Too vague; “a low fat diet” could be taken to mean replacing fats with carbs, replacing fats with proteins, or just eating less in general. Otherwise I think it’s a fine idea.
Diets are mindkilling. Someone who is or has been on a diet, or has someone important to them who has, will treat choice of and necessity of dieting as a purely affiliation/signalling game.
By that criterion, anything people can have an opinion on is “mindkilling”. Yes, people are vulnerable to becoming entrenched in any way of thinking, but some are less vulnerable to such than others. And in my experience, diets are something people tend to be open to a variety of opinions on.
Anything people can have an opinion on is potentially mindkilling, yes, but I was saying diets are actually so for very many people. Basically, my experience runs counter to yours: I’ve seen a lot of people being unreasonable and irrational about dieting, whether or not they are/were dieting themselves.
I’m happy that you can have rational conversations about diets with people. I still think my experience isn’t extraordinary and so diets would be a poor choice for the OP’s question.
butt I was saying diets are actually so for very many people.
You’re right here of course. It would seem, however that this is such a basic element of our daily existence that it may be worth simply ignoring those with mind killing issues on the subject and bullying the subject down to one of plain good decision making and science, at least in this context.
How about nutrition related questions? The exact wording of the question is tricky, but something like
“Will a low fat diet help most people lose weight?” isn’t the kind of thing that inspires 0% or 100% responses.
Too vague; “a low fat diet” could be taken to mean replacing fats with carbs, replacing fats with proteins, or just eating less in general. Otherwise I think it’s a fine idea.
Diets are mindkilling. Someone who is or has been on a diet, or has someone important to them who has, will treat choice of and necessity of dieting as a purely affiliation/signalling game.
By that criterion, anything people can have an opinion on is “mindkilling”. Yes, people are vulnerable to becoming entrenched in any way of thinking, but some are less vulnerable to such than others. And in my experience, diets are something people tend to be open to a variety of opinions on.
Anything people can have an opinion on is potentially mindkilling, yes, but I was saying diets are actually so for very many people. Basically, my experience runs counter to yours: I’ve seen a lot of people being unreasonable and irrational about dieting, whether or not they are/were dieting themselves.
I’m happy that you can have rational conversations about diets with people. I still think my experience isn’t extraordinary and so diets would be a poor choice for the OP’s question.
You’re right here of course. It would seem, however that this is such a basic element of our daily existence that it may be worth simply ignoring those with mind killing issues on the subject and bullying the subject down to one of plain good decision making and science, at least in this context.