McGuff updates away from “common wisdom” of exercise, usually in a direction that makes things better.
McGuff is an opponent of large amounts of moderate-intensity cardio, arguing that it has extremely poor return-on-investment (too much time, energy, effort) and causes too much injury. His recommendation to do minimal amounts of high-intensity exercise line up nicely with Romeo Steven’s recommendations and recent research.
McGuff focuses on recovery, recommending to err on the side of too much recovery, rather than too little. I’ll take exception to his recommended recovery intervals (ACSM and Romeo Stevens both recommend exercising 2–3 times a week, rather than once a week), but he’s definitely erring on the right side; overtraining will waste your time, make you weak, and injure you, whereas undertraining just means you don’t achieve results quite as quickly.
McGuff separates exercise (an activity designed to produce a physiological response) and physical activity (moving your body). This is in line with the scientific community (this very distinction is made in chapter one of ACSM’s Guidelines for Exercise Testing and Prescription). In particular, since exercise is optimizing for a desirable physiological response under the constraint of not getting injured, it should come as no surprise that exercise is by far the most efficient way of achieving a desirable physioligical response and doesn’t injure you. When the weather permits, I play ultimate frisbee several hours a week, and it’s fun, but I’ve had numerous (minor) injuries and hold no illusions that I couldn’t achieve approximately equivalent results with 12 minutes a week of Tabata sprints.
McGuff advocates for using machines over free weights because, even though the latter will produce slightly better outcomes, it’s difficult to hold proper form as your muscles approach failure, and bad form with free weights is a recipe for getting injured.
McGuff is big on having genetics as an input to your exercise function. In particular, a routine that’s optimal for the genetically gifted isn’t going to be good for anyone else; if I tried exercising as much as Michael Phelps, my body would break because I’m not an outlier freak whose body can handle that much physical stress. This is in opposition to a (bad) common argument that goes “X has physique Y, which I desire. If I follow the same exercise program as X, I’ll obtain physique Y. However, no matter what routine I do, I’ll never have Triple H’s body because my bones aren’t thick enough.) McGuff like an anecdote about out-of-shape people swimming because they want the long, lean body of a swimmer, even though elite swimmers have long, lean bodies because anyone with a different body type doesn’t become an elite swimmer.
However, I feel McGuff sometimes ignores or cherrypicks evidence to reach his preconceived notions of what optimal exercise ought to look like. Most notably, he advocates for one set to failure, whereas the consensus amongst people who look closely at the evidence recommend 4 sets at a weight, number of reps, and cadence such that you can barely finish the last set.
Similarly for Lindeberg in nutrition:
Most popular nutrition literature reads something like “X is good for you because it has a lot of Y!” Lindeberg’s book reads a lot like “foods from class X are problematic because they contain Y which causes Z.” (Foods from the class legumes are problematic because they contain phytic acid which is problematic because it binds to metals, meaning that you don’t absorb the iron or magnesium you’ve eaten. Plants really didn’t evolve to be good things to eat (fruit excepted).)
Lindeberg argues that micronutrient:calorie ratios, not macronutrient ratios, are important. (He’s well-known for his study of Kitavans, an indigenous population known to not suffer from western disease. They have a very high-carbohydrate diet. Lindeberg also notes that the Inuit, who are also basically devoid of western disease, derive a few percent of their calories from carbohydrates.)
Lindeberg isn’t overconfident. Nutrition is hard to study: we can’t really placebo food, we can only usually measure biomarkers (which don’t quite equal health outcomes), and doing controlled intervention studies is hard (you need to get a large group of people to adhere to a diet long enough to see far-down-the-road health outcomes), so there aren’t nearly enough of them. It’s also nonobvious how to “slice” food: is it that meat an unhealthy class of food, is it mostly harmless and just processed meat that’s bad? Should we be comparing high carb/low carb or processed/unprocessed or GMO/natural or paleo/modern or…?
Ultimately, Lindeberg does recommend a paleo diet (which bears a passing relationship to mainstream paleo), but, on account of there not being enough good evidence, despite writing a book with >2k references, I remember not being entirely convinced he presented enough evidence to justify his recommendations.
Ultimately, what makes McGuff and Lindeberg hidden rationalists is not that they present the best arguments, although they do a better job than most. What makes them hidden rationalists is they present good arguments that lend themselves to updating. McGuff outlines a bunch of exercise principles, most of which I still use, but I made small changes when Romeo Stevens posted Optimal Exercise. Lindeberg outlines nutrition principles, which back up the paleo diet, most of which I abide by, even though I eat soylent, which is about the least-paleo thing there is.
This becomes remarkable when you compare it to the “normal” situation, which is, near as I can tell, amalgamating a mishmash heuristic from articles written by morons who have no clue what they’re talking about (the prototypical example being a friend who started working out based on recommendations from bodybuilding forums.) You can certainly update in this case (I can tell friend he’s exercising too frequently and he goes to the gym less often), but it’s not nearly as good as being able to update intelligently: it’s the difference between looking at a gallup poll and scientific evidence to determine whether global warming is true. (Actually, that methodology is better; if I’m reading random idiots on the internet, I’m subject to a massive confirmation bias. Also, only reading the 10% of literature on exercise that falls outside of Sturgeon’s law saves a lot of time.)
Also, I endorse Staffan Lindeberg as a hidden rationalist and wholeheartedly recommend his book. >2k references! (To compare, OP’s Body By Science has about a tenth as many. Which is exceptional—Lindeberg is just really exceptional.)
