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[–] 17790222? ago 

There is a word for carnivores that have adapted to be able to eat plants during times of famine, I forgot it though.

Like foxes, we should be eating just meat, but are able to tolerate a plant based diet as a backup plan. It's one of the reasons we're top survival predator. As we became more domesticated, it became infeasible to feed entire cities with meat, so we gradually adopted an omnivorous diet to cope with population growth.

I do think we are able to perform almost optimally on omnivore diets though, and as long as you're eating a lot of protein and few carbs you can do well; roman legionaries ate barely any meat for example.

>>13058835

King Warrior Magician Lover

Surprised by Joy

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[–] 17790223? ago 

King Warrior Magician Lover

The Hero with a Thousand Faces

Surprised by Joy

Never heard of it. What's with all the religious books? Waste of time.

Only religion related book you should read is The Power of Positive Thinking

https://www.politico.com/magazine/story/2015/10/donald-trump-2016-norman-vincent-peale-213220

Is this guy for real? Or more to the point, could anyone really possess that much self-confidence? There has been no shortage of explanations—a huge inferiority complex, infantile narcissism, delusional thinking—for Trump’s undying self-assurance. But as I discovered when writing a book about Donald, his father, and his grandfather, if you want to understand what goes on underneath the blond comb-over, you’d do well to look back to two crucial events in the early 1950s.

Event No. 1 occurred in October 1952, when a book appeared called The Power Of Positive Thinking. Written by Dr. Norman Vincent Peale and translated into 15 languages, it remained on the New York Times best-seller list for 186 weeks and sold 5 million copies. Donald was only 6 years old at the time and didn’t read the book until much later, but it quickly became important in the large Queens household in which he grew up, and it would play a critical role in his future. His parents, Fred and Mary, felt an immediate affinity for Peale’s teachings. On Sundays, they drove into Manhattan to worship at Marble Collegiate Church, where Peale was the head pastor. Donald and both his sisters were married there, and funeral services for both Fred and Mary took place in the main sanctuary.

“I still remember [Peale’s] sermons,” Trump told the Iowa Family Leadership Summit in July. “You could listen to him all day long. And when you left the church, you were disappointed it was over. He was the greatest guy.” A month later, in the same news conference at which Trump tossed out Univision anchor Jorge Ramos, he again referred to Peale as his pastor and said he was “one of the greatest speakers” he’d ever seen.

Known as “God’s salesman,” Peale merged worldliness and godliness to produce an easy-to-follow theology that preached self-confidence as a life philosophy. Critics called him a con man, described his church as a cult, and said his simple-minded approach shut off genuine thinking or insight. But Peale’s outlook, promoted through his radio shows, newspaper columns and articles, and through Guideposts, his monthly digest of inspirational messages, fit perfectly into the Trump family culture of never hesitating to bend the rules, doing whatever it took to win, and never, ever giving up.

“Believe in yourself!” Peale’s book begins. “Have faith in your abilities!” He then outlines 10 rules to overcome “inadequacy attitudes” and “build up confidence in your powers.” Rule one: “formulate and staple indelibly on your mind a mental picture of yourself as succeeding,” “hold this picture tenaciously,” and always refer to it “no matter how badly things seem to be going at the moment.”

Subsequent rules tell the reader to avoid “fear thoughts,” “never think of yourself as failing,” summon up a positive thought whenever “a negative thought concerning your personal powers comes to mind,” “depreciate every so-called obstacle,” and “make a true estimate of your own ability, then raise it 10 per cent.”

Peale’s philosophy fell on willing and eager ears in the Trump family. Long before this self-esteem guru codified his canon, Donald’s grandfather Friedrich used Peale-like confidence and tenacity to make the first Trump fortune during the Klondike gold rush. A few decades later, Donald’s father, Fred, deployed proto-Peale thinking to become a multimillionaire real estate developer in Brooklyn and Queens. And Donald Trump himself has cited Peale’s advice many times in his own career.

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[–] 17790225? ago 

you’d do well to look back to two crucial events in the early 1950s.

Well what was event number 2? Don't leave me hanging cunt.

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[–] 17790224? ago 

Really hated the Joseph Campbell book. Dude couldn't write and just ranted his frantic mind onto the page. Could not follow or keep concentration.

Surpised By Joy about C.S. Lewis about how he went from Christian to Athiest to Christian again.