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== Lesson 7 - Carbohydrates - Fuel For The Human Body ==
 
== Lesson 7 - Carbohydrates - Fuel For The Human Body ==
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'''[[The Immense Wisdom And Providence Of The Body|Back - Lesson 06]] - PDF pages 152-191 - [[Life Science Health System - T.C. Fry|Table of Contents]] - [[Proteins In The Diet|Next - Lesson 08]]'''
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=== Introduction ===
 
=== Introduction ===
 
Before embarking on a study of carbohydrates—their role in the body, their sources, etc., we will begin by highlighting the importance of carbohydrates, defining what carbohydrates are and learning how they are formed, as well as glimpsing at a brief history of carbohydrates in the human diet.
 
Before embarking on a study of carbohydrates—their role in the body, their sources, etc., we will begin by highlighting the importance of carbohydrates, defining what carbohydrates are and learning how they are formed, as well as glimpsing at a brief history of carbohydrates in the human diet.
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Certainly, as he contended, sweet foods would be far better for the weakened individual and the invalid, with lowered digestive powers, than would be a diet of starches. If there is one starch food that may be regarded as an exception to this rule, it would be the potato, as its starch is more easily and speedily converted into sugar than the starch of cereals, legumes, etc. But Densmore goes further than a consideration of the interests of the invalid when he says, “it would seem plain that a human being in apparently robust health is much more liable to remain so upon a food that is adapted to his organism and that is of easy digestion, than upon one that is a foreign body and that must undergo a protracted and difficult digestion before being of use to the system.”
 
Certainly, as he contended, sweet foods would be far better for the weakened individual and the invalid, with lowered digestive powers, than would be a diet of starches. If there is one starch food that may be regarded as an exception to this rule, it would be the potato, as its starch is more easily and speedily converted into sugar than the starch of cereals, legumes, etc. But Densmore goes further than a consideration of the interests of the invalid when he says, “it would seem plain that a human being in apparently robust health is much more liable to remain so upon a food that is adapted to his organism and that is of easy digestion, than upon one that is a foreign body and that must undergo a protracted and difficult digestion before being of use to the system.”
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'''<big>Next Chapter - 08 - [[Proteins In The Diet]]</big>'''
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'''[[The Immense Wisdom And Providence Of The Body|Back - Lesson 06]] - PDF pages 152-191 - [[Life Science Health System - T.C. Fry|Table of Contents]] - [[Proteins In The Diet|Next - Lesson 08]]'''

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