.

Shades of the indulgences that upset Martin Luther! You don’t find this sort of detail in other books.