It reminds me a lot of my mom, to be honest, though even she mocks the paleo diet (thank hermes).
You're also not getting what I'm saying.
Zero of what you just said has anything to do with the point. The only point is that, from any biological or historical or cross-cultural perspective, chewing on roots or tree bark is the normal way to deal with problems, and popping pills, much less getting stabbed with a needle, is profoundly weird and unique.
Any statement about effect has nothing to do with anything, because "normal" is a totally separate axis from "good" and equivocating between the two is insane and fallacious.
That's easy to misinterpret but pretty cool! You mean "profoundly weird and unique" in a neutral way, morally, neither good nor bad. To read any morality into it would be
insane and fallacious. oops v_v
I mean, I don't really eat processed foods, but yeah, most things most people eat aren't. Not sure what your point is.
Eating stuff external to your body to make yourself feel better is so standard a behavior it's exhibited pervasively by non-humans, to the point a lot of our pharmacology got its start out of observing exactly that. It's part of normal biology for just about everything that has a biology.
Pills refine materials to (hopefully) maximize the benefits and minimize the detriments, but the basic behavior is incredibly standard among living things. If it ain't something you'd consider normal, your concept of normal is wildly out of whack.
You're just equivocating between "abnormal" and "there's something wrong with it". Pills that have to be manufactured in a factory halfway around the world and shipped to you at enormous energy expense are obviously abnormal, and qualitatively different from the prehistoric "eat some roots and grass and probably die anyway" correlate.
Morally neutral!
Including the part where they're shipped at enormous energy expense. That *sounds* like a moral criticism, but fortunately you clarified that it's a morally neutral statement. You bring up that you avoid it, but I suppose that's ethics not morality.
Obviously.
Joking aside: You're on that paleo diet and it helps you feel superior to other people. That's fine, we all adopt arbitrary rituals to assert our identity in a world that's both unthinkably large and compressed into a little black mirror.
It's not a practical moral code for a modern society, but as personal ethics it's... probably fine. Mostly harmless, if you know what you're doing. Simply a waste of money... As long as you don't start projecting that fetish for ""natural"" behavior on to other people.
I find it healthier to admit that my personal ticks are arbitrary, or at least that they're personal, but I might have an "abnormal" mind.
Oh and also yes, it's kinda fucked that we ship food around the world unnecessarily.
But refining pharmaceuticals into a pill or injection? That's just good. It's only as unnatural as grinding a root in a pestle and mortar instead of your teeth.
They sell industrial buckets of estrogen, you know? I don't know what would happen if I
snorted it like cocaine tried to absorb it sublingually. There's a whole chemical
process, apparently, which refines it into a safe form we know as the little teal pill emblazoned with a ρ
ha, hey, it's my name! ρ!
But yeah, medicine is good actually. Shipping is largely bad, a lot of imperialism is bad, but medicine? good
Edit: Oh oh, and the open document outlining that refinement process, by some based anarcho-socialists? Even though it relies on the pharmaceutical industry for the raw materials, it's pretty rad.
(There are even-more-off-the-grid methods involving urine, but there's no need to be so
natural just yet)