John Coleman: Comparative Anatomy & Taxonomy

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Comparative anatomy works on the simple and demonstrable fact that the biological form usually defines function. Human is closest to frugivore animals (fruit eaters), from the anatomic and taxonomic point of view.


Comparative Anatomy & Taxonomy

Comparative anatomy works on the simple and demonstrable fact that the biological form usually defines function. Individual features, or species may break the rules, but a look at many factors will reveal a species true biological role. Certainly science does not really validate the typical vegan diet, as this serves cultural imperitives. Science provides us with an indicator of human nutrition which was not established by culture, but is certainly that of a herbivore or frugivore and not a carnivore or omnivore.

Feature Carnivore Herbivore Omnivore Human

Facial Muscles

Reduced to allow wide mouth gape

Well-developed

Reduced

Well-developed

Jaw Type

Angle not expanded

Expanded angle

Angle not expanded

Expanded angle

Jaw Joint Location

On same plane as molar teeth

Above the plane of the molars

On same plane as molar teeth

Above the plane of the molars

Jaw Motion

Shearing;
minimal side-to-side motion

No shear;
good side-to-side,
front-to-back

Shearing;
minimal side-to-side

No shear;
good side-to-side,
front-to-back

Major Jaw Muscles

Temporalis

Masseter and pterygoids

Temporalis

Masseter and pterygoids

Mouth Opening vs. Head Size

Large

Small

Large

Small

Teeth: Incisors

Short and pointed

Broad, flattened and spade shaped

Short and pointed

Broad, flattened and spade shaped

Teeth: Canines

Long, sharp and curved

Dull and short or long (for defense), or none

Long, sharp and curved

Short and blunted

Teeth: Molars

Sharp, jagged and blade shaped

Flattened with cusps vs complex surface

Sharp blades and/or flattened

Flattened with nodular cusps

Chewing

None; swallows food whole

Extensive chewing necessary

Swallows food whole and/or simple crushing

Extensive chewing necessary

Saliva

No digestive enzymes

Carbohydrate digesting enzymes

No digestive enzymes

Carbohydrate digesting enzymes

Stomach Type

Simple

Simple or multiple chambers

Simple

Simple

Stomach Acidity

Less than or equal to pH 1 with food in stomach

pH 4 to 5 with food in stomach

Less than or equal to pH 1 with food in stomach

pH 4 to 5 with food in stomach

Stomach Capacity

60% to 70% of total volume of digestive tract

Less than 30% of total volume of digestive tract

60% to 70% of total volume of digestive tract

21% to 27% of total volume of digestive tract

Length of Small Intestine

3 to 6 times body length

10 to more than 12 times body length

4 to 6 times body length

10 to 11 times body length

Colon

Simple, short and smooth,
no fermentation

Long, complex; may be sacculated, may ferment

Simple, short and smooth,
no fermentation

Long, sacculated,
may ferment

Liver

Can detoxify vitamin A

Cannot detoxify vitamin A

Can detoxify vitamin A

Cannot detoxify vitamin A

Kidney

Extremely concentrated urine

Moderately concentrated urine

Extremely concentrated urine

Moderately concentrated urine

Nails

Sharp claws

Flattened nails or blunt hooves

Sharp claws

Flattened nails

Thermostasis

Hyperventilation

Perspiration

Hyperventilation

Perspiration

Adapted from The Comparative Anatomy of Eating by Milton R. Mills, M.D., formerly at http://www.newveg.av.org/anatomy.htm (broken link)

The Opportunistic Feeder Theory

Various folk promote the opportunistic feeder theory which suggests that because man can or has fed on meat, eggs, insects and other animal matter, then man is an opportunistic omnivore. This theory also counters the conclusions of taxonomy presented above, suggesting it is misleading and that species have individual feeding habits and cannot be pigeonholed as taxonomy suggests. The basis of this argument is that animal behaviour and adaptability indicates dietary suitability.

This theory is false and unscientific. Of course tradition is not scientific, and the practice of humans eating meat is old, but has nothing to do with what we are biologicaly equipped to feed upon. We ate meat to survive, now we eat it out of habit and not need.

Another quasi-scientific theory is associated with the opportunistic feeder theory. This can be called the biochemical individuality theory which is often seen in far eastern "medicines" such as Traditional Chinese Medicine, and the Ayurvedic systems. This theory suggests that since we are biochemically individual we should all eat individual diets suited to our moods, illnesses and other contrived indicators.

The logic behind biochemical individuality theory is fallacious, for although we are all unique biochemical beings, we are predominantly the same biochemical system, with low level variations. At the molecular level we differ, at the system level we are alike. If anyone imagines they can adjust their diet according to these individual metabolic variations, they are fooling themselves.

By picking only the low level system differences to indicate information about dietary choices, or moods, yin and yang and so forth, and extrapolating to the whole, we produce a gross misrepresentation of the facts. As far as we know, all cattle graze, all lions eat raw flesh, all chimps eat a diet of mainly raw fruit and vegetation and all chickens peck for grubs and grains. No animal on earth, that we know of, cooks its food before eating it, except humans. Only human behaviour breaks the taxonomic definition that that science defines for it. Humans prefer culture and technology over nature, and since our natural role is as a raw food herbivore, and because our bodies are only suited to that role, any significant perversion of it must, and does, lead to ill health. One cannot choose what to eat healthily, based on cultural imperitives since one will most likely present the wrong kind and quantity of precursor molecules, as well as introducing poisons to the body. A healthy human body cannot be operated on the wrong chemical inputs. "Garbage in equals garbage out"!

Our anatomy is clearly unsuited to deal with animal matter in the diet, however our digestive chemistry can deal with animal tissues and obtain some nutrition. But this does not indicate biological suitability or desirability. Cattle, which are herbivorous ruminents may eat many insects while they feed, chimps may occassionally kill and eat a small monkey. A pet cat may eat bread and margarine. So what? Are cattle to be defined as insectivores or omnivores, or opportunistic feeders? Is the pet cat an opportunistic feeder? Certainly, and the chimp an opportunistic feeder? Why not. None of this distorts taxonomy or suprises the biologist. All herbivores will be able to process animal protein to some degree or other since all protein is biochemically related. It is possible with modern processing methods to produce a "cat food" derived solely from plant material and non-animal matter that will keep a cat alive. Is this a herbivorous cat? No, it is a domestic animal eating an industrial diet. Higher lifeforms display a broader range of behaviours, and feeding behaviour simply reflects this, but does not reflect our true biological feeding requirements.

The opportunistic feeder theory is based on circular logic, "I do therefore I am" and is hard to falsify*, since at a molecular level, food is chemically similar, because all animal tissues are made up of broken down plant tissues.

The fact that opportunistic feeding theory is circular and hard to falsify make it unscientific, and useless in any discussion of what humans should eat. Taxonomy is accurate, logical but not exact. Since there are exceptions it is falsifiable.

* a statement that cannot be falsified is unscientific, eg. the statement: "The sun will extinguish in 1000 years time" is unscientific because nobody can demonstrate that this cannot happen.


This page is a mirror of http://www.vegan-straight-edge.org.uk/taxonomy.htm (slightly adapted)!


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