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fortydegrees | 2 years ago

>they don’t seem to look at real people that live a long time in Spain, Italy, Japan, etc

I think you're referring to 'Blue zones'[0] here. I'm certainly not an expert in longevity, but was also intrigued by these areas and their apparently above-average lifespan, and how it goes against a lot of conventional longevity advice re: diet.

One explanation I've heard is that they're simply the results of poor record keeping, and that there isn't much strong evidence to suggest people in those regions do statistically live longer than average.

[0]https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blue_zone

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keiferski|2 years ago

It doesn’t need to be strictly based on the blue zones idea, but the basic fact that in some places, people live longer than others. That Wikipedia article criticized the Okinawa narrative but doesn’t mention that Japan still has one of the longest lifespans in the first place.

My criticism is basically this: there are places where people live longer than others, and they certainly aren’t eating bowls of green goop and 200 pills every morning. If your goal is to maximize longevity, it seems logical to imitate whatever they’re doing. Or at least investigate it.

tpush|2 years ago

> [...] and how it goes against a lot of conventional longevity advice re: diet.

Why do you think it goes against "conventional longevity advice"?

anonymoushn|2 years ago

Japanese people generally don't skip breakfast and eat rice with every meal. So they aren't doing intermittent fasting and they are constantly eating one of the foods TFA says not to eat.