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277 points petethomas | 2 comments | | HN request time: 0.408s | source
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pinkmuffinere ◴[] No.45298755[source]
It’s tempting to see things like this and think “well of course it does, because that’s how we evolved”. But I think that might just be post-rationalization? At the very least, I think the argument _doesn’t_ hold for periodic famine, extreme temperatures, most disease, etc even though we also evolved with those things. Is there any guiding principle that separates the things-we-evolved-with-that-are-good vs the -that-are-bad? Or is it really just a case-by-case examination?
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brightball ◴[] No.45304373[source]
Since I was a little kid I was always skeptical of slathering something all over my body just to go outside. Just thought…how did people survive before this stuff if we really need it so bad.
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adrianN ◴[] No.45304403[source]
If you ask „how did people survive“ the answer is more often than not: „with great difficulty“. Take for example simple hygiene measures like using soap or brushing your teeth or disinfecting wounds.
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1. datadrivenangel ◴[] No.45304548[source]
Teeth brushing is not as important if you're not eating modern food. Processed sugars really are terrible (but delicious)
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2. adrianN ◴[] No.45309759[source]
If by modern you mean anything since agriculture was invented, then perhaps.