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Artificial food. Thatโs what humans eat. .ย . โOh yes,โ comes the reply. โThe moreโs the pity. . . Itโs high time to return to natural food.โ But, no, I mean artificial in its original sense of man-made, produced by humans, artfully created.
Our distant ancestors found little good in the food that nature provided. Greens had too few calories to sustain life, chewy meat came tightly wrapped in . . .ย living animals. . . Acquiring and digesting food was a constant struggle.
So sometime in the distant past, . . .ย members of our species decided they could improve on nature. They discovered how to process raw foods by using fire to cook them, or stones to chop and grind them, or coopting microorganisms to ferment them. They began creating niches for the more edible species, breeding sweeter fruits, less toxic roots.ย . .
The art of cookery. . .ย produced more food that, on balance, was nutritious, easier to digestย . . .ย than raw plants and meat. . . .anthropologists such as Richard Wrangham at Harvard have argued that bodies changed as the energy formerly spent on digesting was diverted to brains that increased in size, and society evolved as a response to cooked, and hence communal, meals.ย . .
[Y]earning for some ideal past . . . overlooks the fact that more people are better fed . . .ย ย [have] more opportunities in life, all thanks to food processing. . .We are not . . .ย ย stuck with what nature provides. And our choices have never been wider than they are at present. . . .ย Thatโs why itโs a cause for celebration that food is something we make, something we process, something not natural, but artificial. Itโs to everyoneโs benefit.
Read full, original post:ย In praise of artificial food















