Unless all food is always exactly equally bad and nutritional science completely worthless there must be some food or combination of foods that is less bad in a given situation than the alternatives. You might as well call that food “good” since, unless identical, compared to a baseline of whatever foods would be considered the default it should have a positive effect of some kind.
I agree that good food by that definition is likely to exist, but since I don’t see a specific reason for it a priori, I don’t see any reason that the difference in health should be particularly large. One thing that I would like to see is some scientific evidence rather than anecdotal that there is any significant correlation between certain diets and health outcomes. I believe they exist but I don’t currently have strong evidence for that belief, other than “people talk about it like it’s true.”
Unless all food is always exactly equally bad and nutritional science completely worthless there must be some food or combination of foods that is less bad in a given situation than the alternatives. You might as well call that food “good” since, unless identical, compared to a baseline of whatever foods would be considered the default it should have a positive effect of some kind.
I agree that good food by that definition is likely to exist, but since I don’t see a specific reason for it a priori, I don’t see any reason that the difference in health should be particularly large. One thing that I would like to see is some scientific evidence rather than anecdotal that there is any significant correlation between certain diets and health outcomes. I believe they exist but I don’t currently have strong evidence for that belief, other than “people talk about it like it’s true.”