Nourishment: What Animals Can Teach Us about Rediscovering Our Nutritional Wisdom"Nourishment will change the way you eat and the way you think."—Mark Schatzker, author of The Dorito Effect "[Provenza is] a wise observer of the land and the animals [and] becomes transformed to learn the meaning of life."—Temple Grandin Reflections on feeding body and spirit in a world of change Animal scientists have long considered domestic livestock to be too dumb to know how to eat right, but the lifetime research of animal behaviorist Fred Provenza and his colleagues has debunked this myth. Their work shows that when given a choice of natural foods, livestock have an astoundingly refined palate, nibbling through the day on as many as fifty kinds of grasses, forbs, and shrubs to meet their nutritional needs with remarkable precision. In Nourishment Provenza presents his thesis of the wisdom body, a wisdom that links flavor-feedback relationships at a cellular level with biochemically rich foods to meet the body’s nutritional and medicinal needs. Provenza explores the fascinating complexity of these relationships as he raises and answers thought-provoking questions about what we can learn from animals about nutritional wisdom.
On a broader scale Provenza explores the relationships among facets of complex, poorly understood, ever-changing ecological, social, and economic systems in light of an unpredictable future.
Provenza’s paradigm-changing exploration of these questions has implications that could vastly improve our health through a simple change in the way we view our relationships with the plants and animals we eat. "Nourishment is a conversation between science, culture, and a greater spiritual or cosmological umbrella."—Montana Public Radio |
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Children of women who were pregnant during the famine were smaller in size, as expected, but when they grew up and had children, their children were also smaller, which suggests the famine experienced by the mothers caused epigenetic ...
The bodies of humans and herbivores are colonized with vaginal microbes at birth.27 After birth, a baby is exposed to bacteria on mother's skin as it suckles and as it begins to ingest foods in the environment.
What foods should a child with a Hindu mother from India and a Catholic father from Argentina select to be physically and mentally healthy, given that he or she was conceived, born, and raised in the United States?
Cognitive processes are strongly influenced by social models such as mother and other herd mates. The result is behavior modification. Affective and cognitive processes are mediated by dorsal and ventral vagus nerves from the gut that ...
... herbivores can discover foods that meet their nutritional needs. By learning from mother and peers, each generation benefits, and such behaviors become part of the foraging culture—the collective nutritional wisdom—of the group.38 ...
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Índice
| 1 | |
| 13 | |
| 22 | |
| 37 | |
| 53 | |
| 72 | |
Undermining the Wisdom Body | 83 |
Medicating in Natures Pharmacy | 101 |
Creating Nourishing Bouquets | 138 |
The Harmony of Nature | 257 |
Alice in Wonderland | 272 |
The Mystery of Being | 294 |
A Visitors Reflections | 309 |
Acknowledgments | 327 |
Bibliography | 377 |
Index | 383 |
Otras ediciones - Ver todo
Nourishment: What Animals Can Teach Us about Rediscovering Our Nutritional ... Fred Provenza Vista previa restringida - 2018 |