Body: Burn by Herman Pontzer

Wiser Than Yesterday: Book club - A podcast by Book geeks Sam Harris & Nicolas Vereecke

Burn: The Misunderstood Science of MetabolismBy Herman PontzerWe burn 2,000 calories a day. And if we exercise and cut carbs, we'll lose more weight. Right? Wrong.the Hadza, who every day move around for ~4 hours and 15,000 steps, use the same amount of energy as couch-potato North Americans.Exercise doesn't increase our metabolism. Instead, we burn calories within a very narrow range: nearly 3,000 calories per day, no matter our activity level.Our extremely effective "metabolic compensation" shifts calories around so we break even at the end of the day no matter how much we move.Basically, you can't lose weight through exercise. Reducing caloric intake is the only way. HOWEVER, the manifold health benefits of exercise still make it the single most healthful activity we can do.The best diet is the one we can stick to.It may be that the most spectacular athletic feats are the result not just of great training, but of an astonishingly efficient digestive system.Interesting points:Faster metabolism = more fat reserves needed (humans have more fat than apes). Metabolism is not optimized for ‘looking good’ or even being healthy, it is shaped by natural selection to optimize for reproductionThe slower a species burns energy, the longer it tends to live. Exercise makes you live longer by consuming energy that would otherwise go to other things.Difference between animals: mouses channel most energy in reproducing, sparrows can channel more into maintenance and repairWe match the energy we expend to the energy we eat each day (hard to maintain weight loss)Calorie restriction reduces base metabolic rate of cells. They work slowerWhy are we fat? Food. Too much variety + engineered food designed to be overeatenHumans focus on survival over reproduction (kids fighting disease grow less)If you excercise, less energy can go to inflammationHigh physical activity -> lower testosterone (good thing, lower rate of cancers inn reproducttive systems)Cooked food has more available caloriesComments:Disappointing that the whole book used the imperial systemNot many solutionsSubscribe!If you enjoyed the podcast please subscribe and rate it. And of course, share with your friends! Don't Forget to leave a comment on this episode See podvine.com/privacy-policy for podcast listener privacy info. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.