Viliam_Bur comments on Are the bacteria/parasites in your gut affecting your thinking? - Less Wrong
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Agree. 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. It might be possible to breed or genetically engineer especially helpful bacteria. We can't really improve or re-engineer a living person's DNA, but we can improve the DNA of a person's bacterial symbionts.
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:
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.]
One day we will raise the sanity waterline by selling Rationality Yogurt.
This is already sold. It's called humility, but you'll have to import it if you live in the US.
I know humble people outside of US, who humbly visit their church, humbly read their horoscope, or humbly participate in their favorite political movement.