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Are Humans Natural Meat Eaters
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If humans are 'natural' meat eaters then why do we have to cook meat in order to make it edible?
I have been doing a lot of research in to various diets (and I love my meat) but cant comprehend eating raw meat, which would be the natural way.
We have canines which are designed to eat flesh but also have 30 foot long intestines which are designed to digest plant based food (carnivores have much shorter intestines) The logical conclusion is that we are omnivores but no other animal cooks its prey before eating it.
Also our closest living relatives in the animal kingdom (chimps, apes, etc) are for the most part vegetarian. So back to square one, why do we have flesh tearing canines and why do we feel the need to cook our meat?
I have been doing a lot of research in to various diets (and I love my meat) but cant comprehend eating raw meat, which would be the natural way.
We have canines which are designed to eat flesh but also have 30 foot long intestines which are designed to digest plant based food (carnivores have much shorter intestines) The logical conclusion is that we are omnivores but no other animal cooks its prey before eating it.
Also our closest living relatives in the animal kingdom (chimps, apes, etc) are for the most part vegetarian. So back to square one, why do we have flesh tearing canines and why do we feel the need to cook our meat?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.>>>but no other animal cooks its prey before eating it
. . . because no other animal has discovered how to make fire.
It's likely that Mr & Mrs Ug were happily eating their raw meat one day (as their ancestors had done for many generations before) when Mr Ug accidentally dropped a piece of meat into the fire. Annoyed by Mrs Ug's complaints that he was wasting good food, he decided to try to eat it anyway and was surprised to find that it tasted better and that it was easier to chew. So Mr & Mrs Ug began experimenting with food and fire, to see how the combination worked best together. Their great, great, great, great, great, (etc) grandson, called Heston Blumenthal, is still doing it ;-)
. . . because no other animal has discovered how to make fire.
It's likely that Mr & Mrs Ug were happily eating their raw meat one day (as their ancestors had done for many generations before) when Mr Ug accidentally dropped a piece of meat into the fire. Annoyed by Mrs Ug's complaints that he was wasting good food, he decided to try to eat it anyway and was surprised to find that it tasted better and that it was easier to chew. So Mr & Mrs Ug began experimenting with food and fire, to see how the combination worked best together. Their great, great, great, great, great, (etc) grandson, called Heston Blumenthal, is still doing it ;-)
we don't have to cook meat to make it edible. Its perfectly edible raw. We cook meat because it makes it tastier and not all apes are vegetarian.
WARNING Gross description in this link
http:// www.new scienti st.com/ article /dn1492 6-lovin g-bonob os-have -a-carn ivorous -dark-s ide.htm l#.VUPL bs4Ri4A
WARNING Gross description in this link
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'Meat' is largely muscle tissue, which is generally safe to eat (even if well-aged) as long as it hasn't come into contact with the contents of the abdominal tract (particularly, somewhat obviously, the rectum) or the skin of the animal. If it wasn't, you wouldn't find recipes such as this one:
http:// www.bbc .co.uk/ food/re cipes/s teaktar tare_89 335
http://
Cooked meat is easier to digest, and we get more nourishment out of meat if cooked rather than raw. Also, cooked meat is more palatable. You may not eat liver or kidney or heart, but I can assure you it is much easier to eat offal if it is cooked, and a good deal of nourishment is to be found in offal, such as certain vitamins and minerals in liver. It is reckoned that our ancestors, before the discovery of fire, had a largely vegetable-based diet, and that our guts were very much longer than we have now. A shorter gut needs less energy, leaving more energy for the development of the brain.
Because we evolved into omnivores. Being omnivorous is an evolutionary plus. Its easier to get some dietary needs from meat or fish than it is from vegetables and grains; and its advantageous to be able to survive on what is available. We don't HAVE to cook our meat, but again there are evolutionary advantages to doing so.
Im not sure we are natural meat eaters. we have some characteristics of carnivores but that could be and evolved condition due to humans moving away from an abundant food source and having to hunt for whatever was available. Cooking meat was simply a way to make it slightly easier to digest and extract nutrients from. We are much better suited to a vegetarian diet.
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