Nornagest comments on Outside the Laboratory - Less Wrong

63 Post author: Eliezer_Yudkowsky 21 January 2007 03:46AM

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Comment author: brazil84 16 December 2013 09:00:49PM 1 point [-]

I define it as food I see and eat in my home as well as food in the restaurants.

I'm not sure what kind of food you keep in your home, but thinking on the fact that a huge percentage of American adults are overweight or obese, I would probably agree that "most food around" is super-stimulating.

You seem to think that any tasty food is super-stimulus food. That's not how most people use the term

Well you asked me why I consider pizza to be a problem. If you don't want to use the word "super-stimulus," it doesn't really affect my point. Pizza tastes good enough to most people that it's difficult to resist the urge to over-eat. That's my answer.

Depends. There's a lot of bad pizza out there.

Oh come on. Please use the Principle of Charity if you engage me. When I assert that "pizza tastes really good," you know what I mean.

I don't see why this is relevant. Small children in general also like pasta

Well small children are naive enough to come right out and express a strong preference for the foods they love. And they don't beg their parents for pasta parties.

The dose make the poison. In small amounts or consumed rarely, pretty much no food or drink is unhealth

Well let me put the question a slightly different way: Do you agree that there exist certain foods which taste really good; which a lot of people have a problem with, which in many ways are like an addiction?

Comment author: Nornagest 16 December 2013 09:18:53PM *  6 points [-]

Well small children are naive enough to come right out and express a strong preference for the foods they love. And they don't beg their parents for pasta parties.

From what I remember, I did occasionally beg for pizza around that age, but if I'm modeling my early childhood psychology right that had as much to do with cultural/media influence as native preference. Pizza is the canonical party food in American children's media, and its prominence in e.g. Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles probably didn't help.

Media counts for a lot! Show of hands, who here found themselves craving Turkish delight after reading The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe without actually knowing what it was?

Comment author: brazil84 16 December 2013 09:29:43PM -1 points [-]

From what I remember, I did occasionally beg for pizza around that age, but if I'm modeling my early childhood psychology right that had as much to do with media influence as native preference

Do you agree that part of the reason kids beg for pizza is that it tastes really good?

Let me ask you this: If you gave lab rats a choice between pizza and oatmeal, which do you think they would choose?

Comment author: Desrtopa 16 December 2013 09:54:13PM 1 point [-]

Let me ask you this: If you gave lab rats a choice between pizza and oatmeal, which do you think they would choose?

I don't know the answer to this, but I'd caution against using lab rats, which, keep in mind, have quite different dietary needs, as an indicator of human dietary preferences.

Comment author: brazil84 17 December 2013 04:29:35AM 0 points [-]

I don't know the answer to this, but I'd caution against using lab rats, which, keep in mind, have quite different dietary needs, as an indicator of human dietary preferences.

Well you are capable of estimating some probabilities, no? I agree that caution is in order, but I feel pretty confident, perhaps 90% probability, that lab rats will choose pizza over oatmeal.

Here's a study which might affect your probability assessments:

http://www.plosone.org/article/info%3Adoi%2F10.1371%2Fjournal.pone.0060407

Exposure to a palatable diet had long-term effects on feeding patterns. Rats became overweight because they initially ate more frequently and ultimately ate more of foods with higher energy density.

Comment author: [deleted] 21 December 2013 08:11:41AM 0 points [-]

Well you are capable of estimating some probabilities, no? I agree that caution is in order, but I feel pretty confident, perhaps 90% probability, that lab rats will choose pizza over oatmeal.

I'd take the other side of the bet. Anybody willing to test this?

Comment author: Nornagest 16 December 2013 09:54:29PM *  3 points [-]

Do you agree that part of the reason kids beg for pizza is that it tastes really good?

I think pizza, at least in the United States and during the years around my own childhood, occupied a cultural position that's not fully describable in terms of its nutritional content. Stimulus concerns are sufficient to explain favoring it over something like (plain) oatmeal, but not over something like spaghetti and meatballs or chicken-fried steak.

I'm told curry occupies a similar position in Japan. Other cultures probably have their own equivalents.

Comment author: brazil84 17 December 2013 04:22:02AM 1 point [-]

I think pizza, at least in the United States and during the years around my own childhood, occupied a cultural position that's not fully describable in terms of its nutritional content. Stimulus concerns are sufficient to explain favoring it over something like (plain) oatmeal, but not over something like spaghetti and meatballs or chicken-fried steak.

Ok, I guess I read your first post too quickly. You don't seem to dispute my basic claim that pizza tastes really good. You also don't seem to dispute my claim that children's preference for pizza is evidence of this. Because whatever food children beg for -- whether it's pizza, hot dogs, or curry -- is probably going to be something that tastes good.

I do agree that children ask for pizza -- as opposed to other tasty foods -- for cultural reasons. But I don't think that contradicts any argument I have made.

Comment author: EHeller 16 December 2013 10:35:55PM *  2 points [-]

Do you agree that part of the reason kids beg for pizza is that it tastes really good?

My kids didn't want pizza (pretty much ever), until they started school, and then they wanted pizza primarily when having friends over. I think its more social/cultural then anything else.

Also, they are pizza snobs- I'm not allowed to order from a local place because its "too salty, and too greasy." They'd prefer no pizza, or a usual dinner (stir fry or something) to the wrong pizza.

Also, I'm not sure if "super stimulus" food are super stimulus consistently. I hate fast food burgers, and have since I was little (but sit me down in a hole-in-the-wall mexican place and I'll eat until I wish I was dead).

Just adding a few anecdotes.

Comment author: brazil84 17 December 2013 04:44:29AM 1 point [-]

Well do you agree that despite your experiences, there do seem to be certain foods which are considered tasty and difficult to resist by large numbers of people?

Comment author: EHeller 17 December 2013 04:56:29AM *  1 point [-]

I actually live in a fairly healthy "bubble," I don't know many significantly overweight people. I know the stereotypes, I guess, that fat people guzzle sodas and pound mcdonalds.

I guess the one example of someone who eats typical bad-for-you foods is my wife's sister who basically grew up only eating burgers (an extremely picky eater with very permissive parents. She still pretty much only eats burgers). But she weighs 125 lbs and runs marathons.

But again, these are my selective anecdotes. I don't claim representative knowledge.

Comment author: brazil84 17 December 2013 08:26:54AM 0 points [-]

And the overweight people you know don't seem to have any specific foods or types of foods which they have trouble resisting?

Comment author: Normal_Anomaly 23 January 2015 05:41:29PM 1 point [-]

Anecdote time! There was a period when I loved pasta but wouldn't eat pizza because I had not yet grasped that Tomatoes Are Awesome. Also that book made me classify Turkish Delight as a drug, and Drugs Are Bad don'tcha know. And then when I finally got some I realized it also tastes bad.

Comment author: NancyLebovitz 07 March 2015 05:17:43PM 0 points [-]

Turkish Delight isn't just one thing. I've had mediocre bright-colored (and probably artificially flavored) turkish delight, and delicious fresh transparent turkish delight flavored with rose water. If you care about the subject, you should see if you have access to a middle eastern shop where you can get the good stuff.

Tentative theory: the good stuff isn't packaged, so it has to be fresh. If it wasn't fresh, it would have dried out.

Comment author: Normal_Anomaly 09 March 2015 12:07:14AM *  0 points [-]

Thanks for the tip! The only Turkish delight I remember having was bright-colored and came in a box.