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by teleforce
453 days ago
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If you care to read the comments for the mentioned article (318 comments) including mine, perhaps you'll get the different perspectives on eating pork [1]. Although the article is a good one but the conclusions can be misleading because it's biased toward archeological evidences that most probably did not tell the entire story. Just like the history of people migration you simply cannot rely on one aspect of archeological evidences alone by ignoring genetic and proto-languages, for examples. The same with dietary constraints and prohibitions you need to take into account other evidences for example religions together with the other archeological evidences. Although the article mentioned religions early on but it kind of dismissed them at the end. For me it's rather myopic view and incomplete methodology of doing research since you need to take every relevant aspects into account for your valid conclusions especially the other important factors in dietary constraints in this case the religious prohibitions. [1] The Origin of the Pork Taboo: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=43418499 |
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