I can't find the studies in full on the net, but you should look to the British medical journal vegetarian study, an the Oxford vegetarian study.Originally Posted by Mirage
I answered your question as best I could with the knowledge you gave me. I asked you where you'd got your information, you haven't told me, so I assume you got it from where I suggested.And I was hoping maybe you could tell me, seeing as I was asking the question.
You are kidding me?! You don't know what's in the food that you eat, an you want me to find an unbiased source to tell you...... :O_O: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Food_groups If you look at meat an meat alternatives, you'll see that any nutrient in meat, can be obtained from a meat alternative.I don't find it obvious that we can get all necessary nutrients from plants, so I'm hoping you can show me that we do. And not from a biased source.If your canines are the same size as a dogs, you're deformed! If you gave your dog a bone to chew on, an then you tried chewing on it, guess what would happen to your teeth.Originally Posted by Rinion
Is it really? How many times have you been cut with an axe an chainsaw to know that?I don't know about northerners (yankees...), but the farmhouses we have down here generally just chop the animals head off with a chainsaw or axe. Painless, usually.
As I've already shown you, you're wrong. Here it is again: Teeth (Canines)The purpose of the canine, in any event, is what I was attempting to address. They are meant to cut meat. If we didn't need them, we wouldn't have them.
Carnivore: Long, sharp and curved.
Herbivore: Dull and short or long (for defense), or none.
Omnivore: Long, sharp and curved.
Human: Short and blunted.
Humans canines are more like a herbivores, than an omnivores, or a carnivores. Herbivores can have canine teeth. Herbivores don't eat meat. If canine teeth were made for meat eating, herbivores wouldn't have them.