|
|
|
|
|
by JoeAltmaier
4033 days ago
|
|
We know this about nutrition: activity burns calories at extremely predictable rates. Food has calories at extremely predictable densities. Physics works. And see? Even these fundamental facts about physics get disputed/denied by the nutrition nuts. |
|
We measure calories in food by burning it in a lab and calculating the exact energy given off. Very precise. What we don't measure is how many pieces of that cob of corn I ate for dinner will pass through to my stool.
And I'll accept the comment that activities burn calories at predictable rates (they don't across populations -- look at exercise adaptation) but they can per individual. But treating the consumption of calories and the expenditure of calories as independent variables seems foolish. For an absurd comparison -- do you think my Caloric consumption over the next 24 hours would be identical if I consumed 10 calories of chocolate or 10 calories of amphetamines?
Physics works. A calorie is a calorie. But pretending that the human body treats all calories the same as a calorometer seems foolish.