Keeping in mind that ‘saturated fat’ is not fat with extra fat, it is the fat which doesn’t have chemically unstable double-carbon bonds. I wonder how much of this idiocy is just because of ‘saturated fat’ sounding like fat with extra fat in it, and ‘polyunsaturated fat’ not being called ‘poly-unstable reactive fat’.
I wonder how much of this idiocy is just because of ‘saturated fat’ sounding like fat with extra fat in it, and ‘polyunsaturated fat’ not being called ‘poly-unstable reactive fat’.
That you would say this tells me your picture of how mainstream science works is even more distorted than I realized.
Studies have linked saturated fat to cholesterol levels and through cholesterol levels to heart disease. You said in the other thread that your nutritionist recommended you eat less saturated fat as a weight loss thing, which is wrong, because the real issue is cholesterol. But you shouldn’t be dismissing worries about saturated fat as “idiocy.”
Now, recently there have also been studies finding no link between saturated fat and heart disease. I haven’t looked into the issue closely enough to tell what’s going on, but it’s possible nutrition science is in the process of realizing they made a mistake about saturated fat. Or maybe the experts have reasons I don’t know about for discounting those studies, I’m not sure, which is why I’ve left the issue alone.
Studies have linked saturated fat to cholesterol levels and through cholesterol levels to heart disease. You said in the other thread that your nutritionist recommended you eat less saturated fat as a weight loss thing, which is wrong, because the real issue is cholesterol. But you shouldn’t be dismissing worries about saturated fat as “idiocy.”
Yes, I agree that one needs to draw a distinction between nutritionism for weight loss and nutritionism for other health-related objectives. As far as I know, there is good scientific evidence backing up the latter.
That’s why I asked Eliezer before what his doctor was hoping to accomplish by advising him to cut down on saturated fat. According to Eliezer, the doctor was indeed aiming for weight loss. Apparently the doctor in question is an endocrinologist. I would be curious to know what an obesity specialist would say.
Of course—I am not surprised at all. But I still stand by my claim that there is good scientific evidence backing up nutritionism for health-related objectives other than weight loss.
Can you cite the one or two most convincing studies that saturated fat is a principle cause of heart disease? I have seen a lot from the other side and would like to get a fuller picture.
Can you cite the one or two most convincing studies that saturated fat is a principle cause of heart disease?
No, I can’t—not without researching it.
My claim is that there is good scientific evidence backing up nutritionism for health-related objectives other than weight loss. If you represent to me that you are seriously skeptical of this claim I will try to find some supporting evidence.
My skepticism at the moment is only about (quoting Chris from above) “Studies have linked saturated fat to cholesterol levels and through cholesterol levels to heart disease.” (Well, and a bit with regards to cancer) I have seen such studies analyzed with alternative explanation convincingly by, for example, Uwe Ravnskov, Malcom Kendrick, Chris Masterjohn or Denise Minger, and wonder if there is more convincing evidence they atre excluding.
Nutrionism (meaning mainstream health science?) and health are of course much more broadly defined and not doubt contain many factual statements, for example on how to prevent scurvy, that don’t necessarily protect the entire field from the possibility of error.
Nutritionism is basically the idea that specific components of food potentially make them healthy or unhealthy.
So assuming for the sake of argument that saturated fat is unhealthy, nutritionism would hold that it’s a good idea to substitute canola oil for corn oil.
I have seen such studies analyzed with alternative explanation convincingly by, for example, Uwe Ravnskov, Malcom Kendrick, Chris Masterjohn or Denise Minger, and wonder if there is more convincing evidence they atre excluding
That’s an interesting question, but not one I’ve ever given much specific thought to.
The fact that people with genetic hypercholesterolemia tend to ( as the cholesterol link would indicate) die of heart attacks fairly young is at least one strike against this view.
That you would say this tells me that your picture of how mainstream science works and the merits of Taubes’ critique is even more distorted than I realized.
That was fun, but seriously. I posted it precisely because the nonsense about sat fat causing heart disease is one of Taubes biggest cudgels against nutrition science and it’s something many experts are now admitting the medical establishment has been wrong about for decades. I’m confused how you came to a conclusion about Taubes without looking into it. It’s probably what he deserves the most credit for.
