The linked article indicated that 10% solutions were widely available on Amazon, and links this one, but doesn’t seem to give any indication why he picked that one in particular—just wanted to check if you might have seen this reasoning somewhere/if it exists.
I’m not familiar with Chris Masterjohn—his web page looks like he’s a content creator trying to leverage his Nutritional Science PhD into being seen as knowledgeable about a wide variety of things—is this human known to say true and useful things?
Thanks for the info! Two questions:
The linked article indicated that 10% solutions were widely available on Amazon, and links this one, but doesn’t seem to give any indication why he picked that one in particular—just wanted to check if you might have seen this reasoning somewhere/if it exists.
I’m not familiar with Chris Masterjohn—his web page looks like he’s a content creator trying to leverage his Nutritional Science PhD into being seen as knowledgeable about a wide variety of things—is this human known to say true and useful things?