Viliam_Bur comments on Are the bacteria/parasites in your gut affecting your thinking? - Less Wrong

13 Post author: witzvo 09 June 2012 10:37AM

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Comment author: witzvo 09 June 2012 07:39:07PM *  3 points [-]

There could be a whole new continent of health improvements achievable by managing the body's bacterial ecosystem in the way a professional gardener manages a botanical garden.

Is eating an effective way to do that? In the world's cultures there's a wide variety of pro-biotic fermented foods. Do these exist merely because people like the taste? Surely they partly exist as a coping strategy for rotten food, but is that all? I doubt it. In some cultures they're eaten regularly. Let's list some:

  • yogurt / cheese / cottage cheese / sour cream / kefir / etc.
  • sauerkraut / kim chee / pickled vegetables
  • fermented tofu (e.g. stinky tofu)
  • fermented rice
  • kombucha

Diet generally can dramatically affect which bacteria thrive in the gut (e.g. I recall evidence about sugar consumption, but can't find it). [I don't list bread or wine because as far as I know the agents are mostly dead before we eat them. For that matter, I'm not sure how much is alive in commercially available cheese.][Hygiene practices vary substantially too which probably has an important effect.]

Comment author: Viliam_Bur 10 June 2012 03:39:22PM 9 points [-]

One day we will raise the sanity waterline by selling Rationality Yogurt.

Comment author: mytyde 15 January 2013 01:32:51AM 0 points [-]

This is already sold. It's called humility, but you'll have to import it if you live in the US.

Comment author: Viliam_Bur 15 January 2013 09:20:06AM 0 points [-]

I know humble people outside of US, who humbly visit their church, humbly read their horoscope, or humbly participate in their favorite political movement.