E.g. Stephan Guyenet, whose arguments against Taubes account of carbs and insulin causing weight gain you posted earlier, thinks that no unbiased person who is familiar with the literature can believe there is a causal link between sat fat and cholesterol and heart disease.
It’s possible Taubes is right about saturated fat, but he’s sufficiently unreliable on other issues that I wouldn’t trust a word he says about saturated fat.
And yes, this matters, because prior to this series Taubes was who everyone was citing for the “look how horribly wrong mainstream nutrition science is” claim.
1. Correlation is not transitive as you seem to assume (the claim is a) sat fats corr cholesterol, and b) cholesterol corr to heart disease, therefore c) sat fats corr heart disease, therefore d) sat fats cause heart disease) . A correlated to B and B correlated to C does not even mean A is correlated to C, let alone that A causes C.
2. When you go looking for solid evidence for saturated fats causing heart disease—as I have—it just isn’t there.
What seems to have happened is that the field was for many years dominated by one man Ancel Keys who had a hunch that saturated fat was the culprit. He then fell prey to the usual cognitive biases, e.g. confirmation bias, and failed to update his views based on evidence.
Unfortunately the mania against saturated fats has let to a large uptake in intake of carbs in particular sugars (which Keys said was better than SF at least on one occasion), and Omega 6 fats contained in industrial seed oils (“vegetable oils”), trans fats and various other abominations that have been replacing trans fats.
Read this and note how weak and old the evidence cited here is (president of the AHA).
that your nutritionist recommended you eat less saturated fat as a weight loss thing, which is wrong
One can also cut on fats to lose weight, if one doesn’t proceed to eat more carbs and over-compensate in the end.
Normally, when someone is having trouble losing weight, they don’t realise how many calories they consume, and errors with fat are the largest in terms of calories. When volition or judgement are impaired, that’s when things get very messy and cutting down on fat may or may not result in eating more.
Studies have linked saturated fat to cholesterol levels and through cholesterol levels to heart disease.
Correlation is not transitive, i.e., X being linked to Y and Y being linked to Z does not necessarily imply X linked to Z. Unfortunately, biologists and health scientists make this kind of mistake all the time.
I haven’t looked into the issue closely enough to tell what’s going on, but it’s possible nutrition science is in the process of realizing they made a mistake about saturated fat.
Weren’t you trying to argue that mainstream science doesn’t make mistakes?
Keeping in mind that ‘saturated fat’ is not fat with extra fat, it is the fat which doesn’t have chemically unstable double-carbon bonds. I wonder how much of this idiocy is just because of ‘saturated fat’ sounding like fat with extra fat in it, and ‘polyunsaturated fat’ not being called ‘poly-unstable reactive fat’.
That you would say this tells me your picture of how mainstream science works is even more distorted than I realized.
Studies have linked saturated fat to cholesterol levels and through cholesterol levels to heart disease. You said in the other thread that your nutritionist recommended you eat less saturated fat as a weight loss thing, which is wrong, because the real issue is cholesterol. But you shouldn’t be dismissing worries about saturated fat as “idiocy.”
Now, recently there have also been studies finding no link between saturated fat and heart disease. I haven’t looked into the issue closely enough to tell what’s going on, but it’s possible nutrition science is in the process of realizing they made a mistake about saturated fat. Or maybe the experts have reasons I don’t know about for discounting those studies, I’m not sure, which is why I’ve left the issue alone.
Yes, I agree that one needs to draw a distinction between nutritionism for weight loss and nutritionism for other health-related objectives. As far as I know, there is good scientific evidence backing up the latter.
That’s why I asked Eliezer before what his doctor was hoping to accomplish by advising him to cut down on saturated fat. According to Eliezer, the doctor was indeed aiming for weight loss. Apparently the doctor in question is an endocrinologist. I would be curious to know what an obesity specialist would say.
The diet—heart attack link is debated as well, of course: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_International_Network_of_Cholesterol_Skeptics
Of course—I am not surprised at all. But I still stand by my claim that there is good scientific evidence backing up nutritionism for health-related objectives other than weight loss.
Can you cite the one or two most convincing studies that saturated fat is a principle cause of heart disease? I have seen a lot from the other side and would like to get a fuller picture.
No, I can’t—not without researching it.
