This discussion is beginning to remind me of the following story. Names have been changed to protect the innocent, moral of the story is for individual use only, YMMV, no nutrition or health claims are made for this little parable.
At his family's insistence, a man is seeing a psychiatrist because the man insists to his family that he is dead (and thus refuses to participate in family life any more). After weeks of seeing the man and trying various forms of reality therapy and rational approaches, the psychiatrist comes up with a plan for his next session. As the session begins he asks the man to follow a rational line of thinking with him, and the man agrees. It goes something like this: So if you're dead, your organs have stopped functioning correct? The man thinks briefly, and says, yep, that would make sense. So if you're dead, then your heart isn't pumping blood any longer, correct? The man thinks briefly, and says, yep, that would make sense too. So it would then follow that dead men don't bleed, correct? The man considers this briefly, and says, yep, that too sounds right doc....so where are we going with this? At that point the psychiatrist leaps toward the man, quickly and deftly sticking him in the forearm with a needle (duly sterilized I am sure). As the puncture begins to bleed, the psychiatrist, with great satisfaction, says "There. That settles it, doesn't it?" The man responds "Well doc, I reckon you're right. It really does settle it. Dead men DO bleed after all." The end. And the end of my posting on this thread. Even those posts that sound "moderate" still want us to act on the basis of suppositions....non-provable suppositions...and that just isn't science in my world. It's a belief system. But......no hard feelings.