Monday, November 25, 2013

Why Do We Eat? A Neurobiological Perspective. Part VIII

During the (probably) after everything else pole of this cycle, I'll take the pieces to facilitate I've increasingly outlined in preceding posts, and plunk them organized into a big-picture, common-sense framework representing thinking around person drinking behavior, and why we dine more at the moment than still or.

Why is Eating Behavior Regulated?

Let's start next to the for the most part fundamental level.  To be competitive in a natural setting, organisms be required to discovery rational ways of interacting with their surroundings to promote survival and reproduction.  One of the for the most part central elements of survival is the acquisition of energy and compound building blocks, either by photosynthesis, or (in the argument of animals) drinking other organisms.  This imperative drove the evolution of rational food seeking behaviors long or the materialization of humans, mammals, reptiles, amphibians, fish, worms, and even eukaryotes (organisms with nuclei).

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