My claim is that there is good scientific evidence backing up nutritionism for health-related objectives other than weight loss. If you represent to me that you are seriously skeptical of this claim I will try to find some supporting evidence.
My skepticism at the moment is only about (quoting Chris from above) “Studies have linked saturated fat to cholesterol levels and through cholesterol levels to heart disease.” (Well, and a bit with regards to cancer) I have seen such studies analyzed with alternative explanation convincingly by, for example, Uwe Ravnskov, Malcom Kendrick, Chris Masterjohn or Denise Minger, and wonder if there is more convincing evidence they atre excluding.
Nutrionism (meaning mainstream health science?) and health are of course much more broadly defined and not doubt contain many factual statements, for example on how to prevent scurvy, that don’t necessarily protect the entire field from the possibility of error.
Nutritionism is basically the idea that specific components of food potentially make them healthy or unhealthy.
So assuming for the sake of argument that saturated fat is unhealthy, nutritionism would hold that it’s a good idea to substitute canola oil for corn oil.
That’s an interesting question, but not one I’ve ever given much specific thought to.
The fact that people with genetic hypercholesterolemia tend to ( as the cholesterol link would indicate) die of heart attacks fairly young is at least one strike against this view.
This is usually an acknowledged exception; whether the rationale for it to be an exception rather than counter evidence holds, I don’t recall.
That you would say this tells me that your picture of how mainstream science works and the merits of Taubes’ critique is even more distorted than I realized.
That was fun, but seriously. I posted it precisely because the nonsense about sat fat causing heart disease is one of Taubes biggest cudgels against nutrition science and it’s something many experts are now admitting the medical establishment has been wrong about for decades. I’m confused how you came to a conclusion about Taubes without looking into it. It’s probably what he deserves the most credit for.
E.g. Stephan Guyenet, whose arguments against Taubes account of carbs and insulin causing weight gain you posted earlier, thinks that no unbiased person who is familiar with the literature can believe there is a causal link between sat fat and cholesterol and heart disease.
It’s possible Taubes is right about saturated fat, but he’s sufficiently unreliable on other issues that I wouldn’t trust a word he says about saturated fat.
And yes, this matters, because prior to this series Taubes was who everyone was citing for the “look how horribly wrong mainstream nutrition science is” claim.
FYI, I’m going to keep citing him.
Two issues here
1. Correlation is not transitive as you seem to assume (the claim is a) sat fats corr cholesterol, and b) cholesterol corr to heart disease, therefore c) sat fats corr heart disease, therefore d) sat fats cause heart disease) . A correlated to B and B correlated to C does not even mean A is correlated to C, let alone that A causes C.
2. When you go looking for solid evidence for saturated fats causing heart disease—as I have—it just isn’t there.
What seems to have happened is that the field was for many years dominated by one man Ancel Keys who had a hunch that saturated fat was the culprit. He then fell prey to the usual cognitive biases, e.g. confirmation bias, and failed to update his views based on evidence.
Unfortunately the mania against saturated fats has let to a large uptake in intake of carbs in particular sugars (which Keys said was better than SF at least on one occasion), and Omega 6 fats contained in industrial seed oils (“vegetable oils”), trans fats and various other abominations that have been replacing trans fats.
Read this and note how weak and old the evidence cited here is (president of the AHA).
Circulation. 2017;136:e1–e23. DOI: 10.1161/CIR.0000000000000510
Per your comment about realizing there is a mistake I get the feeling that the tide is turning and they are slowly walking it back.
Contrast the article above with this talk on the issue.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NUY_SDhxf4k&list=LLsRhdFOqQxl9zxUew3GgU8g&index=4&t=0s
One can also cut on fats to lose weight, if one doesn’t proceed to eat more carbs and over-compensate in the end.
Normally, when someone is having trouble losing weight, they don’t realise how many calories they consume, and errors with fat are the largest in terms of calories. When volition or judgement are impaired, that’s when things get very messy and cutting down on fat may or may not result in eating more.
Correlation is not transitive, i.e., X being linked to Y and Y being linked to Z does not necessarily imply X linked to Z. Unfortunately, biologists and health scientists make this kind of mistake all the time.
Weren’t you trying to argue that mainstream science doesn’t make mistakes?
No Eugine