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by glenra
4749 days ago
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One particularly interesting point Taubes makes is that there exist people (with various conditions) who are simultaneously emaciated and obese. Someone can be obese in the lower half of the body and emaciated in the top half or vice-versa. In this circumstance, your theory suggests they should simultaneously eat more AND eat less to fix it. > If energy or matter is being destroyed by viruses The viruses don't need to destroy or create energy, they just need modify the set point. (Which could be done by increasing hunger, decreasing satiety, or decreasing metabolism.) "net caloric balance" is true by definition yet is utterly useless as an explanation of why people gain or lose fat or have trouble doing so. What needs to be explained is why for some people their metabolic rate and hunger demands make them stable at a LOW set point and for others their metabolic rate and hunger demands give them a HIGH and/or INCREASING set point. There are lots and lots of environmental factors that COULD explain some of this. For instance, obesity in the US has increased as smoking has decreased; people who quit smoking tend to gain weight. |
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I've met these people myself. They call themselves "women".
> The viruses don't need to destroy or create energy, they just need modify the set point.
"Set points" assumes that we are dealing with an automatic system. This is true only if people do not pay attention to what they are eating.
Given that the first and indeed only step in dieting is to observe and control your eating ...