Henry Grabar
👤 PersonAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
And if and when they die, where do they go?
And if and when they die, where do they go?
So I've heard, for example, that you're supposed to let your kids play in the dirt, that the microbes in soil and that the microbes in the environment, that we don't want to be too clean, that we want to interact with these microbes. Can you talk about that?
So I've heard, for example, that you're supposed to let your kids play in the dirt, that the microbes in soil and that the microbes in the environment, that we don't want to be too clean, that we want to interact with these microbes. Can you talk about that?
So I've heard, for example, that you're supposed to let your kids play in the dirt, that the microbes in soil and that the microbes in the environment, that we don't want to be too clean, that we want to interact with these microbes. Can you talk about that?
So I assume if we all humans have these microbes all over us and in us, every other living thing must too that we see.
So I assume if we all humans have these microbes all over us and in us, every other living thing must too that we see.
So I assume if we all humans have these microbes all over us and in us, every other living thing must too that we see.
You know, as I was looking through your book, I landed on something that I'm not sure exactly how this fits into this discussion, but I'd never even heard of this, about nutrient density and how it's diminishing since over the last several decades? Can you explain what that is and some examples and then how it fits into this discussion?
You know, as I was looking through your book, I landed on something that I'm not sure exactly how this fits into this discussion, but I'd never even heard of this, about nutrient density and how it's diminishing since over the last several decades? Can you explain what that is and some examples and then how it fits into this discussion?
You know, as I was looking through your book, I landed on something that I'm not sure exactly how this fits into this discussion, but I'd never even heard of this, about nutrient density and how it's diminishing since over the last several decades? Can you explain what that is and some examples and then how it fits into this discussion?
I'd never heard of that. And according to you, it says that you would have to eat four carrots today to get the same amount of magnesium from one carrot in 1940.
I'd never heard of that. And according to you, it says that you would have to eat four carrots today to get the same amount of magnesium from one carrot in 1940.
I'd never heard of that. And according to you, it says that you would have to eat four carrots today to get the same amount of magnesium from one carrot in 1940.
So when people take an antibiotic to help kill whatever bad thing is causing them to be sick, an antibiotic will kill lots of things, I assume lots of microbes within the body. So can you talk about that?
So when people take an antibiotic to help kill whatever bad thing is causing them to be sick, an antibiotic will kill lots of things, I assume lots of microbes within the body. So can you talk about that?
So when people take an antibiotic to help kill whatever bad thing is causing them to be sick, an antibiotic will kill lots of things, I assume lots of microbes within the body. So can you talk about that?
I've been talking to Jake Robinson. He is a microbial ecologist, and the name of his book is Invisible Friends, How Microbes Shape Our Lives and the World Around Us. And there is a link to that book in the show notes. Appreciate it, Jake. Thanks for taking the time. Cheers, Mike. Thanks for having me on. A lot of people who think they have a food allergy actually have a food intolerance.
I've been talking to Jake Robinson. He is a microbial ecologist, and the name of his book is Invisible Friends, How Microbes Shape Our Lives and the World Around Us. And there is a link to that book in the show notes. Appreciate it, Jake. Thanks for taking the time. Cheers, Mike. Thanks for having me on. A lot of people who think they have a food allergy actually have a food intolerance.
I've been talking to Jake Robinson. He is a microbial ecologist, and the name of his book is Invisible Friends, How Microbes Shape Our Lives and the World Around Us. And there is a link to that book in the show notes. Appreciate it, Jake. Thanks for taking the time. Cheers, Mike. Thanks for having me on. A lot of people who think they have a food allergy actually have a food intolerance.