I’m not sure I follow your line of thinking on this.
I am arguing that the presence of biological control systems radically affects how things behave, in ways that may seem impossible to someone who is unaware of these concepts.
And so again, how is this different than anything in life? If I want to excel at math, I would need to devote X% more time, effort, resource than other people who are fortunate in this area. It would require great mental and physical effort for me. Same if I want to excel at long distance running. Or chess. Or ventriloquism. I’d be predisposed to success in some pursuits and at a deficit in others.
For some of those, you may not be able to succeed at them at all, regardless of how much effort you put in. The equations have no solution for X. The word “enough” is not a magic spell: sometimes there is no such thing as “enough to succeed”.
For some of those, you may not be able to succeed at them at all, regardless of how much effort you put in. The equations have no solution for X. The word “enough” is not a magic spell: sometimes there is no such thing as “enough to succeed”.
I agree.
I think individual differences in BMR are a big part of why certain individuals have a more difficult time controlling their weight.
I am arguing that the presence of biological control systems radically affects how things behave, in ways that may seem impossible to someone who is unaware of these concepts.
For some of those, you may not be able to succeed at them at all, regardless of how much effort you put in. The equations have no solution for X. The word “enough” is not a magic spell: sometimes there is no such thing as “enough to succeed”.
I agree.
I think individual differences in BMR are a big part of why certain individuals have a more difficult time controlling their weight.