Kynhneigð
12.8.2012 | 21:02
Kynhneigð
Hér er ég að leita að
hvort mismunandi kynhneigð
sé lærð, mótuð, eða meðfædd,
eða sitt lítið af hverju.
Soya virðist hamla kynþroska drengja og flýta kynþroska stúlkna.
Kinsey gefur í skin að aðilar geti sveiflast á milli kynhneigða.
Lesa um hvernig maurar stýra því að ungviðið verður drottning,
hermaur, eða vinnu maur.
Þetta þyrfti að rannsaka.
Maurarnir virðast vita meira en við í þessum málum.
?
Eg. 20-07-2012 jg
***
http://jonvalurjensson.blog.is/blog/jonvalurjensson/entry/236125/
Jafnvel Kinsey-stofnunin hefur viðurkennt,
að stór hluti homma eigi að baki sér grundvallarbreytingu
til og frá í kynhneigð.
Engin sönnun liggur fyrir um, að samkynhneigð sé meðfædd eða arfgeng.
***
The Kinsey Institute for Research in Sex, Gender and Reproduction ...
***
maurar
***
http://www.bupa.co.uk/members/mb-healthy-living/mb-nutrition/soya
Recently, Israel's health ministry recommended
that soya intake should be limited in young children
and avoided, if possible, in babies and infants.
In Australia and New Zealand,
soya-based baby formula can only be bought
with a doctor's prescription.
***
http://www.frot.co.nz/dietnet/basics/soy.htm
(yfirstrikað((Myth: Soy formula is safe for infants. ))yfirstrikað)
Truth:
Soy foods contain trypsin inhibitors
that inhibit protein digestion and affect pancreatic function.
In test animals, diets high in trypsin inhibitors
led to stunted growth and pancreatic disorders.
Soy foods increase the body's requirement for vitamin D,
needed for strong bones and normal growth.
Phytic acid in soy foods results in reduced bioavailabilty
of iron and zinc which are required for the health
and development of the brain and nervous system.
Soy also lacks cholesterol,
likewise essential for the development
of the brain and nervous system.
Megadoses of phytoestrogens in soy formula
have been implicated in the current trend
toward increasingly premature sexual development
in girls and delayed or retarded sexual development in boys.
***
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC527731/
A year after the deaths from encephalopathy of two Israeli infants
who were exclusively fed a soya formula made in Germany
that lacked vitamin B1 (thiamin) (BMJ 2003;327:1128)
nine children are still being treated for serious neurological damage.
Bæta við athugasemd [Innskráning]
Ekki er lengur hægt að skrifa athugasemdir við færsluna, þar sem tímamörk á athugasemdir eru liðin.