Doug McGuff (author of Body By Science) reminds me of Staffan Lindeberg (author of Food and Western Disease).
McGuff updates away from “common wisdom” of exercise, usually in a direction that makes things better.
McGuff is an opponent of large amounts of moderate-intensity cardio, arguing that it has extremely poor return-on-investment (too much time, energy, effort) and causes too much injury. His recommendation to do minimal amounts of high-intensity exercise line up nicely with Romeo Steven’s recommendations and recent research.
McGuff focuses on recovery, recommending to err on the side of too much recovery, rather than too little. I’ll take exception to his recommended recovery intervals (ACSM and Romeo Stevens both recommend exercising 2–3 times a week, rather than once a week), but he’s definitely erring on the right side; overtraining will waste your time, make you weak, and injure you, whereas undertraining just means you don’t achieve results quite as quickly.
McGuff separates exercise (an activity designed to produce a physiological response) and physical activity (moving your body). This is in line with the scientific community (this very distinction is made in chapter one of ACSM’s Guidelines for Exercise Testing and Prescription). In particular, since exercise is optimizing for a desirable physiological response under the constraint of not getting injured, it should come as no surprise that exercise is by far the most efficient way of achieving a desirable physioligical response and doesn’t injure you. When the weather permits, I play ultimate frisbee several hours a week, and it’s fun, but I’ve had numerous (minor) injuries and hold no illusions that I couldn’t achieve approximately equivalent results with 12 minutes a week of Tabata sprints.
McGuff advocates for using machines over free weights because, even though the latter will produce slightly better outcomes, it’s difficult to hold proper form as your muscles approach failure, and bad form with free weights is a recipe for getting injured.
McGuff is big on having genetics as an input to your exercise function. In particular, a routine that’s optimal for the genetically gifted isn’t going to be good for anyone else; if I tried exercising as much as Michael Phelps, my body would break because I’m not an outlier freak whose body can handle that much physical stress. This is in opposition to a (bad) common argument that goes “X has physique Y, which I desire. If I follow the same exercise program as X, I’ll obtain physique Y. However, no matter what routine I do, I’ll never have Triple H’s body because my bones aren’t thick enough.) McGuff like an anecdote about out-of-shape people swimming because they want the long, lean body of a swimmer, even though elite swimmers have long, lean bodies because anyone with a different body type doesn’t become an elite swimmer.
However, I feel McGuff sometimes ignores or cherrypicks evidence to reach his preconceived notions of what optimal exercise ought to look like. Most notably, he advocates for one set to failure, whereas the consensus amongst people who look closely at the evidence recommend 4 sets at a weight, number of reps, and cadence such that you can barely finish the last set.
Similarly for Lindeberg in nutrition:
Most popular nutrition literature reads something like “X is good for you because it has a lot of Y!” Lindeberg’s book reads a lot like “foods from class X are problematic because they contain Y which causes Z.” (Foods from the class legumes are problematic because they contain phytic acid which is problematic because it binds to metals, meaning that you don’t absorb the iron or magnesium you’ve eaten. Plants really didn’t evolve to be good things to eat (fruit excepted).)
Lindeberg argues that micronutrient:calorie ratios, not macronutrient ratios, are important. (He’s well-known for his study of Kitavans, an indigenous population known to not suffer from western disease. They have a very high-carbohydrate diet. Lindeberg also notes that the Inuit, who are also basically devoid of western disease, derive a few percent of their calories from carbohydrates.)
Lindeberg isn’t overconfident. Nutrition is hard to study: we can’t really placebo food, we can only usually measure biomarkers (which don’t quite equal health outcomes), and doing controlled intervention studies is hard (you need to get a large group of people to adhere to a diet long enough to see far-down-the-road health outcomes), so there aren’t nearly enough of them. It’s also nonobvious how to “slice” food: is it that meat an unhealthy class of food, is it mostly harmless and just processed meat that’s bad? Should we be comparing high carb/low carb or processed/unprocessed or GMO/natural or paleo/modern or…?
Ultimately, Lindeberg does recommend a paleo diet (which bears a passing relationship to mainstream paleo), but, on account of there not being enough good evidence, despite writing a book with >2k references, I remember not being entirely convinced he presented enough evidence to justify his recommendations.
Ultimately, what makes McGuff and Lindeberg hidden rationalists is not that they present the best arguments, although they do a better job than most. What makes them hidden rationalists is they present good arguments that lend themselves to updating. McGuff outlines a bunch of exercise principles, most of which I still use, but I made small changes when Romeo Stevens posted Optimal Exercise. Lindeberg outlines nutrition principles, which back up the paleo diet, most of which I abide by, even though I eat soylent, which is about the least-paleo thing there is.
This becomes remarkable when you compare it to the “normal” situation, which is, near as I can tell, amalgamating a mishmash heuristic from articles written by morons who have no clue what they’re talking about (the prototypical example being a friend who started working out based on recommendations from bodybuilding forums.) You can certainly update in this case (I can tell friend he’s exercising too frequently and he goes to the gym less often), but it’s not nearly as good as being able to update intelligently: it’s the difference between looking at a gallup poll and scientific evidence to determine whether global warming is true. (Actually, that methodology is better; if I’m reading random idiots on the internet, I’m subject to a massive confirmation bias. Also, only reading the 10% of literature on exercise that falls outside of Sturgeon’s law saves a lot of time.)
Also, I endorse Staffan Lindeberg as a hidden rationalist and wholeheartedly recommend his book. >2k references! (To compare, OP’s Body By Science has about a tenth as many. Which is exceptional—Lindeberg is just really exceptional.)