Whole Rethinking the science of nutrition

T. Colin Campbell, 1934-

Book - 2013

"The China Study" revealed what we should eat and provided the powerful empirical support for this answer. "Whole" answers the question of why. Why does a whole-food, plant-based diet provide optimal nutrition? "Whole" demonstrates how far the scientific reductionism of the nutrition orthodoxy has gotten offtrack and reveals the elegant wonders of the true holistic workings of nutrition, from the cellular level to the operation of the entire organism.

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Subjects
Published
Dallas, Texas : BenBella Books, Inc [2013]
Language
English
Main Author
T. Colin Campbell, 1934- (-)
Other Authors
Howard Jacobson, 1930- (-)
Physical Description
xvi, 328 pages : illustrations ; 24 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN
9781937856243
  • Introduction
  • Part I. Enslaved by the System
  • Chapter 1. The Modern Health-Care Myth
  • Chapter 2. The Whole Truth
  • Chapter 3. My Heretical Path
  • Part II. Paradigm as Prison
  • Chapter 4. The Triumph of Reductionism
  • Chapter 5. Reductionism Invades Nutrition
  • Chapter 6. Reductionist Research
  • Chapter 7. Reductionist Biology
  • Chapter 8. Genetics versus Nutrition, Part One
  • Chapter 9. Genetics versus Nutrition, Part Two
  • Chapter 10. Reductionist Medicine
  • Chapter 11. Reductionist Supplementation
  • Chapter 12. Reductionist Social Policy
  • Part III. Subtle Power and its Wielders
  • Chapter 13. Understanding the System
  • Chapter 14. Industry Exploitation and Control
  • Chapter 15. Research and Profit
  • Chapter 16. Media Matters
  • Chapter 17. Government Misinformation
  • Chapter 18. Blinded by the Light Bringers
  • Part IV. Final Thoughts
  • Chapter 19. Making Ourselves Whole
  • Acknowledgments
  • About the Authors
  • Notes
  • Index
Review by Choice Review

According to Campbell (emer., Cornell Univ.; The China Study, Jun'05, 42-5895), plant-based whole food is the nutritional elixir for maintaining health. The noted nutrition researcher criticizes the current scientific reductionist mind-set, along with the medical system that focuses on disease rather than health, and provides evidence that proper nutrition is basic to fitness. A diet that excludes fats and sugars and is low in meat-based proteins is the holistic recipe to avoid cancer, diabetes, obesity, and heart disease. Plant-based foods contain the antioxidants essential for health that are absent in meat products. Vegetable food sources serve as the enzymes for the myriad combinations and permutations of chemical reactions that are part of metabolism. Evolution has fine-tuned the body to select its raw materials from the ingested diet. Unfortunately, profits drive industries to fashion food tastes; medicine treats symptoms but not underlying causes; and science pursues molecular solutions while ignoring the whole picture of the functioning body. Campbell emphatically and emotionally argues for a shift from the reductionist paradigm of science to a broader, holistic view of how food affects the body. The reader may well be converted to a vegetarian diet after digesting the book's contents. Summing Up: Highly recommended. All levels/libraries. R. A. Hoots emeritus, Sacramento City College

Copyright American Library Association, used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Campbell's follow-up to his best-selling The China Study is more of the same, in the best way. He continues his quest to convince people that "the ideal human diet looks like this: Consumer plant-based foods in forms as close to their natural state as possible...eat a variety of vegetables, fruits, raw nuts and seeds, beans and legumes, and whole grains." The entirety of the book is a passionate and convincing case for that ideal diet. Campbell has not written a book of diet tips, or even provided recipes. In fact, at times the book delves so deeply into scientific process- for example, explaining how cancer develops or how metabolism works-that many may find themselves having to read slowly to understand his point. Yet he makes the case that Americans are too prone to take pills to solve health issues (and doctors too prone to prescribe them) as a result of "reductionist thinking". His years of scientific study and calm, measured tone are highly convincing, making a firm case that changing one's diet is the best way to assure good health. Readers will be inclined to put down their processed food snacks once they read what could be a life-changer of a book. (May) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.


Review by Library Journal Review

Humans should eat only the whole food, plant-based diet for which their bodies are designed. All animal products and/or added fats are bad. Repeat. Tell a few interesting stories, oversimplify a few biological concepts, and repeat. This sequel to the author's extremely popular The China Study is more a personal examination of political and social constraints on Campbell's diet crusade than true science. It should be no surprise that the coauthor Jacobson is a marketing expert. Don Hagan gives a beautifully clear reading. Verdict Readers looking for "scientific" support for radical diet choices will probably love this book; however, a more skeptical approach might be safer.-I. Pour-El, Des Moines Area Community Coll., Boone, IA (c) Copyright 2013. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Campbell (Emeritus, Nutritional Biochemistry/Cornell Univ.; The China Study: The Most Comprehensive Study of Nutrition Ever Conducted and the Startling Implications for Diet, 2005) elaborates on the themes of his earlier book and the 2011 documentary film Forks Over Knives. In 1980, the author began a study with Chinese scientists to investigate how the transformation of the Chinese diet in the aftermath of the stringencies of the Cultural Revolution affected the health of a sample of 100 Chinese families living in two different rural counties. A comparison with mortality statistics 20 years earlier showed a significant increase with the introduction of more protein in their diets. While admitting that these conclusions (taken from the original China study) are based on correlations and do not establish causality, Campbell does base his dietary recommendations on those conclusions. He claims that the adoption of a whole-foods, plant-based lifestyle can prevent 95 percent of all cancers, nearly all heart attacks and strokes, and even reverse severe heart disease. The author cautions against the use of dietary supplements and multivitamins and rejects the potential of targeted drugs as well as traditional medical remedies such as chemotherapy and radiation. He attempts to buttress his conclusions by referring to experiments conducted on rats in which the incidence of cancer was significantly higher for those fed a diet high in animal protein. Campbell dismisses the failure of medical and scientific journals to publish papers that he has written over the years, attributing this to biased peer review and financial pressure from doctors, the pharmaceutical industry, and dairy and livestock producers. While his earlier book had impressive sales figures, he complains that the media has failed to showcase his work. A spirited but unconvincing defense of Campbell's earlier work.]] Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.